Publication | Closed Access
The Spinal Injured Athlete
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1990
Year
Physical ActivitySpinal DisorderOrthopaedic SurgerySport InjuryKinesiologyExercisePhysical ExerciseApplied PhysiologyO 2Health SciencesSpinal Cord InjuryPhysical FitnessMusculoskeletal FunctionSpinal InjuryRehabilitationPhysiological VariablesSpinal Injured AthletePhysical TherapyExercise ScienceExercise PhysiologySpinal TraumaMusculoskeletal InteractionAthletic TrainingMedicineSport-related Injuries
Physiological variables identified as important factors in athletic performance are discussed in relation to the spinal cord injured (SCI) athlete. These include body composition, pulmonary function, cardiorespiratory efficiency, muscular strength and endurance, and anaerobic power. SCI athletes are less fat and have a larger lean body mass than nonathletes, and male SCI are less fat than female SCI. Static lung volumes are usually below normal values in SCI subjects, but athletic SCI subjects tend to have higher values than sedentary SCI. Sedentary SCI subjects have lower aerobic power (O 2 max) than the general able-bodied (AB) sedentary population on tests of arm cranking or wheelchair ergometry. Low-lesion paraplegics generally achieve O 2 max values comparable to AB subjects. O 2 max is inversely related to level of injury, that is, the higher the SCI, the lower the O 2 max. However, elite SCI athletes are capable of achieving very high levels of O 2 max during arm exercise. SCI subjects respond well to strength and muscular endurance training. Paraplegic subjects achieve higher anaerobic power scores than quadriplegic subjects. Increases in O 2 max occur at about the same magnitude as in AB subjects. The required intensity level appears to be about 70–80% of maximal heart rate reserve.