Effects of ankle and hip muscle fatigue on postural sway and attentional demands during unipedal stance
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Abstract
The effect of muscle fatigue on quiet standing is equivocal, including its duration/recovery and whether
it leads to an increase in attentional demands. The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of ankle
and hip muscle fatigue on postural sway and simple reaction time during a unipedal task. Two groups of
14 young adults (mean age = 22.50 3.23) had to stand on their dominant leg for 30-s trials before and after
fatigue of hip or ankle flexors and extensors. Half of the unipedal trials were performed in a dual-task
condition where subjects, in addition to standing, had to respond verbally to an auditory stimulus. Sway area,
and sway variability and velocity in the AP and ML planes were calculated using center of pressure data
obtained from a force platform. Voice reaction time was recorded seated and during the dual-task condition
to assess attentional demands. A main effect of fatigue was found for AP sway variability (p = 0.027), AP sway
velocity (p = 0.017) and ML sway velocity (p = 0.004). Both groups showed increased sway velocity in both
directions and in reaction time during the dual-task condition (p < 0.001), but reaction time did not increase
with fatigue. A group by fatigue interaction was found significant for ML sway velocity (p = 0.043). Results
suggest that hip and ankle fatigue affected postural control in the fatigued plane (AP) but only hip fatigue
affected postural control in the non-fatigued plane (ML sway velocity). However, fatigue did not lead to an
increase in attentional demands and increased AP and ML sway velocity had recovered within 30 min.
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Keywords
Muscle fatigue, Postural stability, Attention, Lower extremity
