Search results for "VIBRATION"

showing 10 items of 823 documents

Application of intermittent galvanic vestibular stimulation reveals age-related constraints in the multisensory reweighting of posture

2014

In this study we examined the effects of intermittent short-duration Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation (GVS) during a multisensory perturbation of posture in young and elderly adults. Twelve young (24.91 +/- 6.44 years) and eleven elderly (74.8 +/- 6.42 years) participants stood upright under two task conditions: (a) quiet standing and (b) standing while receiving pseudo-randomly presented bipolar 2 s GVS pulses. In both conditions, sensory reweighting was evoked by visual surround oscillations (20 cm, 0.3 Hz) and Achilles tendon vibration (3 mm, 80 Hz), concurrently delivered during the middle 60 s of standing. Intermittent GVS decreased the excessive postural sway induced by the concurrent …

AdultMaleAgingmedicine.medical_specialtyPhotic StimulationPostureSensory systemStimulationAudiologyVibration03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicinePostural BalanceHumansPostural BalanceGalvanic vestibular stimulationAged030304 developmental biologyVestibular system0303 health sciencesProprioceptionGeneral NeuroscienceProprioceptionElectric StimulationReflexFemaleVestibule LabyrinthVisual FieldsPsychologyPhotic Stimulation030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscience Letters
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The long-term effects of rally driving on spinal pathology

2000

Abstract Objectives. To investigate the consequences of rally driving on lumbar degenerative changes. Background. Vehicular driving is suspected to accelerate disc degeneration through whole-body vibration, leading to back problems. However, in an earlier well-controlled study of lumbar MRI findings in monozygotic twins, significant effects of lifetime driving on disc degeneration were not demonstrated. Another study of machine operators found only long-term exposure to vibration on unsprung seats led to a reduction in disc height. Design. Case-control study comparing rally drivers with population sample. Methods. Eighteen top rally drivers and co-drivers, mean age 43 yrs (SD, 10), voluntee…

AdultMaleAutomobile Drivingmedicine.medical_specialtyBiophysicsPoison controlVibrationTimeSpinal OsteophytosisLumbarPhysical medicine and rehabilitationInjury preventionmedicineBack painHumansWhole body vibrationOrthopedics and Sports MedicineIntervertebral DiscLumbar Vertebraemedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)Lumbosacral RegionMagnetic resonance imagingMagnetic Resonance ImagingSurgeryOccupational DiseasesBack PainCase-Control StudiesEpidemiological MonitoringDisc degenerationmedicine.symptombusinessIntervertebral Disc DisplacementEnvironmental MonitoringClinical Biomechanics
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Effects of grip and push forces on the acute response of the hand-arm system under vibrating conditions

1993

The purpose of the occupational medicine component of a joint research project was to study the effects of grip and push forces on the acute reaction of the hand-arm system under vibrating conditions. Several series of experiments were carried out by means of a vibration simulator in a laboratory environment in order to study biodynamic vibration behaviour, muscle response, skin temperature, shifts of the vibration perception threshold and the intensity of subjective vibration perception; in addition, field tests with hammer drills were conducted. On the whole, the findings obtained suggest that the coupling of the hand with the handle involved in using vibrating tools has a considerable im…

AdultMaleComputer sciencebusiness.industryMusclesMuscle responsePublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthBiomechanicsStructural engineeringHandVibrationlaw.inventionJoint researchVibrationVibration perceptionlawArmHumansSkin circulationHammerbusinessHand armInternational Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health
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Effects of combined hand-arm vibration and cold on skin temperature

1989

Under laboratory conditions 14 healthy male subjects were exposed to hand-arm vibration (ahzw = 6.3 m/s2) at different air temperatures (5 degrees, 12 degrees, 18 degrees and 25 degrees C). Static load (grip force 15 N, push force 40 N) was kept constant. Finger tip temperature as an indirect criterion of the peripheral blood circulation was measured. As expected, low air temperatures (5 degrees, 12 degrees and 18 degrees C) cause a strong decrease of skin temperature. Under additional stress of vibration connected with static load, a further decrease of the mean skin temperature was noted. At this, static load proved to have a predominant influence on the acute diminution of skin temperatu…

