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Mechanisms underlying performance impairments following prolonged static stretching without a comprehensive warm-up.
Eur J Appl Physiol. 2021 Jan; 121(1):67-94.EJ

Abstract

Whereas a variety of pre-exercise activities have been incorporated as part of a "warm-up" prior to work, combat, and athletic activities for millennia, the inclusion of static stretching (SS) within a warm-up has lost favor in the last 25 years. Research emphasized the possibility of SS-induced impairments in subsequent performance following prolonged stretching without proper dynamic warm-up activities. Proposed mechanisms underlying stretch-induced deficits include both neural (i.e., decreased voluntary activation, persistent inward current effects on motoneuron excitability) and morphological (i.e., changes in the force-length relationship, decreased Ca2+ sensitivity, alterations in parallel elastic component) factors. Psychological influences such as a mental energy deficit and nocebo effects could also adversely affect performance. However, significant practical limitations exist within published studies, e.g., long-stretching durations, stretching exercises with little task specificity, lack of warm-up before/after stretching, testing performed immediately after stretch completion, and risk of investigator and participant bias. Recent research indicates that appropriate durations of static stretching performed within a full warm-up (i.e., aerobic activities before and task-specific dynamic stretching and intense physical activities after SS) have trivial effects on subsequent performance with some evidence of improved force output at longer muscle lengths. For conditions in which muscular force production is compromised by stretching, knowledge of the underlying mechanisms would aid development of mitigation strategies. However, these mechanisms are yet to be perfectly defined. More information is needed to better understand both the warm-up components and mechanisms that contribute to performance enhancements or impairments when SS is incorporated within a pre-activity warm-up.

Authors+Show Affiliations

School of Human Kinetics and Recreation, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, NL, A1C 5S7, Canada. dbehm@mun.ca.Sport, Exercise and Life Sciences, School of Health, The University of Northampton, Northampton, NN2 7AL, UK.Faculty of Health, School-Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.Centre for Exercise and Sports Science Research, Edith Cowan University, Joondalup Campus, Joondalup, WA, 6027, Australia.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Systematic Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

33175242

Citation

Behm, David G., et al. "Mechanisms Underlying Performance Impairments Following Prolonged Static Stretching Without a Comprehensive Warm-up." European Journal of Applied Physiology, vol. 121, no. 1, 2021, pp. 67-94.
Behm DG, Kay AD, Trajano GS, et al. Mechanisms underlying performance impairments following prolonged static stretching without a comprehensive warm-up. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2021;121(1):67-94.
Behm, D. G., Kay, A. D., Trajano, G. S., & Blazevich, A. J. (2021). Mechanisms underlying performance impairments following prolonged static stretching without a comprehensive warm-up. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 121(1), 67-94. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-020-04538-8
Behm DG, et al. Mechanisms Underlying Performance Impairments Following Prolonged Static Stretching Without a Comprehensive Warm-up. Eur J Appl Physiol. 2021;121(1):67-94. PubMed PMID: 33175242.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Mechanisms underlying performance impairments following prolonged static stretching without a comprehensive warm-up. AU - Behm,David G, AU - Kay,Anthony D, AU - Trajano,Gabriel S, AU - Blazevich,Anthony J, Y1 - 2020/11/11/ PY - 2020/08/22/received PY - 2020/10/21/accepted PY - 2020/11/12/pubmed PY - 2021/9/29/medline PY - 2020/11/11/entrez KW - Flexibility KW - Muscle morphology KW - Neural KW - Range of motion KW - Sport KW - Warm-up SP - 67 EP - 94 JF - European journal of applied physiology JO - Eur J Appl Physiol VL - 121 IS - 1 N2 - Whereas a variety of pre-exercise activities have been incorporated as part of a "warm-up" prior to work, combat, and athletic activities for millennia, the inclusion of static stretching (SS) within a warm-up has lost favor in the last 25 years. Research emphasized the possibility of SS-induced impairments in subsequent performance following prolonged stretching without proper dynamic warm-up activities. Proposed mechanisms underlying stretch-induced deficits include both neural (i.e., decreased voluntary activation, persistent inward current effects on motoneuron excitability) and morphological (i.e., changes in the force-length relationship, decreased Ca2+ sensitivity, alterations in parallel elastic component) factors. Psychological influences such as a mental energy deficit and nocebo effects could also adversely affect performance. However, significant practical limitations exist within published studies, e.g., long-stretching durations, stretching exercises with little task specificity, lack of warm-up before/after stretching, testing performed immediately after stretch completion, and risk of investigator and participant bias. Recent research indicates that appropriate durations of static stretching performed within a full warm-up (i.e., aerobic activities before and task-specific dynamic stretching and intense physical activities after SS) have trivial effects on subsequent performance with some evidence of improved force output at longer muscle lengths. For conditions in which muscular force production is compromised by stretching, knowledge of the underlying mechanisms would aid development of mitigation strategies. However, these mechanisms are yet to be perfectly defined. More information is needed to better understand both the warm-up components and mechanisms that contribute to performance enhancements or impairments when SS is incorporated within a pre-activity warm-up. SN - 1439-6327 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/33175242/Mechanisms_underlying_performance_impairments_following_prolonged_static_stretching_without_a_comprehensive_warm_up_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -