Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.

Exercise combined with whole body vibration (WBV) is becoming increasingly popular, although additional effects of WBV in comparison to conventional exercises are still discussed controversially in literature. Heterogeneous findings are attributed to large differences in the training designs between...

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Main Authors: Ramona Ritzmann, Andreas Kramer, Sascha Bernhardt, Albert Gollhofer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3935964?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-afef692680a44910922de71f52cead162020-11-25T01:19:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0192e8990510.1371/journal.pone.0089905Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.Ramona RitzmannAndreas KramerSascha BernhardtAlbert GollhoferExercise combined with whole body vibration (WBV) is becoming increasingly popular, although additional effects of WBV in comparison to conventional exercises are still discussed controversially in literature. Heterogeneous findings are attributed to large differences in the training designs between WBV and "control" groups in regard to training volume, load and type. In order to separate the additional effects of WBV from the overall adaptations due to the intervention, in this study, a four-week WBV training setup was compared to a matched intervention program with identical training parameters in both training settings except for the exposure to WBV. In a repeated-measures matched-subject design, 38 participants were assigned to either the WBV group (VIB) or the equivalent training group (CON). Training duration, number of sets, rest periods and task-specific instructions were matched between the groups. Balance, jump height and local static muscle endurance were assessed before and after the training period. The statistical analysis revealed significant interaction effects of group×time for balance and local static muscle endurance (p<0.05). Hence, WBV caused an additional effect on balance control (pre vs. post VIB +13%, p<0.05 and CON +6%, p = 0.33) and local static muscle endurance (pre vs. post VIB +36%, p<0.05 and CON +11%, p = 0.49). The effect on jump height remained insignificant (pre vs. post VIB +3%, p = 0.25 and CON ±0%, p = 0.82). This study provides evidence for the additional effects of WBV above conventional exercise alone. As far as balance and muscle endurance of the lower leg are concerned, a training program that includes WBV can provide supplementary benefits in young and well-trained adults compared to an equivalent program that does not include WBV.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3935964?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ramona Ritzmann
Andreas Kramer
Sascha Bernhardt
Albert Gollhofer
spellingShingle Ramona Ritzmann
Andreas Kramer
Sascha Bernhardt
Albert Gollhofer
Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ramona Ritzmann
Andreas Kramer
Sascha Bernhardt
Albert Gollhofer
author_sort Ramona Ritzmann
title Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.
title_short Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.
title_full Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.
title_fullStr Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.
title_full_unstemmed Whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.
title_sort whole body vibration training--improving balance control and muscle endurance.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Exercise combined with whole body vibration (WBV) is becoming increasingly popular, although additional effects of WBV in comparison to conventional exercises are still discussed controversially in literature. Heterogeneous findings are attributed to large differences in the training designs between WBV and "control" groups in regard to training volume, load and type. In order to separate the additional effects of WBV from the overall adaptations due to the intervention, in this study, a four-week WBV training setup was compared to a matched intervention program with identical training parameters in both training settings except for the exposure to WBV. In a repeated-measures matched-subject design, 38 participants were assigned to either the WBV group (VIB) or the equivalent training group (CON). Training duration, number of sets, rest periods and task-specific instructions were matched between the groups. Balance, jump height and local static muscle endurance were assessed before and after the training period. The statistical analysis revealed significant interaction effects of group×time for balance and local static muscle endurance (p<0.05). Hence, WBV caused an additional effect on balance control (pre vs. post VIB +13%, p<0.05 and CON +6%, p = 0.33) and local static muscle endurance (pre vs. post VIB +36%, p<0.05 and CON +11%, p = 0.49). The effect on jump height remained insignificant (pre vs. post VIB +3%, p = 0.25 and CON ±0%, p = 0.82). This study provides evidence for the additional effects of WBV above conventional exercise alone. As far as balance and muscle endurance of the lower leg are concerned, a training program that includes WBV can provide supplementary benefits in young and well-trained adults compared to an equivalent program that does not include WBV.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3935964?pdf=render
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