Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle Activity

# Background/Purpose The Elastic band pull-apart exercise is commonly used in rehabilitation. It involves pulling an elastic resistance band with both hands in horizontal abduction or diagonal arm movements. The extent of muscle activation during this exercise is unknown. The purpose of this study...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Takumi Fukunaga, Connor Fedge, Timothy Tyler, Michael Mullaney, Brandon Schmitt, Karl Orishimo, Malachy McHugh, Stephen Nicholas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North American Sports Medicine Institute 2022-04-01
Series:International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26603/001c.33026
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1825197023408685056
author Takumi Fukunaga
Connor Fedge
Timothy Tyler
Michael Mullaney
Brandon Schmitt
Karl Orishimo
Malachy McHugh
Stephen Nicholas
author_facet Takumi Fukunaga
Connor Fedge
Timothy Tyler
Michael Mullaney
Brandon Schmitt
Karl Orishimo
Malachy McHugh
Stephen Nicholas
author_sort Takumi Fukunaga
collection DOAJ
description # Background/Purpose The Elastic band pull-apart exercise is commonly used in rehabilitation. It involves pulling an elastic resistance band with both hands in horizontal abduction or diagonal arm movements. The extent of muscle activation during this exercise is unknown. The purpose of this study was to measure the electromyographic (EMG) activity of shoulder-girdle muscles during the pull-apart exercise using resistance bands and to determine the effects of arm position and movement direction on shoulder-girdle muscle activity. # Materials/Methods Surface EMG activity was measured on the infraspinatus, upper trapezius, middle trapezius, lower trapezius and posterior deltoid of the dominant shoulder. After measurement of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) for each muscle, subjects performed the band pull-apart exercise in three hand positions (palm up, neutral, palm down) and three movement directions (diagonal up, horizontal, diagonal down). Elastic band resistance was chosen to elicit moderate exertion (5/10 on the Borg CR10 scale). The order of the exercises was randomized and three repetitions of each exercise were performed. Mean peak EMG activity in each muscle across the repetitions was calculated and expressed as a percentage of MVC. Peak normalized EMG activity in each muscle was compared in two-way (hand position x direction) repeated-measures ANOVA. # Results Data were collected from 10 healthy subjects (all males, age 36±12 years). Peak muscle activity ranged from 15.3% to 72.6% of MVC across muscles and exercise conditions. There was a significant main effect of hand position for the infraspinatus and lower trapezius, where muscle activity was highest with the palm up hand position (p < 0.001), and for the upper trapezius and posterior deltoid, where muscle activity was highest with the palm down position (p-value range < 0.001-0.004). There was a significant main effect of movement direction, where the diagonal up direction demonstrated the highest muscle activity for the infraspinatus, upper trapezius, lower trapezius, and posterior deltoid (p-value range < 0.001-0.02). # Conclusion Altering hand position and movement direction during performance of an elastic band pull-apart exercise can affect magnitudes of shoulder-girdle muscle activity. Clinicians may alter a patient’s hand position and movement direction while performing the band pull-apart exercise in order to increase muscle activity in target muscles or diminish muscle activity in other muscles. # Level of Evidence 2b
format Article
id doaj-art-878a2765e0b44e53a99acd2dfcf129f3
institution Kabale University
issn 2159-2896
language English
publishDate 2022-04-01
publisher North American Sports Medicine Institute
record_format Article
series International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy
spelling doaj-art-878a2765e0b44e53a99acd2dfcf129f32025-02-11T20:28:09ZengNorth American Sports Medicine InstituteInternational Journal of Sports Physical Therapy2159-28962022-04-01173Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle ActivityTakumi FukunagaConnor FedgeTimothy TylerMichael MullaneyBrandon SchmittKarl OrishimoMalachy McHughStephen Nicholas# Background/Purpose The Elastic band pull-apart exercise is commonly used in rehabilitation. It involves pulling an elastic resistance band with both hands in horizontal abduction or diagonal arm movements. The extent of muscle activation during this exercise is unknown. The purpose of this study was to measure the electromyographic (EMG) activity of shoulder-girdle muscles during the pull-apart exercise using resistance bands and to determine the effects of arm position and movement direction on shoulder-girdle muscle activity. # Materials/Methods Surface EMG activity was measured on the infraspinatus, upper trapezius, middle trapezius, lower trapezius and posterior deltoid of the dominant shoulder. After measurement of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) for each muscle, subjects performed the band pull-apart exercise in three hand positions (palm up, neutral, palm down) and three movement directions (diagonal up, horizontal, diagonal down). Elastic band resistance was chosen to elicit moderate exertion (5/10 on the Borg CR10 scale). The order of the exercises was randomized and three repetitions of each exercise were performed. Mean peak EMG activity in each muscle across the repetitions was calculated and expressed as a percentage of MVC. Peak normalized EMG activity in each muscle was compared in two-way (hand position x direction) repeated-measures ANOVA. # Results Data were collected from 10 healthy subjects (all males, age 36±12 years). Peak muscle activity ranged from 15.3% to 72.6% of MVC across muscles and exercise conditions. There was a significant main effect of hand position for the infraspinatus and lower trapezius, where muscle activity was highest with the palm up hand position (p < 0.001), and for the upper trapezius and posterior deltoid, where muscle activity was highest with the palm down position (p-value range < 0.001-0.004). There was a significant main effect of movement direction, where the diagonal up direction demonstrated the highest muscle activity for the infraspinatus, upper trapezius, lower trapezius, and posterior deltoid (p-value range < 0.001-0.02). # Conclusion Altering hand position and movement direction during performance of an elastic band pull-apart exercise can affect magnitudes of shoulder-girdle muscle activity. Clinicians may alter a patient’s hand position and movement direction while performing the band pull-apart exercise in order to increase muscle activity in target muscles or diminish muscle activity in other muscles. # Level of Evidence 2bhttps://doi.org/10.26603/001c.33026
spellingShingle Takumi Fukunaga
Connor Fedge
Timothy Tyler
Michael Mullaney
Brandon Schmitt
Karl Orishimo
Malachy McHugh
Stephen Nicholas
Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle Activity
International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy
title Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle Activity
title_full Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle Activity
title_fullStr Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle Activity
title_full_unstemmed Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle Activity
title_short Band Pull-Apart Exercise: Effects of Movement Direction and Hand Position on Shoulder Muscle Activity
title_sort band pull apart exercise effects of movement direction and hand position on shoulder muscle activity
url https://doi.org/10.26603/001c.33026
work_keys_str_mv AT takumifukunaga bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity
AT connorfedge bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity
AT timothytyler bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity
AT michaelmullaney bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity
AT brandonschmitt bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity
AT karlorishimo bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity
AT malachymchugh bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity
AT stephennicholas bandpullapartexerciseeffectsofmovementdirectionandhandpositiononshouldermuscleactivity