NLM Gateway
A service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health
Your Entrance to
Resources from the
National Library of Medicine
    Home      Term Finder      Limits/Settings      Search Details      History      My Locker        About      Help      FAQ    
Skip Navigation Side Barintended for web crawlers only

Estimation of elbow joint position before, during, and following a 17-day spaceflight.

McCall GE, Boorman GI, Goulet C, Edgerton VR.

Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1998 May; 30: S337.

University of California, Los Angeles, USA.

The ability to estimate elbow joint position was tested in four male astronauts before (-30 and -12 days), during (1, 4, 9, and 15 days), and after (+1, +5, +9. and +16 days) a l7-day spaceflight (STS-78). Subjects were asked to estimate 90 or l35 degrees joint angles during passive (relaxed) and active (10% maximal agonist effort) isokinetic extension (EXT) and flexion (FLX). Subjects also estimated these joint positions during low resistance isotonic EXT. For each angle, 6 (isokinetic) and 3 (isotonic) trials were requested in random order. Across all test conditions, the mean angle estimate ranges were 93 degrees-118 degrees and 119 degrees-152 degrees for requested angles of 90 degrees and 135 degrees, respectively. Subjects overestimated the 90 degrees position across all conditions whereas the accuracy of the 135 degrees estimate varied. Angle estimates were most accurate during isokinetic FLX for 90 degrees (mean error +9.8 degrees) and isokinetic EXT for 135 degrees (mean error +0.7 degrees). No differences occurred between passive vs. active isokinetic EXT or FLX. Estimates of each joint angle during isokinetic EXT were less than isotonic EXT, but greater than isokinetic FLX (P<0.005). During spaceflight, joint angle estimates were lower during isokinetic FLX and EXT for 90 degrees (P<0.005) and 135 degrees (P < or = 0.10) compared to preflight. Spaceflight also decreased angle estimates during isotonic FLX and EXT (P<0.05). Elbow angle estimates had returned to preflight values one day after return to 1G. These data demonstrate that elbow joint angle estimation was: 1) decreased during spaceflight, particularly for isotonic conditions 2) rapidly restored to preflight values upon return to 1G; and 3) not changed by low level agonist muscle exertion during isokinetic movements These data indicate that the proprioception of elbow joint position is altered by microgravity but rapidly readapts to preflight control values after return to 1G. Supported by NAS-18773, and NIH, NRSA(DE07212) and NIDR.

Publication Types:
  • Meeting Abstracts
Keywords:
  • Elbow
  • Elbow Joint
  • Exertion
  • Joints
  • Male
  • Movement
  • Muscles
  • Proprioception
  • Space Flight
  • Weightlessness
  • NASA Discipline Musculoskeletal
  • NASA Experiment Number 284036
  • Non-NASA Center
Other ID:
  • 99605124
UI: 102237339

From Meeting Abstracts




Contact Us
U.S. National Library of Medicine |  National Institutes of Health |  Health & Human Services
Privacy |  Copyright |  Accessibility |  Freedom of Information Act |  USA.gov