AdultMaleDiminutionmedicine.medical_specialtyMaterials sciencePhysical ExertionWork (physics)Public Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSkin temperatureVibrationPeripheral bloodSurgeryCold TemperatureVibrationStress (mechanics)Reference ValuesmedicineHumansGrip forceComposite materialSkin TemperatureHand armInternational Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health
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Evaluation of Support in Singing

2005

Summary This study searched for perceptual, acoustic, and physiological correlates of support in singing. Seven trained professional singers (four women and three men) sang repetitions of the syllable [pa:] at varying pitch and sound levels (1) habitually (with support) and (2) simulating singing without support. Estimate of subglottic pressure was obtained from oral pressure during [p]. Vocal fold vibration was registered with dual-channel electroglottography. Acoustic analyses were made on the recorded samples. All samples were also evaluated by the singers and other listeners, who were trained singers, singing students, and voice specialists without singing education (a total of 63 liste…

AdultMaleGlottisVoice Qualitymedia_common.quotation_subjectSpeech recognitionSpeech AcousticsSpeech and HearingProfessional CompetencePerceptionPressureHumansVocal fold vibrationOccupationsElectroglottographAgedmedia_commonAged 80 and overRespirationMiddle AgedLPN and LVNSelf perceptionSelf ConceptElectrophysiologySubglottic pressureOtorhinolaryngologySpeech PerceptionFemaleSingingSyllablePsychologyJournal of Voice
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The role of heterosynaptic facilitation in long-term potentiation (LTP) of human pain sensation

2008

Long-term potentiation (LTP) of nociceptive synaptic transmission induced by high-frequency electrical stimulation (HFS) predominantly modulates natural somatosensory perceptions mediated by Adelta- and Abeta-fibers in humans at the site of conditioning stimulation. The relative contribution of homo- and heterosynaptic mechanisms underlying those perceptual changes remained unclear. We therefore compared changes of the somatosensory profile between a conditioned skin site (homotopic zone) and an area adjacent to conditioning HFS (heterotopic zone). HFS of the ventral forearm in 24 healthy subjects (mean pain 41/100) led to an abrupt increase of pain to single electrical test stimuli (pain a…

AdultMalePain ThresholdHot TemperatureConditioning ClassicalLong-Term PotentiationPainStimulationSensory systemSomatosensory systemNerve Fibers MyelinatedVibrationYoung AdultPhysical StimulationPressuremedicineHumansHabituation PsychophysiologicAfferent PathwaysLong-term potentiationMiddle AgedElectric StimulationForearmAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineNociceptionNeurologyHyperalgesiaTouchSynapsesNeuropathic painHyperalgesiaSynaptic plasticityFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomPsychologyNeurosciencePain
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Hand-arm vibration syndrome: clinical characteristics, conventional electrophysiology and quantitative sensory testing.

2013

Abstract Objective Workers exposed to vibrating tools may develop hand-arm vibration syndrome (HAVS). We assessed the somatosensory phenotype using quantitative sensory testing (QST) in comparison to electrophysiology to characterize (1) the most sensitive QST parameter for detecting sensory loss, (2) the correlation of QST and electrophysiology, and (3) the frequency of a carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in HAVS. Methods QST, cold provocation tests, fine motor skills, and median nerve neurography were used. QST included thermal and mechanical detection and pain thresholds. Results Thirty-two patients were examined (54 ± 11 years, 91% men) at the more affected hand compared to 16 matched contro…

AdultMalePain Thresholdmedicine.medical_specialtySensory systemAudiologySomatosensory systemVibrationPhysiology (medical)Threshold of painMedicineHumansCarpal tunnel syndromeHand-Arm Vibration SyndromeAgedbusiness.industryMagnetic resonance neurographySensory lossMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseHandCarpal Tunnel SyndromeSensory SystemsMedian nerveCompound muscle action potentialMedian Nervebody regionsNeurologyAnesthesiaSensation DisordersFemaleNeurology (clinical)businessClinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
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The pattern and time course of somatosensory changes in the human UVB sunburn model reveal the presence of peripheral and central sensitization.

