2020
DOI: 10.1111/sms.13842
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Influence of isometric training at short and long muscle‐tendon unit lengths on the history dependence of force

Abstract: Active muscle shortening and lengthening are prevalent in all sports, and when these motions precede an isometric (ie, constant muscle-tendon unit length) contraction, they influence force production. Specifically, the amount of force produced in an isometric steady-state is less following active shortening (residual force depression; rFD) and more following active lengthening (residual force enhancement; rFE) than a purely isometric contraction at the same muscle length and level of activation. Together, rFD … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Our findings are consistent with the literature as previous studies investigating the modifiability of rFD at the in‐vivo whole human level, and in‐vitro whole muscle level also noted that rFD was not modifiable through training (Chen et al, 2020; Chen & Power, 2019; Hinks et al, 2020). By investigating this property at the single fiber level, we are able to identify that rFD is not intrinsically modifiable at the cellular level, at least given the constraints of the current experimental design.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
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“…Our findings are consistent with the literature as previous studies investigating the modifiability of rFD at the in‐vivo whole human level, and in‐vitro whole muscle level also noted that rFD was not modifiable through training (Chen et al, 2020; Chen & Power, 2019; Hinks et al, 2020). By investigating this property at the single fiber level, we are able to identify that rFD is not intrinsically modifiable at the cellular level, at least given the constraints of the current experimental design.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Training could potentially modify rFD by increasing single muscle fiber force production capacity and thus work of shortening. The only studies that have investigated the chronic modifiability of rFD following training were two in‐vivo studies testing humans (Chen & Power, 2019; Hinks et al, 2020), and an in‐vitro study in rodents (Chen et al, 2020). rFD of the ankle dorsiflexors was not modifiable at the whole human level following 4 weeks of concentric and eccentric resistance training (Chen & Power, 2019), nor 8 weeks of isometric training biased to a long or short muscle tendon unit length (Hinks et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, based on the findings of this study, future research should test the efficacy of the chronic use of PS-ISO contractions in hamstring strain injury prevention. The potential exists that with the chronic use of PS-ISO contractions, athletes could experience benefits including increased muscle hypertrophy, increased eccentric and isometric strength, increased fascicle length and a rightward shift or broadening of the plateau of the optimum angle in the length-tension curve [12,41,[65][66][67].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The influence of muscle architecture changes on rFE has recently been investigated, with varied effects found [49,68,69]. For example, Hinks, Davidson, Akagi and Power [67] found no significant changes in rFE following chronic isometric training at long or short muscle lengths, despite the fascicle length increasing and decreasing, respectively [67]. In contrast, evidence of the effect of concentric and eccentric training on rFE is less certain.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%