Proprioceptive postural control strategies differ among non-injured athletes

Highlights Sensory plasticity is considered as an optimal strategy for postural control. Proprioceptive reweighting was heterogenous in young healthy athletes. Plastic strategy allows proprioceptive reweighting when conditions are changing. Rigid individuals showed an ankle steered strategy considered as inappropriate on foam surface. The two strategies involve differences in hamstring activity and balance recovery. Abstract Postural control during complex tasks requires adequate sensory integration and somaesthetic reweighting: suboptimal postural strategies can lead to injury. We assessed the ability of healthy athletes to reweight somaesthetic signals during postural perturbations on different surfaces. Thirty-five young (16 ± 1 years), healthy, elite handball players participated in this cross-sectional study. Proprioceptive reweighting was evaluated via vibration of the triceps surae and lumbar muscles on firm and foam surfaces. Postural variables and the electromyographic activity of the gluteus medius (GM), semitendinosus (ST) and fibularis longus (FL) were recorded during the PRE (10 s), VIBRATION (20 s) and POST (20 s) periods. Ankle proprioception was predominantly used on the firm compared to foam support. However, two opposing behaviours were observed: a "rigid" strategy in which reliance on ankle proprioception increased on the foam, and a "plastic" strategy that involved a proximal shift of proprioceptive reliance (p < 0.001). The plastic strategy was associated with a more effective recovery of balance after vibration cessation (p < 0.05). ST activation was higher during POST in the rigid strategy and did not return to the PRE level (p < 0.05) whereas it did in the plastic strategy. Proprioceptive strategies for postural control are highly variable and future studies should evaluate their contribution to injury.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport games junior sports
Published in:Neuroscience Letters
Language:English
Published: 2022
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2021.136366
Volume:69
Issue:19.1.2022
Pages:136366
Document types:article
Level:advanced