Sensors (Aug 2023)

An Investigation of Surface EMG Shorts-Derived Training Load during Treadmill Running

  • Kurtis Ashcroft,
  • Tony Robinson,
  • Joan Condell,
  • Victoria Penpraze,
  • Andrew White,
  • Stephen P. Bird

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s23156998
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 15
p. 6998

Abstract

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The purpose of this study was two-fold: (1) to determine the sensitivity of the sEMG shorts-derived training load (sEMG-TL) during different running speeds; and (2) to investigate the relationship between the oxygen consumption, heart rate (HR), rating of perceived exertion (RPE), accelerometry-based PlayerLoadTM (PL), and sEMG-TL during a running maximum oxygen uptake (V˙O2max) test. The study investigated ten healthy participants. On day one, participants performed a three-speed treadmill test at 8, 10, and 12 km·h−1 for 2 min at each speed. On day two, participants performed a V˙O2max test. Analysis of variance found significant differences in sEMG-TL at all three speeds (p V˙O2max (r = 0.31, p r = 0.72–0.97, p V˙O2max (p > 0.05) and only demonstrated significant correlations in 3 out of 10 participants at the individual level. Therefore, the sEMG shorts-derived training load was sensitive in detecting a work rate difference of at least 2 km·h−1. sEMG-TL may be an acceptable metric for the measurement of internal loads and could potentially be used as a surrogate for oxygen consumption.

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