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Stance leg frontal plane stability during lateral bounds

Jones, P., Kerwin, D., Irwin, G. and Nokes, Leonard Derek Martin ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9504-8028 2011. Stance leg frontal plane stability during lateral bounds. British Journal of Sports Medicine 45 (4) , pp. 354-355. 10.1136/bjsm.2011.084038.126

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Abstract

Background. Lower limb stability is pivotal to successful dynamic sporting movements, with poor stability during single leg tasks commonly associated with lower limb non-contact injuries. Objective. This study investigated stance leg frontal plane stability during a lateral bound task. Design. Players performed an infield clinical screening involving 10 alternating bounds from their left (LLEG) and right (RLEG) legs. Each bound comprised stabilisation (landing) and propulsion (lateral push off). 3D kinematic data for the stance leg (200 Hz) were captured using an automated system (CODAmotionTM) and a cluster marker set. Setting. Professional footballers currently performing in the English Football League System performed the screening. Participants. Five participants performed the screening. Intervention/Assessment of risk factors. The independent variables in this study were the players involved. Main outcome measurements. Absolute frontal plane sway (AFP-Sway) at the hip, knee and ankle were determined (Visual3DTM) and combined to provide a collective stance leg sway score (CSL-Sway) for each trial. Additionally, percentage contributions of AFP-Sway at each joint to CSL-Sway for all trials were determined and compared across players in each condition using one-way ANOVA. Results. There were CSL-Sway differences between players within each condition, accounted for by additional motions at all three lower limb joints under LLEG conditions and only hip and knee joints under RLEG conditions. Percentage individual joint contributions to CSL-Sway differed between players at the knee and ankle joints under LLEG and all joints under RLEG conditions. Both conditions revealed two distinct bounding strategies with hip or combination of hip and ankle motions contributing the most to CSL-Sway. Conclusions. Player differences in CSL-Sway, AFP-Sway and percentage joint contribution to CSL-Sway under both bounding conditions highlight the individualised nature of lateral bound strategies. Such objective assessment of stance leg stability may enable movement stability classification and ultimately aid injury risk identification.

Item Type: Article
Status: Published
Schools: Engineering
Subjects: R Medicine > RC Internal medicine > RC1200 Sports Medicine
T Technology > TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Additional Information: Abstracts. IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury & Illness in Sport. Posters
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group
ISSN: 0306-3674
Last Modified: 18 Oct 2022 13:28
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/14031

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