Child-adult differences in the kinetics of torque development.

J Sports Sci

Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Brock University, St Catharines, Ontario, Canada.

Published: January 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Children exhibit lower maximal voluntary force, speed, and power compared to adults due to hypothesized lesser utilization of type-II motor units.
  • In a study with untrained boys and men, boys showed significantly lower peak torque and longer times to reach certain force levels in explosive muscle contractions.
  • The results indicate that the differences in force kinetics between boys and men support the idea that children have a lower capacity to utilize type-II motor units, contributing to their disadvantage in speed and explosive force tasks.

Article Abstract

Children have lower size-normalised maximal voluntary force, speed, and power than adults. It has been hypothesised that these and other age-related performance differences are due to lesser type-II motor-unit utilisation in children. This should be manifested as slower force kinetics in explosive muscle contractions. The purpose of this study was to investigate the nature of child-adult force-kinetics differences and whether the latter could support that hypothesis. Untrained boys (n = 20) and men (n = 20) (10.1 ± 1.3 and 22.9 ± 4.4 years, respectively), performed maximal, explosive, isometric elbow flexions and knee extensions on a Biodex dynamometer. Peak torque (MVC), times to 10-100% MVC, and other kinetics parameters were determined. The boys' body-mass-normalised knee extension MVC, peak rate of torque development, and %MVC at 100 ms were 26, 17 and 23% lower compared with the men and their times to 30% and 80% MVC were 24 and 48% longer, respectively. Elbow flexion kinetics showed similar or greater differences. The findings illuminate boys' inherent disadvantage in tasks requiring speed or explosive force. It is demonstrated that the extent of the boys-men kinetics disparity cannot be explained by muscle-composition and/or musculo-tendinous-stiffness differences. We suggest therefore that the findings indirectly support children's lower utilisation of type-II motor units.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3804465PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02640414.2012.757343DOI Listing

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