Acute effects of jaw clenching while wearing a customized bitealigning mouthguard on muscle activity and force production during maximal upper body isometric strength
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Author
Miró, Adrià
Buscà Safont-Tria, Bernat
Arboix-Alió, Jordi
Huerta, Pol
Aguilera-Castells, Joan
Other authors
Universitat Ramon Llull. Facultat de Psicologia, Ciències de l'Educació i de l'Esport Blanquerna
Publication date
2022-12Abstract
Background/Objective: The possible mechanisms supporting the relationship between the masticatory
and the musculoskeletal systems have been recently investigated. It has been suggested that jaw
clenching promotes ergogenic effects on prime movers through the phenomenon of concurrent activation potentiation (CAP). The purpose of this study was to analyse the effects of jaw clenching and jaw
clenching while wearing mouthguard (MG) on muscle activity and force output during three upper body
isometric strength tests.
Methods: Twelve highly trained rink-hockey athletes were recruited for the study. A randomized,
repeated measures within study design was carried out to compare the acute effects of three experimental conditions: jaw clenching while wearing MG (MG), jaw clenching without MG (JAW) and nonjaw clenching (NON-JAW).
Results: Statistical analyses revealed significant higher force output (p < 0.05) in all tests for MG conditions with respect to NON-JAW. When comparing JAW and NON-JAW conditions an increased peak
force was found in handgrip (p ¼ 0.045, d ¼ 0.26) and bench press (p ¼ 0.018, d ¼ 0.43) but not in biceps
curl (p ¼ 0.562, d ¼ 0.13). When comparing MG and JAW conditions, no differences were observed in any
force output. In terms of muscle activity, significant differences were found in the agonist muscles of the
handgrip test for MG with respect to NON-JAW (p ¼ 0.031e0.046, d ¼ 0.25e1.1).
Conclusion: This study demonstrated that jaw clenching, with and without MG, may be a good strategy
to elicit the CAP phenomenon, which seems to promote ergogenic effects in upper body isometric force
production. The non-significant differences observed between JAW and MG suggested that the use of MG
doesn't make a difference in enhancing the isometric force production neither the muscle activity in
upper body isometric strength.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Keywords
Protectors bucals
Esports
Pages
8
Publisher
Elsevier (Singapur)
Is part of
Journal of Exercise Science & Fitness, 21(2023), 157-164
Grant agreement number
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FPCEEB/PIF1920-PSITIC
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
Rights
© The Society of Chinese Scholars on Exercise Physiology and Fitness
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/