Abstract
AbstractNeuromuscular fatigue (NMF) induces temporary reductions in muscle force production capacity, affecting various aspects of motor function. While studies have extensively explored NMF’s impact on muscle activation patterns and postural stability, its influence on motor adaptation processes remains less understood. This paper investigates the effects of localized NMF on motor adaptation during upright stance, focusing on reaching tasks. Utilizing a force field perturbation paradigm, participants performed reaching movements while standing upright before and after inducing NMF in the ankle dorsiflexor muscles. Results revealed that despite maintained postural stability, participants in the NMF group exhibited larger movement errors during reaching tasks, suggesting impaired motor adaptation. This was evident in both initial and terminal phases of adaptation, indicating a disruption in learning processes rather than a decreased adaptation rate. Analysis of electromyography activation patterns highlighted distinct strategies between groups, with the NMF group showing altered activation of both fatigued and non-fatigued muscles. Additionally, differences in co-activation patterns suggested compensatory mechanisms to prioritize postural stability despite NMF-induced disruptions. These findings underscore the complex interplay between NMF, motor adaptation, and postural control, suggesting a potential role for central nervous system mechanisms in mediating adaptation processes. Understanding these mechanisms has implications for sports performance, rehabilitation, and motor skill acquisition, where NMF may impact the learning and retention of motor tasks. Further research is warranted to elucidate the transient or long-term effects of NMF on motor adaptation and its implications for motor rehabilitation interventions.New & NoteworthyWe assessed motor adaptation during force field reaching following exercise-induced neuromuscular fatigue (NMF) on postural muscles. NMF impaired adaptation in performance. Similarly, diverging activation strategies were observed in the muscles. No effects were seen on measures of postural control. These results suggest the remodulation of motor commands to the muscles in presence of NMF, which may be relevant in settings where participants could be exposed to NMF while learning, such as sports and rehabilitation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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