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Articles

Whole-body vibration exposure in sport: four relevant cases

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Pages 1143-1150 | Received 24 Oct 2013, Accepted 25 Aug 2014, Published online: 30 Sep 2014
 

Abstract

This study investigates the whole-body vibration exposure in kite surfing, alpine skiing, snowboarding and cycling. The vibration exposure was experimentally evaluated following the ISO 2631 guidelines. Results evidenced that the most critical axis is the vertical one. The weighted vibration levels are always larger than 2.5 m/s2 and the vibration dose values are larger than 25 m/s1.75. The exposure limit values of the EU directive are reached after 8–37 min depending on the sport. The vibration magnitude is influenced by the athletes’ speed, by their skill level and sometimes by the equipment. The large vibration values suggest that the practice of sport activities may be a confounding factor in the aetiology of vibration-related diseases.

Abstract

Practitioner Summary: The vibration exposure in some sports is expected to be large, but has never been quantified in the literature. Results of experiments performed in cycling, alpine and water sports outlined vibration levels exceeding the EU standard limit values.

Notes

1. Given that the MTVV/aw ratio evidenced the presence of severe shocks, the basic ISO 2631 criterion may even underestimate the exposure severity.

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