1 / 19

Strength Testing: variability and relevance

Strength Testing: variability and relevance. Readings - Matheson - Effects of instructions on isokinetic trunk strength variability, reliability absolute value and predictive value Garg - A comparison of isokinetic lifting strength

ardice
Download Presentation

Strength Testing: variability and relevance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Strength Testing: variability and relevance • Readings - • Matheson - Effects of instructions on isokinetic trunk strength variability, reliability absolute value and predictive value • Garg - A comparison of isokinetic lifting strength • Wolf - relationships among grip strength work capacity and recovery • OUTLINE • Summaries of above findings and discussions • Complete knowledge of methods and results not required

  2. Psychological Factors • Classic experiments - arm strength • normal conditions • immediately after loud noise • while subject was screaming loudly • influence of alcohol and amphetamines • hypnosis • observed increased strength - most with hypnosis • theorized temporary modification in CNS - argued most people - neural inhibition (protective reflex) • reduced inhibition • highly trained athletes • arousal - unexplainable feats • early phase of strength training

  3. Effect of Instructions: (Matheson) • Previous discussions emphasized the need for standardized protocol • consistent instructions important • Matheson paper supports this tenet • asks - what type of instructions produce the best results? • Optimize reliability, validity • Hypotheses • high demand instruction in isokinetic strength testing will show; • decreased variability • increased peak torque • produce stronger correlation with performance capacity • When compared to uniform instructions asking subject to put in a consistent effort

  4. Instructions - Discussion • With high demand instructions • Hypothesis one • performance variability • Tables 2 and 3 - % coefficient of variation - four trials each speed • Lower variability with high demand • less variability at slower speeds with both types of instruction • Hypothesis two • peak torque - fig 1,2 tables 4 and 5 • higher in high instruction group • groups affected similarly by changes in velocity • Hypothesis three • Predictive ability - table 6 through 9 • significant correlation between isokinetic strength and lifting capacity in progressive test • Only with high demand instruction

  5. Comparing Isokinetic Strength (Garg) • Goal of research • determine effects of speed of lifting and box size on isokinetic strength • compare isokinetic with • static lifting strength • psychophysically determined maximal acceptable weight (MAW) • Relevance of Research • Measurement of human strength is important for job design • Important to match physical strength requirements with worker capabilities to prevent injury • Measurement of dynamic strength is complex • Isokinetic strength is commonly used to measure dynamic strength • The use of boxes instead of a bar is a better simulation of actual lifting tasks

  6. Methods • 9 male college students - range in age 22-36 (table 1) • 12 lifts per hour (every 5 minutes) • lift floor to bench (.8 m) • 3 box sizes 25 - 50 cm wide • open technique - subjects choice ** • Measure MAW, static strength, isokinetic strength • MAW - adjust weight till comfortable • Static measured at origin of lift • Isokinetic evaluated at 3 speeds • RPE on low back for all lifts

  7. Results • Progressive decline in mean and peak isokinetic strength • with inc speed and inc box width • Fig 1 and 2 • speed had greater impact than width • Recommend lifting slowly • However, high speed lifting perceived to be less stressful • RPE 10.7 (fast) vs 12.7 (slow) • Fig 3 • static strength and MAW higher correlation with mean than peak isokinetic strength • high speed - mean isokinetic - within 6% of MAW • low speed - mean - equal to mean static strength • Fig 4

  8. Recommendations • recommend • both speed of lifting and box width should be controlled carefully • using MAW and Static strength testing • SST results in higher allowable limits for workers • MAW - effectiveness not yet as well documented • the complexities of isokinetic strength testing and its relationship to safe lifting capability are not fully understood

  9. Grip Strength, Work Capacity and Recovery • Wolf • Relationships between strength, fatigue and work capacity are central to occupational rehabilitation • Musculoskeletal impairments are often expressed as loss of strength • % disability • strength and endurance correlation exceeds .90 • endurance tests • often assess repetitions to failure using a % of body weight • strength test often use one rep max (isotonic) ; not always appropriate • 1 RM= (weight) / [1- (RM * .02)]

