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Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm

Years of training in competitive sports leads to human body adaptation to a specific type of exercise. In judo bouts, maintaining hand grip on an opponent’s clothes and postural balance is essential for the effective technical and tactical actions. This study compares changes after maximal anaerobic...

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Autores principales: Sterkowicz, Stanisław, Jaworski, Janusz, Lech, Grzegorz, Pałka, Tomasz, Sterkowicz-Przybycień, Katarzyna, Bujas, Przemysław, Pięta, Paweł, Mościński, Zenon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4878781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27218258
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155985
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author Sterkowicz, Stanisław
Jaworski, Janusz
Lech, Grzegorz
Pałka, Tomasz
Sterkowicz-Przybycień, Katarzyna
Bujas, Przemysław
Pięta, Paweł
Mościński, Zenon
author_facet Sterkowicz, Stanisław
Jaworski, Janusz
Lech, Grzegorz
Pałka, Tomasz
Sterkowicz-Przybycień, Katarzyna
Bujas, Przemysław
Pięta, Paweł
Mościński, Zenon
author_sort Sterkowicz, Stanisław
collection PubMed
description Years of training in competitive sports leads to human body adaptation to a specific type of exercise. In judo bouts, maintaining hand grip on an opponent’s clothes and postural balance is essential for the effective technical and tactical actions. This study compares changes after maximal anaerobic exercise among judo athletes and untrained subjects regarding 1) maximum isometric handgrip strength (HGSmax) and accuracy at the perceived 50% maximum handgrip force (1/2HGSmax) and 2) the balance of 13 judo athletes at national (n = 8) and international (n = 5) competitive levels and 19 untrained university students. The groups did not differ in age, body height, and weight. Body mass index (BMI) and body composition (JAWON) were evaluated. The Wingate Anaerobic Test (WAnT, Monark 875E) measured recommended anaerobic capacity indices. Hand grip strength (Takei dynamometer) and balance (biplate balance platform) were measured before warm-up (T1), before the WAnT test (T2), and after (T3). Parametric or non-parametric tests were performed after verifying the variable distribution assumption. Judoists had higher BMI and fat-free mass index (FFMI) than the students. The athletes also showed higher relative total work and relative peak power and lower levels of lactic acid. The difference in judoists between HGSmax at T1 and HGSmax at T3 was statistically significant. Before warm-up (T1), athletes showed higher strength (more divergent from the calculated ½HGSmax value) compared to students. Substantial fatigue after the WAnT test significantly deteriorated the body stability indices, which were significantly better in judo athletes at all time points. The findings suggest specific body adaptations in judoists, especially for body composition, anaerobic energy system efficiency, and postural balance. These characteristics could be trained for specifically by judo athletes to meet the time-motion and anaerobic demands of contemporary bouts.
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spelling pubmed-48787812016-06-09 Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm Sterkowicz, Stanisław Jaworski, Janusz Lech, Grzegorz Pałka, Tomasz Sterkowicz-Przybycień, Katarzyna Bujas, Przemysław Pięta, Paweł Mościński, Zenon PLoS One Research Article Years of training in competitive sports leads to human body adaptation to a specific type of exercise. In judo bouts, maintaining hand grip on an opponent’s clothes and postural balance is essential for the effective technical and tactical actions. This study compares changes after maximal anaerobic exercise among judo athletes and untrained subjects regarding 1) maximum isometric handgrip strength (HGSmax) and accuracy at the perceived 50% maximum handgrip force (1/2HGSmax) and 2) the balance of 13 judo athletes at national (n = 8) and international (n = 5) competitive levels and 19 untrained university students. The groups did not differ in age, body height, and weight. Body mass index (BMI) and body composition (JAWON) were evaluated. The Wingate Anaerobic Test (WAnT, Monark 875E) measured recommended anaerobic capacity indices. Hand grip strength (Takei dynamometer) and balance (biplate balance platform) were measured before warm-up (T1), before the WAnT test (T2), and after (T3). Parametric or non-parametric tests were performed after verifying the variable distribution assumption. Judoists had higher BMI and fat-free mass index (FFMI) than the students. The athletes also showed higher relative total work and relative peak power and lower levels of lactic acid. The difference in judoists between HGSmax at T1 and HGSmax at T3 was statistically significant. Before warm-up (T1), athletes showed higher strength (more divergent from the calculated ½HGSmax value) compared to students. Substantial fatigue after the WAnT test significantly deteriorated the body stability indices, which were significantly better in judo athletes at all time points. The findings suggest specific body adaptations in judoists, especially for body composition, anaerobic energy system efficiency, and postural balance. These characteristics could be trained for specifically by judo athletes to meet the time-motion and anaerobic demands of contemporary bouts. Public Library of Science 2016-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4878781/ /pubmed/27218258 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155985 Text en © 2016 Sterkowicz et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sterkowicz, Stanisław
Jaworski, Janusz
Lech, Grzegorz
Pałka, Tomasz
Sterkowicz-Przybycień, Katarzyna
Bujas, Przemysław
Pięta, Paweł
Mościński, Zenon
Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm
title Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm
title_full Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm
title_fullStr Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm
title_short Effect of Acute Effort on Isometric Strength and Body Balance: Trained vs. Untrained Paradigm
title_sort effect of acute effort on isometric strength and body balance: trained vs. untrained paradigm
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4878781/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27218258
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155985
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