Optimal warm-up stimuli of muscle activation to enhance short and long-term acute jumping performance

(Optimale Aufwärmstimuli der Muskelaktivierung zur Verbesserung der akuten und langfristigen Sprungleistung)

The aim of this study was to determine the effect of different types of active warm-up stimuli of muscle activation on explosive jumping performance after short (5 min postwarm-up) and long (6 h postwarm-up) recovery periods following warm-up. Twelve trained volleyball players (21-24 years) performed different types of specific warm-up stimuli (WP) after baseline measurements [e.g., countermovement jump (CMJ) without and with extra load and Drop jump (DJ)] on randomized separate occasions: (1) three sets of five jumps with extra load (WP1), (2) two sets of four reps at 80% of 1RM parallel squat (1RMPS) and two sets of two reps at 85% of 1RMPS (WP2), (3) two sets of four reps at 80% of 1RMPS and two sets of two reps at 90% of 1RMPS and two sets of one rep at 95% of 1RMPS (WP3), (4) three sets of five DJs (WP4), (5) specified warm-up for a volleyball match (WP5), (6) three sets of five reps at 30% 1RMPS (WP6), and (7) an experimental condition of no active warm-up. Height in DJ significantly improved (P < 0.05) after WP1 (4.18%), WP2 (2.98%), WP3 (5.47%), and WP5 (4.49%). Maximal power output during CMJ with extra load significantly improved (P < 0.05) after WP2 (11.39%), WP5 (10.90%), WP3 (9%), and WP1 (2.47%). High-intensity dynamic loading (e.g., 80-95% 1RM), as well as specific volleyball warm-up protocol bring about the greatest effects on subsequent neuromuscular explosive responses. Acute positive effects on jumping performance after warm-up were maintained after long recovery periods (e.g., 6 h following warm-up), particularly when prior high-intensity dynamic actions were performed.
© Copyright 2007 European Journal of Applied Physiology. Springer. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Schlagworte:
Notationen:Kraft-Schnellkraft-Sportarten Biowissenschaften und Sportmedizin Trainingswissenschaft
Veröffentlicht in:European Journal of Applied Physiology
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: 2007
Online-Zugang:http://www.springerlink.com/content/l841078876h002k8/
Jahrgang:100
Heft:4
Seiten:393-401
Dokumentenarten:Artikel
Level:hoch