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Dive into the research topics where Bruce M. Gansneder is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruce M. Gansneder.


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 2004

Reliability and validity of the Biodex system 3 pro isokinetic dynamometer velocity, torque and position measurements

Joshua M. Drouin; Tamara C. Valovich-mcLeod; Sandra J. Shultz; Bruce M. Gansneder; David H. Perrin

This study quantitatively assessed the mechanical reliability and validity of position, torque and velocity measurements of the Biodex System 3 isokinetic dynamometer. Trial-to-trial and day-to-day reliability were assessed during three trials on two separate days. To assess instrument validity, measurement of each variable using the Biodex System 3 dynamometer was compared to a criterion measure of position, torque and velocity. Position was assessed at 5° increments across the available range of motion of the dynamometer. Torque measures were assessed isometrically by hanging six different calibrated weights from the lever arm. Velocity was assessed (30°/s to 500°/s) across a 70° arc of motion by manually accelerating the weighted lever arm. With the exception of a systematic decrease in velocity at speeds of 300°/s and higher, the Biodex System 3 performed with acceptable mechanical reliability and validity on all variables tested.


Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine | 2004

Serial administration of clinical concussion assessments and learning effects in healthy young athletes

Tamara C. Valovich McLeod; David H. Perrin; Kevin M. Guskiewicz; Sandra J. Shultz; Robert Diamond; Bruce M. Gansneder

Objective:To determine if serial administration of the Standardized Assessment of Concussion (SAC) and Balance Error Scoring System (BESS) would elicit a learning effect in young athletes and to determine the intratester reliability of scoring the BESS. Design:A prospective study of 50 healthy young athletes who were assigned to either the control or practice group. All subjects were administered the assessments on 2 occasions, 60 days apart. In addition, subjects in the practice group received serial administration of the assessments on 3 occasions in the week following the initial assessment. Setting:University Sports Medicine/Athletic Training Research Laboratory. Subjects:Fifty uninjured young athletes between 9 and 14 years of age. Main Outcome Measured:Scores on 2 clinical concussion assessments, the SAC and the BESS. Results:We found a significant learning effect upon serial BESS testing in the practice group. BESS error scores were significantly lower than baseline (15.0 ± 4.6) on days 5 (11.3 ± 5.33), 7 (12.4 ± 6.2), and 60 (12.6 ± 6.2). We also found a significant learning effect upon the day 60 BESS administration across all subjects. We did not find a practice or learning effect with serial SAC test administration. The intratester reliability of the investigator’s ability to score repeated observations of the same BESS test ranged from 0.87 to 0.98. Conclusions:Our results demonstrated that serial administration of the BESS elicited a learning effect, which was more prominent during the tandem conditions. Clinicians utilizing the BESS as a measure of postural stability should be aware of the potential for improvement with repeated testing. Clinicians should not expect improvement with the SAC, as scores remained relatively stable across all trials.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2006

Early childhood diarrhea predicts impaired school performance.

Breyette Lorntz; Alberto M. Soares; Sean R. Moore; Relana Pinkerton; Bruce M. Gansneder; Victor E. Bovbjerg; Helen L. Guyatt; Aldo Ângelo Moreira Lima; Richard L. Guerrant

Objective: Diarrhea is a leading cause of mortality worldwide; however, its long-term morbidity is poorly understood. Recently, early childhood diarrhea (ECD) has been associated with impaired physical fitness, growth and cognitive function 6 to 9 years later. We studied the effects of ECD on school functioning in a shantytown in northeastern Brazil. Design: We administered 77 educational surveys. Complete diarrhea surveillance (ie, >90%) in the first 2 years of life and demographic and anthropometric information were available for 73 children. Age at starting school was calculated for 62 children, whereas age appropriateness for the current grade (AFG) was calculated for all 73 children who were >6 years old. Stepwise regression was used to examine the independent effect of ECD on school functioning after controlling for socioeconomic factors, maternal education, breast feeding, growth and cognitive functioning. Results: ECD correlated with age at starting school (r = 0.55, P = 0.0005) and remained a significant predictor even after controlling for family demographics, days of breast feeding, early growth and TONI-3 test of nonverbal intelligence. This was true despite significant correlations of ECD with growth shortfalls and impaired cognitive functioning. ECD also correlated with AFG (r = 0.38, P = 0.001). Only TONI-3 test scores explained this association, suggesting that ECD may hinder school performance, but only in part school readiness, by impairing cognitive function as measured by performance on the TONI-3 nonverbal intelligence test. Conclusions: These findings document effects of early childhood diarrhea on later school readiness and performance and hence potential long-term human and economic costs of ECD, which warrant further attention and far greater investment for the control of ECD and its consequences.


Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 2002

The differential effects of fatigue on reflex response timing and amplitude in males and females

Brian D. Moore; Joshua M. Drouin; Bruce M. Gansneder; Sandra J. Shultz

We examined the effects of fatigue on patellar tendon reflex responses in males and females. A spring-loaded reflex hammer elicited a standardized tendon tap with the knee positioned in an isokinetic dynamometer and flexed to 85 degrees. We recorded vastus lateralis activity (SEMG) and knee extension force production at the distal tibia (force transducer). Reflex trials were performed before and after (immediate, 2, 4, and 6 min) an isokinetic fatigue protocol to 50% MVC (90 degrees /s). For each event, pre-motor time (PMT), electromechanical delay (EMD), and total motor time (TMT) were obtained, as well as EMG amplitude (EMG(amp)), time to peak EMG (EMG(tpk)), peak force amplitude (F(amp)), time to peak force (F(tpk)), EMG:force ratio (E:F), and rate of force production (F(rate)=N/ms). TMT increased significantly in females following fatigue, while males showed no change. The increased TMT was due to an increased EMD with fatigue, while PMT was unaffected. EMG(amp) and F(amp) were somewhat diminished in females yet significantly augmented in males following fatigue, likely accounting for the differential changes in EMD noted. Results suggest males and females may respond differently to isokinetic fatigue, with males having a greater capacity to compensate for contraction force failure when responding to mechanical perturbations.


Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 2000

Assessment of neuromuscular response characteristics at the knee following a functional perturbation

Sandra J. Shultz; David H. Perrin; J. Milton Adams; Brent L. Arnold; Bruce M. Gansneder; Kevin P. Granata

Previous research indicates that both the extent and timing of muscular activation at the knee can be influenced by muscle activity state, joint angle, weight-bearing status and trunk position. However, little research to date has evaluated protective neuromuscular response times and activation patterns to an imposed perturbation with the knee joint in a functional, weight-bearing stance. Hence, we designed a lower extremity perturbation device to produce a sudden, forward and either internal or external rotation moment of the trunk and femur relative to the weight-bearing tibia. Surface electromyography (EMG) recorded long latency reflex times of the medial and lateral quadriceps, hamstring and gastrocnemius muscles in 64 intercollegiate lacrosse and soccer players in response to both internal and external rotation perturbation. We found the gastrocnemius fired significantly faster that the hamstring, which in turn fired significantly faster than the quadriceps. There was also a significant difference in activation times of the medial and lateral hamstring not found for the quadriceps or gastrocnemius muscles. Our findings confirmed that reactive neuromuscular responses following this functional perturbation differ markedly from those previously reported using seated, partial weight-bearing and/or uni-planar models under relaxed conditions.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1994

Predictability and Stability of Professional Golf Association Tour Statistics

David S. Belkin; Bruce M. Gansneder; Morris Pickens; Robert J. Rotella; David Striegel

Professional Golf Association (PGA) statistics for the years 1986–1988 were analyzed to assess their value as predictive tools. Previous studies have not yielded a consensus regarding whether PGA statistics can be used to predict outcome, but preliminary indications suggested that hitting greens in regulation is the most important factor in maintaining a low scoring average. Using a stepwise multiple-regression procedure, the present study confirmed this finding as stable over a three-year period. It is concluded that replication of previous findings and stability of relationships over time suggest that the selected PGA statistics aie a useful predictive tool.


