Authors
Christopher John Chapman
Publication date
2018
Institution
University of Toronto (Canada)
Description
Bodyweight unilateral lower limb exercise tasks (BULLETs) are used in movement assessment and (re) training contexts. Since kinematic characteristics of individual BULLETs are different, it was hypothesized that lower extremity biomechanical loading patterns would differ between BULLETs. Thirty-two participants performed bodyweight forward lunges, backward lunges, split squats, single-leg squats, and double-leg squats. Body segment kinematics and ground reaction forces were used to quantify body-size normalized, lower limb net joint moments. Peak and average hip, knee, ankle, and total support moments differed across BULLETs (p< 0.05). Sex-based differences were observed for peak and average support moment, and peak knee moment (p< 0.05). Characterizing BULLETs based on joint moment magnitudes can be used to improve the sensitivity and specificity of movement assessments and to …
Total citations
2022202322