These findings suggest that subjects with diabetes exhibit a lower skin blood flow and lower NO response to externally applied vibration than matched normal subjects.
The balance exercise program improved balance and trunk proprioception. These results suggested that a balance exercise is suitable for individuals with diabetic neuropathy.
Electrical stimulation of the quadriceps muscle was used to elicit 4-min isometric contractions at 10% of the maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) in four male and three female subjects. The effect of four waveforms, including Russian, interferential, sine, and square, on the mean stimulation current required to achieve the desired contraction force, subjective comfort, and physiological responses was studied. Interferential stimulation, even at full power, could not elicit a sustained contraction at 10% MVC. The contractions elicited by electrical stimulation utilizing the sine waveform required significantly less mean stimulation current to maintain the desired force of contraction with consistently lower verbal rating scale scores and greater increases in oxygen consumption than either the Russian or square waveform stimulations. Russian waveform stimulation produced a significantly greater rise in galvanic skin resistance than the sine or square waveform while the changes in respiratory quotient were similar between waveforms. The data support sine wave stimulation as working the best by producing the desired muscle tension with the least mean stimulation current and therefore, the least tissue trauma while providing the most subjective comfort.
The purpose of this study was to quantify the thermal transfer characteristics of the skin in relation to body composition as assessed by the ability of water immersion and hot and cold packs with different thicknesses of towels layers to heat or cool deep tissue. Two sets of experiments were conducted to determine the interrelationships between body fat content and muscle temperature after immersion of the limb in water or the application of hot and cold packs. In the first series of experiments, subjects immersed their lower body in water at 42, 37, 34, 27, 24 and 0 degrees C for 20 minutes. Muscle temperature was measured in the skin above and in the belly of the quadriceps and medial gastrocnemius muscles by a thermistor on the skin and one implanted with a 20-gauge needle 25 mm below and perpendicular to the skin. To see the effect of circulation, a series was conducted with the circulation occluded. In the second series, hot or cold packs were used with different thicknesses of towel layers. The muscle temperature after immersion in water approached that of the packs within approximately 20 minutes. In contrast, when hot and cold packs were used with various thickness of towels ranging from 2 to 10 mm in thickness, the change in muscle temperature was much less and it was still changing at the end of a 20 minute period. Subjects with high body fat changed their deep tissue temperatures much more slowly with a time constant nearly double that of the thin subjects with all modalities. Even after water immersion, if the body fat exceeded 25% of the subject's weight, 20 min of immersion was not enough to either warm the muscle or cool it down substantially. Cold packs and hot packs were very ineffective in changing muscle temperature under these same conditions. Body fat plays a major role, as did limb blood flow in controlling the movement of heat across the limb.
Three-channel ES is more effective than two-channel ES in terms of better current dispersion across the skin and penetration into tissue and will probably be better for wound healing.
Hormones such as estradiol have an effect on human connective tissue, making women more susceptible to knee injuries. Indeed, women have a greater risk for non-contact injuries of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) compared to men when participating in the same sports. The purpose of the present study was to examine the difference in ACL laxity after an eccentric exercise in the lower limbs in young healthy women between oral contraceptive pill (OCP) users and non-OCP users to see the effect of OCP on ACL laxity. Forty young healthy women participated in the experiments (25 with normal menstrual cycle and 15 with taking OCP). ACL laxity and a visual analog pain scale were measured before and after a bout of squat. OCP users had more pain than non-OCP users after heavy exercise (p < 0.001). Both groups showed a significant reduction in ACL laxity on the 2nd day after exercise (p < 0.05). While ACL laxity was always less in the OCP group, when expressed as a percent change from baseline, the ACL laxity change was similar in both groups (p > 0.05). We found that there was no statistically significant difference in ACL laxity recovery over time in response to the delayed onset muscle soreness after a bout of squat between two groups. However, health professionals working with young female adults should recognize that OCP users with less ACL laxity are at higher risk for having knee injuries because of ACL stiffness when doing exercise.
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