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Journal Article

Citation

Mang DW, Siegmund GP, Blouin JS. JCCA J. Can. Chiropr. Assoc. 2014; 58(2): 109-118.

Affiliation

School of Kinesiology, UBC ; Brain Research Centre ; Institute for Computing, Information and Cognitive Systems (ICICS).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Canadian Chiropractic Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

24932015

PMCID

PMC4025081

Abstract

Whiplash injuries are the most common injuries following rear-end collisions. During a rear-end collision, the human muscle response consists of both a postural and a startle response that may exacerbate injury. However, most previous studies only assessed the presence of startle using data collected from the neck muscles and head/neck kinematics. The startle response also evokes a descending pattern of muscle recruitment and changes in autonomic activity. Here we examined the recruitment of axial and appendicular muscles along with autonomic responses to confirm whether these other features of a startle response were present during the first exposure to a whiplash perturbation. Ten subjects experienced a single whiplash perturbation while recording electromyography, electrocardiogram, and electrodermal responses. All subjects exhibited a descending pattern of muscle recruitment, and increasing heart rate and electrodermal responses following the collision. Our results provide further support that the startle response is a component of the response to whiplash collisions.

KEYWORDS:
chiropractic; perturbation; startle; whiplash


Language: en

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