MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY

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MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER : A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY. / Husted, Rasmus S; Bencke, Jesper; Hölmich, Per; Andersen, Lars L; Thorborg, Kristian; Bandholm, Thomas; Gliese, Bjørn; Lauridsen, Hanne B; Myklebust, Grethe; Aagaard, Per; Zebis, Mette K.

I: International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy, Bind 13, Nr. 1, 2018, s. 66-76.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Husted, RS, Bencke, J, Hölmich, P, Andersen, LL, Thorborg, K, Bandholm, T, Gliese, B, Lauridsen, HB, Myklebust, G, Aagaard, P & Zebis, MK 2018, 'MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY', International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy, bind 13, nr. 1, s. 66-76. https://doi.org/10.26603/ijspt20180066

APA

Husted, R. S., Bencke, J., Hölmich, P., Andersen, L. L., Thorborg, K., Bandholm, T., Gliese, B., Lauridsen, H. B., Myklebust, G., Aagaard, P., & Zebis, M. K. (2018). MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY. International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy, 13(1), 66-76. https://doi.org/10.26603/ijspt20180066

Vancouver

Husted RS, Bencke J, Hölmich P, Andersen LL, Thorborg K, Bandholm T o.a. MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY. International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy. 2018;13(1):66-76. https://doi.org/10.26603/ijspt20180066

Author

Husted, Rasmus S ; Bencke, Jesper ; Hölmich, Per ; Andersen, Lars L ; Thorborg, Kristian ; Bandholm, Thomas ; Gliese, Bjørn ; Lauridsen, Hanne B ; Myklebust, Grethe ; Aagaard, Per ; Zebis, Mette K. / MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER : A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY. I: International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy. 2018 ; Bind 13, Nr. 1. s. 66-76.

Bibtex

@article{873be57effdb42b1942e1bab2815cc39,
title = "MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY",
abstract = "Background: Reduced lower extremity muscle strength as well as reduced lower extremity muscle pre-activity (defined as muscular activity just prior to initial ground contact) during high-risk movements are factors related to increased risk of non-contact ACL injury in adolescent female athletes. A strong relationship exists between muscle strength and muscle activity obtained during an isometric contraction, however, whether these two measures are related when muscle activity is obtained during a movement associated with a high risk of non-contact ACL injury is not known. Absence or presence of such a relationship may have implications for which training modalities to choose in the prevention of ACL injuries.Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between maximal muscle strength of the hip extensors, hip abductors and knee flexors and the pre-activity of these muscle groups recorded during a sidecutting maneuver (high-risk movement) in adolescent female soccer and handball athletes.Study design: Cross-sectional study.Methods: Eighty-five adolescent (age 16.9 ± 1.2 years) female elite handball and soccer athletes were assessed for maximal hip extensor, hip abductor and knee flexor muscle strength; and muscle pre-activity (electromyography recordings over a 10 ms time interval prior to foot ground contact) of the gluteus maximus (Gmax), gluteus medius (Gmed), biceps femoris (BF) and semitendinosus (ST) during a standardized sidecutting maneuver.Results: The results of the correlation analyses demonstrated poor and statistically non-significant correlations. Maximal hip extensor force (N/kg bw) and Gmax pre-activity [rs = 0.012 (95% CI -0.202 - 0.224), p = 0.91], maximal hip abductor force (N/kg bw) and Gmed pre-activity [rs = 0.171 (95% CI -0.044 - 0.371), p = 0.11], maximal knee flexor force (N/kg bw) and BF pre-activity [rs = 0.049 (95% CI -0.166 - 0.259), p = 0.65], and maximal knee flexor force and ST pre-activity [rs = 0.085 (95% CI -0.131 - 0.293), p = 0.44].Conclusion: In the present exploratory study, the results imply that no relationship exists between maximal lower extremity isometric muscle strength and lower extremity muscle pre-activity during sidecutting. This means that athletes with low muscle strength may not necessarily demonstrate high (or low) muscle pre-activity during sidecutting - a well-known risk movement for sustaining non-contact ACL injury.Levels of evidence: Level 3.",
author = "Husted, {Rasmus S} and Jesper Bencke and Per H{\"o}lmich and Andersen, {Lars L} and Kristian Thorborg and Thomas Bandholm and Bj{\o}rn Gliese and Lauridsen, {Hanne B} and Grethe Myklebust and Per Aagaard and Zebis, {Mette K}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.26603/ijspt20180066",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "66--76",
journal = "International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy",
issn = "2159-2896",
publisher = "International Federation of Sports Physical Therapy (IFSPT)",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - MAXIMAL HIP AND KNEE MUSCLE STRENGTH ARE NOT RELATED TO NEUROMUSCULAR PRE-ACTIVITY DURING SIDECUTTING MANEUVER

