Effects of arm and leg loading on sprint performance.

Autor: Ropret, Robert, Kukolj, Milos, Ugarkovic, Dusan, Matavulj, Dragan, Jaric, Slobodan
Zdroj: European Journal of Applied Physiology & Occupational Physiology; May1998, Vol. 77 Issue 6, p547-550, 4p
Abstrakt: The effects of loading on sprint kinematics were examined in 24 male students. The moment of inertia of either the arms or legs was increased by up to 50% of their unloaded values and the time for distances of 0.5–15 m and 15–30 m from a sprint start was measured. An increase in leg loading was associated with a gradual decrease in velocity of both sprint phases, while the change associated with arm loading was modest and significant only in the second phase. The decrease in sprint velocity was predominantly due to a reduction in stride rate, while the stride length remained almost unchanged. It was concluded that leg loading affected sprint velocity more than arm loading, and also that the velocity was reduced due to a decrease in the stride rate rather than in the stride length. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index