000 01801nab a2200217 c 4500
001 myd_86918
003 ES-MaCDM
005 20241003081904.0
008 181003s2013 sp ||||fr 00| u|spa u
040 _aES-MaCDM
100 1 _aWyon, Matthew A.
_9103807
245 0 _aMuscular Fatigue
_b Considerations for Dance
_cWYON, Matthew; KOUTEDAKIS, Yiannis
260 _c2013:
_bJ. Michael Ryan Publishing,
_aAndover, NJ
336 _aTexto (visual)
337 _aSin mediación
520 _aRESUMEN: Muscular fatigue can be defined as the failure to maintain an expected power output. It is a multifaceted phenomenon that incorporates metabolic, neural and neuromuscular components, among others. Metabolic causes of fatigue are associated with the ability to maintain energy supply during exercise, the speed at which homeostasis is achieved post-exercise, and the effects of high intensity exercise by-products on the peripheral neuromuscular system. Research has indicated that the central nervous system plays a protective role in preventing catastrophic muscle damage by reducing the intensity and frequency of propagation founded on biofeedback from the muscle cells. The duration and particularly the type of physical activity play a role in the development of muscle fatigue, with impact or weightbearing exercises, such as dance, producing increased symptoms compared to non-impact or non-weightbearing equivalents. The effects of prolonged exercise and the associated increased levels of muscle fatigue that may lead to compromises in neuromuscular propagation need to be considered in dance.
700 1 _aKoutedakis, Yiannis
_9136341
773 0 _tJournal of dance, medicine & science
_072900
_wmyd_16043
_gVol. 17, núm. 2, 2013, p. 63
903 _a86918
_b86918
942 _cART
999 _c123209
_d123209