Effects of real and sham whole-body mechanical vibration on spinal excitability at rest and during muscle contraction

T. Hortobagyi*, P. Rider, P. DeVita

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We examined the effects of whole-body mechanical vibration (WBV) on indices of motoneuronal excitability at rest and during muscle contraction in healthy humans. Real and sham WBV at 30Hz had no effect on reflexes measured during muscle contraction. Real WBV at 30 and 50Hz depressed the H-reflex approximate to 45%. These depressions diminished across the five inter-bout rest intervals. The depression converted to 27% and 7% facilitation over the 15-min long recovery period following real WBV at 30 and 50Hz, respectively. The depression, measured during the inter-bout rest, correlated r=0.48 (P=0.007) with the subsequent facilitation, measured during the follow-up. The depression produced by sham vs real WBV was significant but less (23%), recovered faster, and the facilitation was absent in the 15-min long follow-up period. WBV produced time-varying depression followed by facilitation of the H-reflex at rest. A lack of change in volitional wave suggests that WBV did not affect the efferent neural drive.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e436-e447
Number of pages12
JournalScandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
Volume24
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec-2014

Keywords

  • Exercise
  • muscle
  • H-reflex
  • V wave
  • H-reflex during contraction
  • RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL
  • MOTOR UNIT RECRUITMENT
  • WRIST EXTENSOR MUSCLES
  • V-WAVE RESPONSES
  • SOLEUS H-REFLEX
  • OLDER-ADULTS
  • HOFFMANN REFLEX
  • STRETCH REFLEX
  • STRENGTH
  • EXERCISE

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