Increased rate of force development and neural drive of human skeletal muscle following resistance training
University of Copenhagen · Bispebjerg Hospital · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The maximal rate of rise in muscle force [rate of force development (RFD)] has important functional consequences as it determines the force that can be generated in the early phase of muscle contraction (0-200 ms). The present study examined the effect of resistance training on contractile RFD and efferent motor outflow ("neural drive") during maximal muscle contraction. Contractile RFD (slope of force-time curve), impulse (time-integrated force), electromyography (EMG) signal amplitude (mean average voltage), and rate of EMG rise (slope of EMG-time curve) were determined (1-kHz sampling rate) during maximal isometric muscle contraction (quadriceps femoris) in 15 male subjects before and after 14 wk of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 9.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
5- PAPer AagaardCorresponding
University of Copenhagen, Bispebjerg Hospital, Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physiology
- EBErik B. Simonsen
- JLJesper L. Andersen
Rigshospitalet
- PMPeter Magnusson
University of Copenhagen, Bispebjerg Hospital
- PDPoul Dyhre‐Poulsen
Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physiology
Topics & keywords
- Isometric exercise
- Electromyography
- Contraction (grammar)
- Muscle contraction
- Skeletal muscle
- Medicine
- Cardiology
- Internal medicine