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Age-related decrease in joint flexibility leads to difficulties in activities of daily living and an increased risk of falls. The current study investigated whether nerve-directed stretching, which focuses on stretching neural tissue, could acutely improve joint flexibility and tissue stiffness more than muscle-directed stretching or not. Twenty-seven older men performed muscle- and nerve-directed stretching for 400 s (40 s × 10 times) on separate days. Before and after stretching, maximum ankle dorsiflexion angle was measured as range of motion (ROM). Shear wave propagation velocity (SWV) was also assessed as tissue stiffness of the sciatic nerve, medial gastrocnemius, posterior thigh fascia, and posterior leg fascia in anatomical position. In both stretching conditions, increment of ROM and reduction of sciatic nerve SWV were observed after stretching. The extent of these changes did not differ between the stretching conditions. The SWVs of tissues other than the sciatic nerve did not change before and after the stretching. These results suggest that acute effects of nerve-directed stretching on joint flexibility and tissue stiffness are not superior to muscle-directed stretching.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3164/jcbn.24-238 | DOI Listing |
J Clin Biochem Nutr
May 2025
College of Systems Engineering and Science, Shibaura Institute of Technology, 307 Fukasaku, Minuma-ku, Saitama 337-8570, Japan.
Age-related decrease in joint flexibility leads to difficulties in activities of daily living and an increased risk of falls. The current study investigated whether nerve-directed stretching, which focuses on stretching neural tissue, could acutely improve joint flexibility and tissue stiffness more than muscle-directed stretching or not. Twenty-seven older men performed muscle- and nerve-directed stretching for 400 s (40 s × 10 times) on separate days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
November 2020
Laboratory of Movement, Interactions, Performance (EA 4334), Faculty of Sport Sciences, Nantes, University of Nantes, France.
Tissue-directed stretching interventions can preferentially load muscular or nonmuscular structures such as peripheral nerves. How these tissues adapt mechanically to long-term stretching is poorly understood. This randomized, single-blind, controlled study used ultrasonography and dynamometry to compare the effects of 12-wk nerve-directed and muscle-directed stretching programs versus control on maximal ankle dorsiflexion range of motion (ROM) and passive torque, shear wave velocity (SWV; an index of stiffness), and architecture of triceps surae and sciatic nerve.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF