Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

decompression bubbles

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • decompression bubbles

    I have a colleague here at JSC who is studying the effects of physical
    activity on the development of decompression sickness (the bends). The
    development of "bubbles" in the joint cavities is apparently influenced by
    certain types of physical activity. For example those people who engaged
    in locomotion or push-up's were more likely to develop the bends during
    decompression than those who engaged in activities such as hand ergometer
    exercise, turning a torque wrench, or a form of rowing (upper limbs only).
    My colleague is trying to identify dimensions that separate these two
    groups [locomotion or push-up's] vs. [hand ergometer exercise, turning a
    torque wrench, or a form of rowing] relative to musculoskeletal dynamics.

    I have asked him for details on the kinetics involved in each of the upper
    body activities he used since there could be distinct power requirements.
    However, it occurred to me that perhaps one difference is the necessity for
    the maintenance of joint stability. An analogy is performance of the bench
    press using a machine vs performance of the bench press using free weights.
    In locomotion

    Consequently I have two questions for this forum:

    1) Has there been any research studying muscular activation patterns and
    the role of joint "stabilizers" in various activities?

    2) Do you have any other suggestions as to dimensions that separate these
    two groups of physical activity.


    As always I will post a summary of replies.



    __________________________________________________ ______________
    Vernon McDonald | Motor Performance Lab.
    KRUG Life Sciences, | NASA/Johnson Space Center
    TEL: (713)-244-6349 |
    FAX: (713)-483-3058 | vmcdonald@plato.jsc.nasa.gov
    __________________________________________________ ______________
Working...
X