This is the first study that experienced the effects of 6 wk of WBV training on the kinematical characteristics of sprint running in non experiences athletes. The results of this study clearly indicate that performance in 10 m, 20 m, 40 m, 50 m and 60 m significantly improved after WBV training with an overall improvement of 2.7%. Additionally the step length, step rate and running velocity were improved by 5.1%, 3.4% and 3.6% respectively (mean improvements). It can be argued that increasing the step length could produce a faster velocity. However, if the step length increased and the muscle force remained the same, the step rate should decrease (Paradisis and Cooke, 2006). According to that, producing a slower step rate should lose the gain from a greater step length. The results of the present study indicate that the gain of the step length was greater than the decrease of the step rate (5.6% vs -3.9%;), so the net effect was an improvement of the running velocity. However, the induced improvement in sprint running kinematics found in the present study contracts with the results of Cochrane et al. (2004) and Delecluse et al., 2005. The different results between the present study and that of Cochrane et al., (2004) could be partially explained by the use of other WBV training programs (total exercise 16 - 36 min per session vs 10 min), different duration of the respective training volume (18 training sessions vs 9), different frequency vibration (30 Hz vs 26 Hz) and different sprint test distances (60 m vs 20 m), respectively. It should be mentioned that Cochrane et al., (2004) concluded that the short duration (9 training sessions) could have contributed to the lack of significant changes. The differences between the present study and that of Delecluse et al., 2005 were the WBV training programs (total exercise 16 - 36 min per session vs 9 - 18 min), the duration of the respective training period (5 wk vs 6 wk), the frequency of vibration (30 Hz vs 35 - 40 Hz), the sprint test distances (60 m vs 30 m) and the participants (non-experienced vs elite sprint-trained athletes) respectively. Most probably in sprint-trained athletes, high resistance training, plyometric drills and sprint running exercise already render a specific training of fast-twitch fibers (Ross and Riek, 2001). In these athletes, muscle strength, motoneuron excitability, fast-twitch fiber recruitment and reflex sensitivity are well developed (Delecluse, 1997; Ross and Riek, 2001). This may explain why WBV training did not affect sprint running performance in sprint-trained athletes, despite the significant changes in non-experienced athletes shown in the present study, as this latter group had a much larger margin to increase the neural drive to the muscle (Delecluse et al., 2005). The CMJ height, a measure of explosive strength, increased by 3.3% after the 6 wk of WBV training. In addition, the 30CVJT, a measure of explosive strength endurance, improved overall by 7.8%. The induced improvement in CMJ found in the present study is comparable to the 8.5% in the study of Torvinen et al., 2002a and to the 7.6% in the study of Delecluse et al., 2003. The differences in CMJ height improvements could be partially explained by the use of other WBV training programs and the different duration of the respective training periods. In the study of Torvinen et al., 2002a, participants trained 4 min per session on the WBV platform, compared with a systematic increase of the training volume from 3 to 20 min per session in the study by Delecluse et al., 2003 and a systematic increase of the training volume from 16 to 36 min per session in this study. Additionally, the training period in the studies of Torvinen et al., 2002a and Delecluse et al., 2003 was 12 wk, where in the present study it was 6 wk. The first phase of training adaptation is characterised by an improvement of neural factors, whereas changes in the morphological structure of the muscle could take from several months to years (Moritani and DeVries, 1979). It is likely that the mechanism by which the WBV training can enhance neuromuscular activation is a biological adaptation connected to the neural potentiation (Delecluse et al., 2003). Komi, 2000 provided evidence for the involvement of the stretch reflex, and thus Ia afferent input in the force potentiation during a stretch-shortening contraction (SSC) in the CMJ. The stimulation of the sensory receptors and the afferent pathways with WBV might thus lead to a more efficient use of the stretch reflex. The sensory stimulation that is the basis of muscle activity in WBV training seems hereby crucial to the facilitation of the SSC and the improvement the CMJ. At motor unit level, it is suggested that the tonic vibration reflex affects primarily the ability of the participants to generate high firing rates in high-threshold motor units (Bongiovanni et al., 1990). During a WBV stimulus, skeletal muscles undergo small changes in muscle length, most likely since mechanical vibration is able to induce a tonic excitatory influence on the muscles exposed to it called “tonic vibration reflex” (Seidel, 1988). This reflex activates the muscle spindles, mediates the neural signals by Ia afferents (Hagbarth, 1973), and finally, activates the muscle fibres via large α-motoneurons. The tonic vibration reflex is also able to cause an increase in recruitment of the motor units through activation of muscle spindles and polysynaptic pathways (De Gail, 1996) and increase facilitation of the reflex action on the motoneuron pool (Romaiguere et al., 1993). Additionally, the recruitment thresholds of the motor units during WBV are expected to be lower compared with voluntary contractions (Romaiguere et al., 1993), probably resulting in a more rapid activation and training of high-threshold motor units. Rittweger et al., 2003 investigated the acute effects of WBV (26 Hz, 12 mm) and found that EMG mean frequency of the m. vastus lateralis during isometric contraction and the amplitude of the patellar tendon reflex were significantly higher after squatting exercise with WBV rather than without WBV. This finding indicates enhanced central nervous excitability, particularly with respect to recruitment of predominantly fast twitch fibres. Therefore, it could be suggested that WBV training renders specific training of fast-twitch fibres (Rittweger, 2000), which have an important contribution to high-speed movements. |