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Whole-Body and Local Muscle Vibration Immediately Improve Quadriceps Function in Individuals With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction

Derek N Pamukoff, Brian Pietrosimone, Michael D Lewek, Eric D Ryan, Paul S Weinhold, Dustin R Lee, J Troy Blackburn
Key takeaways
  1. 01Vibration may immediately improve quadriceps activation after ACL surgery
  2. 02Both whole-body and local vibration showed positive effects
  3. 03The study observed enhanced neural drive to the muscle
  4. 04This was a single-session study on 20 participants

A single session of vibration therapy may immediately improve the brain's ability to activate the quadriceps muscle after ACL reconstruction surgery.

Abstract

Objective: To determine the immediate effects of a single session of whole-body vibration (WBV) and local muscle vibration (LMV) on quadriceps function in individuals with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR).

Design: Singe-blind, randomized crossover trial.

Setting: Research laboratory.

Participants: Population-based sample of individuals with ACLR (N=20; mean age ± SD, 21.1±1.2y; mean mass ± SD, 68.3±14.9kg; mean time ± SD since ACLR, 50.7±21.3mo; 14 women; 16 patellar tendon autografts, 3 hamstring autografts, 1 allograft).

Interventions: Participants performed isometric squats while being exposed to WBV, LMV, or no vibration (control). Interventions were delivered in a randomized order during separate visits separated by 1 week.

Main outcome measures: Quadriceps active motor threshold (AMT), motor-evoked potential (MEP) amplitude, Hoffmann reflex (H-reflex) amplitude, peak torque (PT), rate of torque development (RTD), electromyographic amplitude, and central activation ratio (CAR) were assessed before and immediately after a WBV, LMV, or control intervention.

Results: There was an increase in CAR (+4.9%, P=.001) and electromyographic amplitude (+16.2%, P=.002), and a reduction in AMT (-3.1%, P<.001) after WBV, and an increase in CAR (+2.7%, P=.001) and a reduction in AMT (-2.9%, P<.001) after LMV. No effect was observed after WBV or LMV in H-reflex, RTD, or MEP amplitude. AMT (-3.7%, P<.001), CAR (+5.7%, P=.005), PT (+.31Nm/kg, P=.004), and electromyographic amplitude (P=.002) in the WBV condition differed from the control condition postapplication. AMT (-3.0% P=.002), CAR (+3.6%, P=.005), and PT (+.30Nm/kg, P=.002) in the LMV condition differed from the control condition postapplication. No differences were observed between WBV and LMV postapplication in any measurement.

Conclusions: WBV and LMV acutely improved quadriceps function and could be useful modalities for restoring quadriceps strength in individuals with knee pathologies.

Cite this study
APA
Derek N Pamukoff, Brian Pietrosimone, Michael D Lewek, Eric D Ryan, Paul S Weinhold, Dustin R Lee, & J Troy Blackburn (2016). Whole-Body and Local Muscle Vibration Immediately Improve Quadriceps Function in Individuals With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/whole-body-and-local-muscle-vibration-immediately-improve-quadriceps-function-in-individuals-with-anterior-cruciate-ligament-reconstruction/
MLA
Derek N Pamukoff, et al. "Whole-Body and Local Muscle Vibration Immediately Improve Quadriceps Function in Individuals With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction." 2016, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/whole-body-and-local-muscle-vibration-immediately-improve-quadriceps-function-in-individuals-with-anterior-cruciate-ligament-reconstruction/.
Chicago
Derek N Pamukoff et al. 2016. "Whole-Body and Local Muscle Vibration Immediately Improve Quadriceps Function in Individuals With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/whole-body-and-local-muscle-vibration-immediately-improve-quadriceps-function-in-individuals-with-anterior-cruciate-ligament-reconstruction/