Effects of abdominal and thoracic breathing upon multiple-site electromyography and peripheral skin temperature

Author: Boyer BA//Poppen R
Affiliation:
Mercy Catholic Medical Center, Darby, PA 19023, USA
Conference/Journal: Percept Mot Skills
Date published: 1995
Other: Volume ID: 81 , Issue ID: 1 , Pages: 3-14 , Word Count: 140


Percept Mot Skills. 1995 Aug;81(1):3-14.{Related Articles, Links Effects of abdominal and thoracic breathing upon multiple-site electromyography and peripheral skin temperature.Boyer BA, Poppen R.Mercy Catholic Medical Center, Darby, PA 19023, USA.Peripheral finger temperature, frontalis and upper trapezius EMG, and self-report of arousal were assessed for four subjects during abdominal and thoracic breathing in a single-subject reversal design. Two subjects displayed significant differences between abdominal and thoracic breathing conditions; one for frontalis EMG, trapezius EMG, and self-report of arousal and one for trapezius EMG. Two subjects showed no significant effects. All subjects reached performance criteria during training sessions. Abdominal breathing performance during reversals was 100% and 92% of sampled breath cycles for the two subjects who showed significant change, and 65% and 42% for the two subjects who showed none. Methodological issues for measurement of breathing patterns and peripheral skin temperature are discussed.

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