2013

The ultraviolet B (UVB) sunburn model was characterized with a comprehensive battery of quantitative sensory testing (QST). Primary hyperalgesia in UVB-irradiated skin and secondary hyperalgesia in adjacent nonirradiated skin were studied in 22 healthy subjects 24h after irradiation with UVB at 3-fold minimal erythema dose of a skin area 5 cm in diameter at the thigh and compared to mirror-image contralateral control areas. The time course of hyperalgesia over 96 h was studied in a subgroup of 12 subjects. Within the sunburn area, cold hyperesthesia (P=.01), profound generalized hyperalgesia to heat (P.001), cold (P.05), pinprick and pressure (P.001), and mild dynamic mechanical allodynia (…

AdultMalePain Thresholdmedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsUltraviolet RaysSunburnSensory systemSomatosensory systemVibrationYoung AdultInternal medicinePhysical StimulationNeural PathwaysmedicineLaser-Doppler FlowmetryPsychophysicsHumansSunburnskin and connective tissue diseasesSensitizationPain MeasurementSkinAnalysis of VarianceCentral Nervous System Sensitizationintegumentary systembusiness.industryHyperesthesiaDose-Response Relationship Radiationmedicine.diseasePeripheralAnesthesiology and Pain Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyNeurologyHyperalgesiaAnesthesiaNeuropathic painHyperalgesiaFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessPainReferences
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Effects of botulinum toxin type A on vibration induced facilitation of motor evoked potentials in spasmodic torticollis.

2004

It has not been clarified if botulinum toxin (BTX) injection leads to muscle spindle dysfunction in man. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that BTX application reduces the facilitation of a magnetic evoked response (MEP).We used the vibration induced facilitation of an MEP of the sternocleidomastoid muscle (SCM) as a surrogate marker for muscle spindle function in 20 healthy subjects and 10 patients with idiopathic rotational torticollis in whom BTX was injected unilaterally.The increase in the amplitude and area of the MEPs in the clinically not affected and untreated SCM of the patients did not differ significantly from the controls. At baseline, the vibration induced increase in th…

AdultMalePapermedicine.medical_specialtyMuscle spindleSpasmodic Torticolliscomplex mixturesInjections IntramuscularVibrationNeck MusclesMedicineHumansBotulinum Toxins Type ATorticollisAgedDenervationMuscle DenervationDose-Response Relationship Drugbusiness.industryMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseEvoked Potentials MotorBotulinum toxinMuscle DenervationSurgeryNerve RegenerationPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuromuscular AgentsAnesthesiaSurgeryFemaleNeurology (clinical)businessSternocleidomastoid musclemedicine.drugTorticollisReinnervationJournal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry
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Effects of whole-body vertical shock-type vibration on human ability for fine manual control

1991

The effects of vertical (z-axis) whole-body shock-type vibration on the ability for fine manual control were examined. The amplitudes and frequency of the shocks was varied, but a constant frequency-weighted acceleration of 1.25 m/s2 r.m.s. was maintained. The examination of the shock's effects was carried out using an experimental system that simulated the actual workplace of earth-moving machinery. Control was measured using a first-order pursuit tracking-test, in which a seated subject was asked to use both hands to direct a cursor on a monitor using a steering wheel. Although the magnitude of shocks (peak amplitude of 6-10 m/s2) and the number of shocks per unit time (shock cycle of 10-…

AdultMalePhysicsElectroshockAcousticsMagnitude (mathematics)Physical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationHuman Factors and ErgonomicsSteering wheelVibrationSquare (algebra)Shock (mechanics)Tracking errorVibrationAccelerationAmplitudeMotor SkillsTask Performance and AnalysisHumansSimulationErgonomics
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