Muscle length influence on rectus femoris damage and protective effect in knee extensor eccentric exercise

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Abstract

This study tested the hypothesis that the magnitude of rectus femoris (RF) damage and the repeated bout effect (RBE) would be greater after knee extensor eccentric exercise performed in a supine (long RF lengths) than a sitting (short RF lengths) position, and the muscle length effects would be more prominent at the proximal than distal RF. Young untrained men were placed to one of the two groups (n = 14 per group). S group performed the knee extensor eccentric exercise in the sitting position for the first bout and the supine position for the second bout, and L group performed the exercise in the supine position for two bouts, with 4 weeks between bouts. Dependent variables included evoked and maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVC) torque, electromyography (EMG) during MVC, muscle soreness, and shear modulus, which were measured before and 1-3 days after each exercise bout. After the first bout, L group in comparison with S group showed greater (P

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Ema, R., Nosaka, K., Kawashima, R., Kanda, A., Ikeda, K., & Akagi, R. (2021). Muscle length influence on rectus femoris damage and protective effect in knee extensor eccentric exercise. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports, 31(3), 597–609. https://doi.org/10.1111/sms.13890

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