Journal of Athletic Training | 2009

Ankle Bracing and the Neuromuscular Factors Influencing Joint Stiffness

Steven M. Zinder; Kevin P. Granata; Sandra J. Shultz; Bruce M. Gansneder

CONTEXT Health care professionals commonly prescribe external stabilization to decrease the incidence and severity of ankle sprains. The mechanism for this decrease is not clearly understood. Examining the effects of ankle bracing on biomechanical stability and influencing factors may provide important information regarding the neuromuscular effects of bracing. OBJECTIVE To study the effects of 2 different ankle braces on the neuromuscular factors influencing ankle stiffness. DESIGN Mixed-model repeated-measures design. SETTING Research laboratory. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS Twenty-eight physically active participants composing 2 groups: 14 with unilateral functional ankle instability (age = 26.19 +/- 6.46 years, height = 166.07 +/- 12.90 cm, mass = 69.90 +/- 13.46 kg) and 14 with bilaterally stable ankles (age = 23.76 +/- 5.82 years, height = 174.00 +/- 11.67 cm, mass = 68.60 +/- 13.12 kg). INTERVENTION(S) Participants were fitted with surface electromyography electrodes over the peroneus longus, peroneus brevis, tibialis anterior, and soleus muscles. Each participant received transient motion oscillations to his or her ankle on a custom-built medial-lateral swaying cradle in each of 3 conditions: no ankle brace (NB), lace-up brace (LU), and semirigid brace (SR). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Ankle stiffness as measured by the cradle and preactivation levels (percentage of maximal voluntary isometric contraction) of the 4 test muscles. RESULTS Stiffness levels increased across brace conditions (NB = 24.79 +/- 6.59 Nm/rad, LU = 28.29 +/- 7.05 Nm/rad, SR = 33.22 +/- 8.78 Nm/rad; F(2,52) = 66.185, P < .001). No differences were found between groups for rotational stiffness (stable = 27.36 +/- 6.17 Nm/rad, unstable = 30.18 +/- 8.21 Nm/rad; F(1,26) = 1.084, P = .307). Preactivation levels did not change for any of the tested muscles with the application of an ankle brace (F(2,52) = 1.326, P = .275). CONCLUSIONS The increase in ankle rotational stiffness with the addition of an ankle brace and the lack of any demonstrable neuromuscular changes suggested ankle braces passively contributed to the stability of the system.


Exceptional Children | 1979

Preparation of Physical Education Teachers as Required under Public Law 94-142

Patrick J. Bird; Bruce M. Gansneder

Observations of a mainstreaming program led to the conclusion that extensive preparation is vital to success. Pupils and teachers, although well intentioned, become anxious, resort to stereotypic behaviors, and demonstrate avoidance of handicapped students. These behaviors seem to be infrequent in the beginning of the program but increase in frequency over time. These factors must be considered when planning a program integrating handicapped and nonhandicapped children.


Health Promotion Practice | 2010

Promoting Community Preparedness: Lessons Learned From the Implementation of a Chemical Disaster Tabletop Exercise

Erika H. High; Kay Lovelace; Bruce M. Gansneder; Robert W. Strack; Barbara G. Callahan; Phillip Benson

Health educators are frequently called on to facilitate community preparedness planning. One planning tool is community-wide tabletop exercises. Tabletop exercises can improve the preparedness of public health system agencies to address disaster by bringing together individuals representing organizations with different roles and perspectives in specific disasters. Thus, they have the opportunity to identify each other’s roles, capabilities, and limitations and to problem-solve about how to address the gaps and overlaps in a low-threat collaborative setting. In 2005, the North Carolina Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response developed a series of exercises to test the preparedness for chemical disasters in a metropolitan region in the southeastern United States. A tabletop exercise allowed agency heads to meet in an environment promoting inter- and intraagency public—private coordination and cooperation. The evaluation results reported here suggest ways in which any tabletop exercise can be enhanced through recruitment, planning, and implementation.


Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 2009

Jogging gait kinetics following fatiguing lumbar paraspinal exercise

Joseph M. Hart; D. Casey Kerrigan; Julie M. Fritz; Ethan N. Saliba; Bruce M. Gansneder; Christopher D. Ingersoll

A relationship exists between lumbar paraspinal muscle fatigue and quadriceps muscle activation. The objective of this study was to determine whether hip and knee joint moments during jogging changed following paraspinal fatiguing exercise. Fifty total subjects (25 with self-reported history of low back pain) performed fatiguing, isometric lumbar extension exercise until a shift in EMG median frequency corresponding to a mild level of muscle fatigue was observed. We compared 3-dimensional external joint moments of the hip and knee during jogging before and after lumbar paraspinal fatigue using a 10-camera motion analysis system. Reduced external knee flexion, knee adduction, knee internal rotation and hip external rotation moments and increased external knee extension moments resulted from repetitive lumbar paraspinal fatiguing exercise. Persons with a self-reported history of LBP had larger knee flexion moments than controls during jogging. Neuromuscular changes in the lower extremity occur while resisting knee and hip joint moments following isolated lumbar paraspinal exercise. Persons with a history of LBP seem to rely more heavily on quadriceps activity while jogging.

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David H. Perrin

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Sandra J. Shultz

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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