Home Current Issue Previous Issues Published Ahead-of-Print Collections For Authors Journal Info
Skip Navigation LinksHome > March 2006 - Volume 38 - Issue 3 > Quantifying Muscle Patterns and Spine Load during Various Fo...
You could be reading the full-text of this article now...
If you have access to this article through your institution, you can view this article in OvidSP.
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise:
March 2006 - Volume 38 - Issue 3 - pp 570-577
doi: 10.1249/01.mss.0000189317.08635.1b
APPLIED SCIENCES: Biodynamics

Quantifying Muscle Patterns and Spine Load during Various Forms of the Push-Up

FREEMAN, STEPHANIE; KARPOWICZ, AMY; GRAY, JOHN; MCGILL, STUART

Collapse Box

Abstract

Purpose: This study was conducted to quantify the normalized amplitudes of the abdominal wall and back extensor musculature during a variety of push-up styles. We also sought to quantify their impact on spinal loading by calculating spinal compression and torque generation in the L4-5 area.

Methods: Ten university-age participants, nine males and one female, in good to excellent condition, volunteered to participate in this study. All participants were requested to perform a maximum of 12 different push-up exercises, three trials per exercise. Surface electromyographic data (EMG) were collected bilaterally on rectus abdominis, external oblique, internal oblique, latissimus dorsi, and erector spinae muscles, and unilaterally (right side) on pectoralis major, triceps brachii, biceps brachii, and anterior deltoid muscles. Spine kinetics were obtained using an anatomically detailed model of the torso/spine.

Results: This study revealed that more dynamic push-ups (i.e., ballistic, with hand movement) required more muscle activation and higher spine load, whereas placing labile balls under the hands only resulted in modest increases in spine load. Right rectus abdominis (RA) activation was significantly higher than left RA activation during the left hand forward push-up and vice versa for the right hand forward push-up (P < 0.001). External oblique (EO) demonstrated the same switch in dominance during staggered hand push-ups (P < 0.01). The one-arm push-up resulted in the highest spine compression. Skilled participants showed greater synchronicity with peak muscle activation (plyometric type of contractions) during ballistic push-ups.

Conclusion: These data will help guide exercise selection for individuals with differing training objectives and injury history.

©2006The American College of Sports Medicine

Login




Help

Forgot Password?

Search for Similar Articles
You may search for similar articles that contain these same keywords or you may modify the keyword list to augment your search.