Journal of Korean Physical Therapy Science (대한물리치료과학회지)
- Volume 13 Issue 3
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- Pages.15-25
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- 2006
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- 2733-6441(pISSN)
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- 2733-645X(eISSN)
Effects of Different Chair Type and Pelvic Position on Abdominal Muscle and Back Extensor Activation During Lower Extremity Exercise
하지 운동 시 의자 종류와 골반 자세가 복근과 요추신전근의 활성도에 미치는 영향
- Choi, In-Yong (Dept. of Physical Therapy, Hanseo University) ;
- Cynn, Heon-Seock (Dept. of Physical Therapy, Hanseo University) ;
- Kim, Tack-Hoon (Dept. of Physical Therapy, Hanseo University) ;
- Roh, Jung-Suk (Dept. of Physical Therapy, Hanseo University)
- Published : 2006.09.30
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate effects of different chair type (with backrest chair and without backrest chair) and pelvic position (anterior pelvic tilting and posterior pelvic tilting) on three abdominal muscles (upper rectus abdominis, external oblique, internal oblique) and back extensor activation during lower extremity exercise. The four different conditions during bilateral knee extension exercise were: (1) leaning on backrest chair with anterior pelvic tilting, (2) leaning on backrest chair with posterior pelvic tilting, (3) anterior pelvic tilting without backrest chair, and (4) posterior pelvic tilting without backrest chair. Fifteen healthy male subjects with no history of neuromusculoskeletal disease voluntarily participated in this study. Electromyography (EMG) was used to collect muscle activation data, and muscle activation data was expressed as a percentage of maximal voluntary isometric contraction (%MVIC). One-way repeated analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to determine the statistical significance, and Bonferroni comparison was used as a post hoc test. The results of this study were the following: (1) Erector spinae activation was significantly lower in posterior pelvic tilting without backrest compared with that in leaning on backrest chair with anterior pelvic tilting. (2) Upper rectus abdominis activation was significantly lower than erector spinae in all four different chair type and pelvic tilting conditions.