Acute effects of dynamic stretching on neuromechanical properties: an interaction between stretching, contraction, and movement

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TitreAcute effects of dynamic stretching on neuromechanical properties: an interaction between stretching, contraction, and movement
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursVieira DCesar Leit, Opplert J, Babault N
JournalEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume121
Pagination957-967
Date PublishedMAR
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1439-6319
Mots-clésEvoked contractile properties, Flexibility, MUSCLE ACTIVATION, Muscle-tendon stiffness, Stretch, warm-up
Résumé

Purpose The present study aimed to investigate the acute effects of dynamic stretching on neurophysiological and mechanical properties of plantar flexor muscles and to test the hypothesis that dynamic stretching resulted from an interaction between stretching, movement, and contraction. Methods The dynamic stretching conditioning activity (DS) was compared to static stretching (SS), passive cyclic stretching (PCS), isometric contractions (IC), static stretching followed by isometric contractions (SSIC), and control (CO) conditions. Stretching amplitude (DS, SS, PCS and SSIC), contraction intensity (DS, IC and SSIC) and duration (all 6 conditions) were matched. Thirteen volunteers were included. Passive torque, fascicle length, and stiffness were evaluated from a dynamometer and ultrasonography during passive dorsiflexion. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation was used to investigate contractile properties [peak twitch torque (PTT), and rate of torque development (RTD)] and muscle voluntary activation (%VA). Gastrocnemius lateralis electromyographic activity (GL EMG/Mwave) was obtained during maximal voluntary contraction. All of these parameters were measured immediately before and 10 s after each experimental condition. Results Peak twitch torque, RTD, %VA, GL EMG/Mwave remained unaltered, while passive torque was significantly reduced after DS (- 8.14 +/- 2.21%). SS decreased GL EMG/Mwave (- 7.83 +/- 12.01%) and passive torque (- 2.16 +/- 7.25%). PCS decreased PTT (- 3.40 +/- 6.03%), RTD (- 2.96 +/- 5.16%), and passive torque (- 2.16 +/- 2.05%). IC decreased passive torque (- 7.72 +/- 1.97%) and enhanced PTT (+ 5.77 +/- 5.19%) and RTD (+ 7.36 +/- 8.35%). However, SSIC attenuated PTT and RTD improvements as compared to IC. Conclusion These results suggested that dynamic stretching is multi-component and would result from an interaction between stretching, contraction, and movement.

DOI10.1007/s00421-020-04583-3