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Home arrow Supp of the Month arrow Unilateral Incline Dumbbell Raises For Peak Shoulder Performance
Unilateral Incline Dumbbell Raises For Peak Shoulder Performance PDF Print E-mail
Written by Stephen E. Alway, PhD, FACSM   
Monday, 23 April 2007
Training is, of course, one way to minimize the potential for shoulder injury. Occasionally, aggressive shoulder training has its place as a preparative program for shoulder performance. However, this must be tempered with a variety of exercises and training volumes, and it must also be distinctly different from sloppy training couched in the name of intensity. Whatever your application, peak shoulder performance requires maximal strength and flexibility and a complete balance of the forces and torques generated around and through the shoulder joint. The trick is to optimize your shoulder's ability to produce and absorb forces without inducing injury that will keep you out of competition.

Muscle Structure and Function
The deltoid is a superficial muscle that overlays the other muscles working at the shoulder. It has three functionally distinct parts. The anterior fibers from the deltoid muscle begin along the lateral part of the clavicle (collarbone). They attach to the deltoid tuberosity, a bumpy area on the upper part of the humerus bone of the upper arm. The anterior deltoid acts to raise the arm in front of your body (shoulder flexion). It's also activated in pushing movements that require shoulder flexion. This region of the deltoid also helps medially rotate the arm at the shoulder joint by turning the humerus bone inwards.

The posterior fibers of the deltoid begin along the spine of the scapula (shoulder blade) near the shoulder. These fibers also attach to the humerus bone at the deltoid tuberosity. When the posterior fibers of the deltoid contract, they pull the humerus bone backward (posteriorly) into shoulder extension. The medial fibers of the deltoid begin on the middle part of the acromion, a lateral part of the bony scapula that forms the "point" of the shoulder. The fibers from the medial deltoid all converge on the deltoid tuberosity on the humerus bone. Contraction of the medial fibers of the deltoid abducts the arm by raising it out to the side of the body (i.e., moving it away from your torso). This is the movement used for lateral dumbbell raises.

The supraspinatus muscle of the rotator cuff contracts at the same time the medial fibers of the deltoid are active, and both act to abduct the arm. However, the supraspinatus and medial deltoid muscle fibers can only raise the arm to a position that's about parallel to the ground. Therefore, if you raise your arms further than this, you're not activating the deltoid any more completely. Rather, you're stimulating the serratus anterior and trapezius muscles that must work in concert to rotate the scapula and move the shoulder joint into a higher position. We will exploit this anatomical feature in one-arm (unilateral) incline dumbbell raises, to maximize the activation of the medial part of the deltoid, strengthen the supraspinatus and minimize the trapezius muscle involvement in the exercise.

Unilateral Incline Lateral Raise
The unilateral incline lateral raise is a specialized version of the more conventional lateral dumbbell raises. Normally, if you were to do standing dumbbell lateral raises, the resistance does not become very intense until you have raised (abducted) your arms about 30 degrees from the starting position. This is because your shoulders have a strong lever arm in the standing version, so the resistance feels light at the beginning of the lift. The resistance feels much heavier near the top of the lift at the weakest part of your strength curve, but it's this point that limits the resistance you can lift in lateral raises. The incline bench reduces the length of the lever arm and therefore the resistance becomes much more effective from the beginning of the lift. This improves the overall quality of each repetition.

1. This exercise should be performed sitting on a 30 to 45-degree incline bench. You can do this exercise with both hands working simultaneously, but it will be described here using one arm at a time. Either pick a dumbbell from off the floor beside your bench, or have your training partner hand you the dumbbell. Use your non-working hand to hold onto the edge of the incline bench for additional support and stability.

2. The hand holding the dumbbell should be hanging vertically toward your body. The dumbbell should be turned so your palm faces toward your torso. Your elbow should be just short of straight, but the elbow joint angle should not change throughout the range of motion.

