Fitness & Sportmedizin

The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of a jumping-fitness training on mini-trampolines on endurance capacity, trunk strength and reactive jump performance. 21 healthy, untrained volunteers were separated in an intervention group (n=12: age 224 years, BMI 22.62.6kg/m) and a control...

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Autores principales: Witassek C, Nitzsche N, Schulz H
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EN
Publicado: Dynamic Media Sales Verlag 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/cd513d8ce42e44e9b9e2c02a47d6f01e
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:cd513d8ce42e44e9b9e2c02a47d6f01e2021-11-16T19:01:41ZFitness & Sportmedizin0344-59252510-526410.5960/dzsm.2018.318https://doaj.org/article/cd513d8ce42e44e9b9e2c02a47d6f01e2018-02-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.germanjournalsportsmedicine.com/archive/archive-2018/heft-2/the-effect-of-several-weeks-of-training-with-mini-trampolines-on-jump-performance-trunk-strength-and-endurance-performance/https://doaj.org/toc/0344-5925https://doaj.org/toc/2510-5264The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of a jumping-fitness training on mini-trampolines on endurance capacity, trunk strength and reactive jump performance. 21 healthy, untrained volunteers were separated in an intervention group (n=12: age 224 years, BMI 22.62.6kg/m) and a control group (n=10: age 253 years, BMI 22.84.3kg/m). The participants in the intervention group completed an eightweek standardized jumping training on mini-trampolines with three training-sessions (TS) per week on average. The control group received no intervention. Pre- and posttests included a treadmill-test and a jumping-test to examine reactive jump performance (drop jump). Furthermore trunk strength was measured using an isometric maximum test. Additionally heart rate (HR), energy expenditure and perceived exertion (BORG 6-20) were monitored during all TS. After eight weeks of intervention jumping group showed significant increases in running speed at V4 and isometric maximum strength in trunk extension. Changes in jump performance were not significant (p>0.01). A nonsignificant group*time interaction was found (p>0.05). Control group showed no significant increase in all parameters (p>0.05). Participants of intervention group trained at 834% compared to their maximum heart rate. The mean energy expenditure was 9.72.5kcal/min during TS. The mean perceived exertion was 14.22.2 (somewhat hard/hard) and decreased over intervention period. The results show, that standardized jumping training on minitrampoline is a vigorous conditioning training and should be control on the effectiveness. KEY WORDS: Trampoline Exercise, Jumping, Endurance, Trunk StrengthWitassek CNitzsche NSchulz HDynamic Media Sales VerlagarticleSports medicineRC1200-1245DEENDeutsche Zeitschrift für Sportmedizin, Vol 69, Iss 2 (2018)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language DE
EN
topic Sports medicine
RC1200-1245
spellingShingle Sports medicine
RC1200-1245
Witassek C
Nitzsche N
Schulz H
Fitness & Sportmedizin
description The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of a jumping-fitness training on mini-trampolines on endurance capacity, trunk strength and reactive jump performance. 21 healthy, untrained volunteers were separated in an intervention group (n=12: age 224 years, BMI 22.62.6kg/m) and a control group (n=10: age 253 years, BMI 22.84.3kg/m). The participants in the intervention group completed an eightweek standardized jumping training on mini-trampolines with three training-sessions (TS) per week on average. The control group received no intervention. Pre- and posttests included a treadmill-test and a jumping-test to examine reactive jump performance (drop jump). Furthermore trunk strength was measured using an isometric maximum test. Additionally heart rate (HR), energy expenditure and perceived exertion (BORG 6-20) were monitored during all TS. After eight weeks of intervention jumping group showed significant increases in running speed at V4 and isometric maximum strength in trunk extension. Changes in jump performance were not significant (p>0.01). A nonsignificant group*time interaction was found (p>0.05). Control group showed no significant increase in all parameters (p>0.05). Participants of intervention group trained at 834% compared to their maximum heart rate. The mean energy expenditure was 9.72.5kcal/min during TS. The mean perceived exertion was 14.22.2 (somewhat hard/hard) and decreased over intervention period. The results show, that standardized jumping training on minitrampoline is a vigorous conditioning training and should be control on the effectiveness. KEY WORDS: Trampoline Exercise, Jumping, Endurance, Trunk Strength
format article
author Witassek C
Nitzsche N
Schulz H
author_facet Witassek C
Nitzsche N
Schulz H
author_sort Witassek C
title Fitness & Sportmedizin
title_short Fitness & Sportmedizin
title_full Fitness & Sportmedizin
title_fullStr Fitness & Sportmedizin
title_full_unstemmed Fitness & Sportmedizin
title_sort fitness & sportmedizin
publisher Dynamic Media Sales Verlag
publishDate 2018
url https://doaj.org/article/cd513d8ce42e44e9b9e2c02a47d6f01e
work_keys_str_mv AT witassekc fitnessampsportmedizin
AT nitzschen fitnessampsportmedizin
AT schulzh fitnessampsportmedizin
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