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How does practise of internal Chinese martial arts influence postural reaction control?

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Pages 629-642 | Accepted 07 Sep 2007, Published online: 20 May 2008
 

Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine the effects of Chinese martial arts practice on postural reaction control after perturbation. Participants standing in Romberg tandem posture were subjected to an unexpected lateral platform translation with the eyes open or closed at two translation amplitudes. The peak displacement of the centre of pressure and of the centre of mass, and the onset latency of muscular activity (tibialis anterior, gastrocnemius, lumbodorsal muscular group, and rectus abdominis), were evaluated for martial arts practitioners and for sport and non-sport participants. Compared with the sport and non-sport participants, the martial arts group showed lower maximal centre of pressure and centre of mass peak displacements in both the lateral and anterior – posterior directions, but no difference was found in the onset of muscular responses. We conclude that martial arts practice influences postural reaction control during a fixed-support strategy in a tandem task. The martial arts group used the ankle joint more frequently than the sport and non-sport participants, especially in the eyes-closed conditions. Our results suggest that the better balance recovery in the martial arts group is a consequence of better control of biomechanical properties of the lower limbs (e.g. through muscular response by co-contraction), not a change in the neuromuscular temporal pattern.

Acknowledgements

This work was made possible by the support of CNRS UMR 6152. The authors wish to thank the CEFUFAL Association and Dr. Pierre Schoebel of the Sport Science Faculty at Marseille University in particular for providing the AMTI force platform used in the present study. Thanks also to “The Arts from China” Association and to all the internal Chinese martial art practitioners for their participation, especially Mr. Wang.

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