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RESEARCH ARTICLES

Effect of Exhaustive Incremental Treadmill Effort on Force Generation Repeatability in Biathletes

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Pages 239-245 | Received 07 Aug 2013, Accepted 06 Feb 2014, Published online: 14 Apr 2014
 

Abstract

ABSTRACT. The authors examined how force generation repeatability changes as the result of incremental maximal test to volitional exhaustion by well-trained (VO2/kg [mL·kg−1·min−1] 62.55 ± 5.27) individuals. 13 young biathletes (18.9 ± 1.7 years) performed isometric maximum voluntary contraction (IMVC) and submaximal targeted (98N) pushes against the force transducers by arms: elbow extension (EE), elbow flexion (EF) and legs: knee extensions (KE) in pre- and posttest conditions after incremental exhaustive test performed on treadmill. IMVC did not differ significantly between pre and posttest conditions for upper and statistically decrease in lower extremities measurements (p <.01). The mean force of 10 submaximal targeted force productions (Fmean; N) is similar for pre- and posttest measurements. Standard deviation of Fmean (Fsd; N) and coefficient variation (CV;%) decrease statistically in elbows flexion p <.02 but not extension. The reduction of force repetition accuracy in left knee extension was noticed (p <.01). The fatigue induced by incremental running test decreases a magnitude of force production variability in specifically trained muscle groups in biathletes.

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