  10. Grip Strength, Work Capacity and Recovery • questions in paper • how important is strength as a component of work capacity? • how do work capacity and strength affect recovery time? • Relevant research • Capacity to sustain work activity is inversely related to power required • exponential decrease in endurance, as demand approaches max • Walsh (Fig 1 and 2) • after injury - loss of power leads to loss of capacity • rest from injury - often increases impact due to muscular de-conditioning

  11. Background • Rehabilitation • strengthen and condition worker to improve capacity • Various programs (functional restoration, work conditioning, work hardening) • Often difficult to establish and define dose of intervention precisely • The goal is to accelerate the rate of rehab and shorten treatment time • Physical training goals in the workplace are different from those ot athletes • Athlete: improve capacity to enhance performance • Worker: improve capacity to minimize the risk of injury and reduce the strain of performing tasks

  12. Background • Prediction equations for muscular endurance at a given % of max contraction - constants for each muscle group (Sato) • results 10-35 % decline in strength • longer bout, lower recovery strength • Fatigue - theory • short - high intensity exercise - metabolic inhibition • longer duration - fatigue may be at level of E-C coupling - ? K+ ? • Relevance of isometric evaluation • low - due to low prevalence of isometric activity • Greater relevance for hand

  13. Relationships • Research goals of Wolf study • develop technology necessary to support a treatment strategy • dose of exercise is able to be closely tied to expected levels of recovery • Address issues of ; • expected work duration • work capacity • and recovery rates for sustained high output work tasks • Methods - 40 healthy subjects - 1/2 male • Standard body position and instructions • repetitive gripping task at set pace • Measure pre trial isometric max • Utilize 25, 50 and 75 % of max • 1 sec reps until fatigue - 2 min recovery • measure isometric grip strength 1, 5 10 and 20 min of recovery • average of three trials

  14. Methods (continued) • evaluate isotonic strength • LIDO - isotonic - progressive protocol • complete ROM in less than 1 sec • inc resistance - repeat to fatigue • Test - based on isotonic results • repetitive gripping to fatigue • 75% and 50% of isotonic max • then 25% for twice as long as 50%

  15. Results • correlation isometric / isotonic strength • no correlation between isometric or isotonic strength and duration of work at either 75 or 50 % • significant relationships between isotonic strength and work capacity at 75 and 50% levels • Isotonic strength best predictor of work capacity at 75 % level - • When compared with duration • Work duration and isotonic strength had a similar predictive ability at the 50% resistance

  16. Recovery Results • No significant gender differences • either recovery time or % at time points • table III and fig 1 • Recovery rate and time to recovery • subjects categorized - time to 100% • significant differences in degree of recovery Fig 2 • no differences in rate • similar slope, different starting points - • Related to degree of loss of strength • Good predictor of length of recovery • Standards - avg 20% decline in strength with protocol - 20 min recovery • variation - abnormal - intervention • standards - tables 4 and 5

  17. Conclusions on Types of Strength testing • High demand instructions(isokin) • Reduce variability with high demand instructions • higher correlation to isotonic • good predictive ability for lifting capacity • Isokinetic testing • correlations depend on lifting speed and box width • difficult to establish safe lifting capacity • Difficult to design - many variables • Better to use static strength and MAW

  18. Conclusions on Types of Strength testing • Recovery from fatigue - FCA • duration of work difficult to correlate to either isotonic or isometric strength • work capacity correlates better to isotonic strength than isometric • recovery rates similar between genders and degree of strength loss • useful in diagnosis - hand grip only from this study

  19. General Conclusions • The goals of physical training program in the workplace are • Improve a workers physical capacity • Minimize risk of injury • Reduce the strain of performing daily tasks • The lack of physical fitness is a contributing factor for musculoskeletal injuries at work • The logistics of implementing changes in a workplace to reduce strain must be considered • Using a bar is inappropriate for manual materials handling assessments • The type of strength assessed will have a significant impact on the design of weight limits for job design • Results from strength tests are influenced by the subjects motivation and perception of how much force to generate without getting injured

More Related