3. The tendon to the supraspinatus muscle is vulnerable to stretching-induced injuries at the beginning of the movement, so it's important not to jerk the weight upward. Instead, make this a smooth, forceful, but not ballistic effort to lift the dumbbell (i.e., abduction of the arm at the shoulder joint). Move the dumbbell to a position that's only slightly above shoulder level. Hold this top position for a count of two so the deltoid contracts isometrically.

4. Slowly lower the dumbbell halfway to the starting position, then stop and return to the top position. Again, hold this for a count of two, then finally lower the weight back to the starting position to complete your first repetition.

5. If you don't have any rotator cuff problems, you can add a medial rotation to the lift. This will further stimulate your shoulder growth. As the top position is approached, rotate your shoulder so the knuckle of the little finger is pointing upward and your thumb is downward. This medial rotation of the humerus will bring the anterolateral region of the deltoid into play (fibers between the lateral and anterior regions) and thereby thicken the tie-in between these two regions of the deltoid.

6. As you begin to lower the weight and then return the dumbbell slowly to the starting position, slowly rotate your shoulders laterally and this will result in a slight supination of your hands. (Do not actually attempt to supinate your hands; but let the shoulder rotation do this for you).

You Should Know...
The medial fibers of the deltoid will be isolated in this exercise as few other exercises can. However, there is potential involvement from the trapezius and anterior serratus muscles if you raise the dumbbell too high. The preferred starting position is adjacent to the lateral portion of the thighs, as opposed to the anterior (front) of the thigh. If any adjustment is to be made to the starting position, it's better to begin with the dumbbell behind the plane of your back, not further to the front.

Make sure that when the knuckle of your little finger is pointing upward, this "twist" will be produced by a rotation at the shoulder, not at the wrist. Twisting the wrist at the top will only give you sore wrists, not large deltoids. Completion of each half repetition at the top of the lift and between the full repetitions will send a small brush fire-like pain into your medial deltoid. However, this will soon be a three-alarm adventure by the fifth repetition of the first set. Still, this additional activation will be just the thing to wake dormant fibers in the medial deltoid muscle.

The shoulder is a very unstable joint and prone to injury, and therefore it makes sense to explore alternatives to using superhuman weights for developing shoulder mass. Adding the half repetitions and medial rotation accomplishes these goals by magnifying the intensity of each contraction without requiring staggering weights. To further maximize the efforts for each contraction, avoid relaxing your muscles between repetitions. Instead, immediately after reaching the starting position, begin the next repetition upward, thereby attempting to maintain tension in the medial deltoid fibers during the entire set.

With good training habits and effective exercises, you'll not only possess those thickly erupting fibers of the medial deltoid, but your shoulder girdle will stay healthy and free of injury.

References
Friden, J., Lieber, R.L., 2001. Quantitative evaluation of the posterior deltoid to triceps tendon transfer based on muscle architectural properties. J.Hand Surg.[Am.] 26, 147-155.
Gagey, O., Hue, E., 2000. Mechanics of the deltoid muscle. A new approach. Clin.Orthop., 250-257.
Halder, A.M., Zhao, K.D., Odriscoll, S.W., Morrey, B.F., An, K.N., 2001. Dynamic contributions to superior shoulder stability. J.Orthop.Res. 19, 206-212.
Lorne, E., Gagey, O., Quillard, J., Hue, E., Gagey, N., 2001. The fibrous frame of the deltoid muscle. Its functional and surgical relevance. Clin.Orthop., 222-225.
Reddy, A.S., Mohr, K.J., Pink, M.M., Jobe, F.W., 2000. Electromyographic analysis of the deltoid and rotator cuff muscles in persons with subacromial impingement. J.Shoulder.Elbow.Surg. 9, 519-523.
Roman-Liu, D., Tokarski, T., Kaminska, J., 2001. Assessment of the musculoskeletal load of the trapezius and deltoid muscles during hand activity. Int.J.Occup.Saf Ergon. 7, 179-193.
 
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