Age and sex differences in steadiness of elbow flexor muscles with imposed cognitive demand

Purpose These studies determined (1) age- and sex-related differences in steadiness of isometric contractions when high cognitive demand was imposed across a range of forces with the elbow flexor muscles (study 1) and; (2) sex differences in steadiness among older adults when low cognitive demand wa...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of applied physiology 2015-06, Vol.115 (6), p.1367-1379
Hauptverfasser: Pereira, Hugo M., Spears, Vincent C., Schlinder-Delap, Bonnie, Yoon, Tejin, Nielson, Kristy A., Hunter, Sandra K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose These studies determined (1) age- and sex-related differences in steadiness of isometric contractions when high cognitive demand was imposed across a range of forces with the elbow flexor muscles (study 1) and; (2) sex differences in steadiness among older adults when low cognitive demand was imposed (study 2). Methods 36 young adults (18–25 years; 18 women) and 30 older adults (60–82 years; 17 women) performed isometric contractions at 5, 30 and 40 % of maximum voluntary contraction (MVC). Study 1 involved a high-cognitive demand session (serial subtractions by 13 during the contraction) and a control session (no mental math). Study 2 (older adults only) involved a low-cognitive demand session (subtracting by 1s). Results Older individuals exhibited greater increases in force fluctuations (coefficient of variation of force, CV) with high cognitive demand than young adults, with the largest age difference at 5 % MVC ( P  = 0.01). Older adults had greater agonist EMG activity with high-cognitive demand and women had greater coactivation than men ( P  
ISSN:1439-6319
1439-6327
DOI:10.1007/s00421-015-3113-0