Effect of shoulder angle on physiological responses during incremental peak arm crank ergometry

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Leicht, Anthony S.;Spinks, Warwick L.
Abstract

This study examined the effect of shoulder angle and gender on physiological and perceptual responses during incremental peak arm ergometry. Healthy adults (nine males, seven females) volunteered for the study and completed an incremental arm ergometry test on two separate occasions at two different shoulder angles (90 degrees and 45 degrees). Initial work rate was set at 16 W x min-1 and was increased progressively until exhaustion. Cardiorespiratory and perceptual responses were recorded at the end of each minute and compared using separate three-way (position x work rate x gender) repeated-measures analyses of variance. The systematic bias of peak responses was examined using separate two-way (position x gender) analyses of variance, while reproducibility of these parameters was explored using intraclass correlation coefficients, measurement bias/ratio, and 95% ratio limits of agreement. Despite a significantly greater peak heart rate for the 45 degrees position, cardiorespiratory and perceptual responses were similar at peak exercise for both positions. Peak values for all variables, although similar, demonstrated similar and large inter-test variability for men and women. Reduction of the shoulder joint angle to 45 degrees did not enhance peak work rate and peak oxygen consumption during seated upper body exercise. Due to the large inter-test variability, arm ergometry should be conducted using the same seated position.

Journal

Journal of Sports Sciences

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N/A

Volume

25

ISBN/ISSN

1827-1928

Edition

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Issue

4

Pages Count

10

Location

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Publisher

Routledge

Publisher Url

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Publisher Location

London, United Kingdom

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Url

N/A

Date

N/A

EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1080/02640410600631199