SPEAKER_00 25:14–25:17
I don't know that anybody would have that perspective directly, Matt. Now, we've messed around with that kind of stuff. Okay. Here's what I used to do back in the olden days before you were born. Actually, this is like a very eye-fast 1.0 kind of an experiment. So you remember back in the olden days when I did like 77 tests in my assessment? You've heard me tell that story? Yes. Yeah. So what we used to do, cause we had a lot of time on our hands when we first opened, you know, cause you got like, you know, eight people coming in and so you got a lot of time. We used to do the assessment and then I would run them through a dynamic warmup. So they got tired and then I would remeasure. Okay. And you, you would definitely see the deficits start to show up. And it would be different depending like certain types of athletes like our soccer players were much better conditioned than most folks that would come in. And so they wouldn't change much. They would have limitations that were associated with their typical training and their typical sport. But the people that were not regular athletes nor well conditioned, the deficits would show up. And so you could see that because I did a talk. It's probably still available on DVD actually in 2008. And I brought up this concept of fatigue because this stuff is in the research. The way it shows up in the research is they talk about instability. Right. And again, you can look it up. All you got to do is look at ankle instability, core instability. I'll talk about that a little bit too. What is that? The cool one? Honestly, Matt, I've never seen it well-defined, so I don't use that term. hip, you'll see hip, and they'll talk about spine directly a lot of times. But what they'll do is they'll, they do make comparisons, like they'll do like single leg landings or something like that, and they'll do it in a rested and fatigued state, and they'll show the differences. And the reason that the differences show up is because you've altered the capacity for strategies, right? You've limited the strategies that were available. And so the equivalent perturbation throws you off your center, right? Too much greater degree. So it takes longer for you to come back to a controlled position or you can't recapture it. So it's all there, like I said, but I don't think that anybody would look at it from the exact same perspective that we talk about. But but still like it's a it's apparent. I don't think it's a I don't think it's a mystery, but again, it wouldn't be perceived the same way.
fatigue testingassessment methodologyinstability