T2 - A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY

AU - Husted, Rasmus S

AU - Bencke, Jesper

AU - Hölmich, Per

AU - Andersen, Lars L

AU - Thorborg, Kristian

AU - Bandholm, Thomas

AU - Gliese, Bjørn

AU - Lauridsen, Hanne B

AU - Myklebust, Grethe

AU - Aagaard, Per

AU - Zebis, Mette K

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Background: Reduced lower extremity muscle strength as well as reduced lower extremity muscle pre-activity (defined as muscular activity just prior to initial ground contact) during high-risk movements are factors related to increased risk of non-contact ACL injury in adolescent female athletes. A strong relationship exists between muscle strength and muscle activity obtained during an isometric contraction, however, whether these two measures are related when muscle activity is obtained during a movement associated with a high risk of non-contact ACL injury is not known. Absence or presence of such a relationship may have implications for which training modalities to choose in the prevention of ACL injuries.Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between maximal muscle strength of the hip extensors, hip abductors and knee flexors and the pre-activity of these muscle groups recorded during a sidecutting maneuver (high-risk movement) in adolescent female soccer and handball athletes.Study design: Cross-sectional study.Methods: Eighty-five adolescent (age 16.9 ± 1.2 years) female elite handball and soccer athletes were assessed for maximal hip extensor, hip abductor and knee flexor muscle strength; and muscle pre-activity (electromyography recordings over a 10 ms time interval prior to foot ground contact) of the gluteus maximus (Gmax), gluteus medius (Gmed), biceps femoris (BF) and semitendinosus (ST) during a standardized sidecutting maneuver.Results: The results of the correlation analyses demonstrated poor and statistically non-significant correlations. Maximal hip extensor force (N/kg bw) and Gmax pre-activity [rs = 0.012 (95% CI -0.202 - 0.224), p = 0.91], maximal hip abductor force (N/kg bw) and Gmed pre-activity [rs = 0.171 (95% CI -0.044 - 0.371), p = 0.11], maximal knee flexor force (N/kg bw) and BF pre-activity [rs = 0.049 (95% CI -0.166 - 0.259), p = 0.65], and maximal knee flexor force and ST pre-activity [rs = 0.085 (95% CI -0.131 - 0.293), p = 0.44].Conclusion: In the present exploratory study, the results imply that no relationship exists between maximal lower extremity isometric muscle strength and lower extremity muscle pre-activity during sidecutting. This means that athletes with low muscle strength may not necessarily demonstrate high (or low) muscle pre-activity during sidecutting - a well-known risk movement for sustaining non-contact ACL injury.Levels of evidence: Level 3.

AB - Background: Reduced lower extremity muscle strength as well as reduced lower extremity muscle pre-activity (defined as muscular activity just prior to initial ground contact) during high-risk movements are factors related to increased risk of non-contact ACL injury in adolescent female athletes. A strong relationship exists between muscle strength and muscle activity obtained during an isometric contraction, however, whether these two measures are related when muscle activity is obtained during a movement associated with a high risk of non-contact ACL injury is not known. Absence or presence of such a relationship may have implications for which training modalities to choose in the prevention of ACL injuries.Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between maximal muscle strength of the hip extensors, hip abductors and knee flexors and the pre-activity of these muscle groups recorded during a sidecutting maneuver (high-risk movement) in adolescent female soccer and handball athletes.Study design: Cross-sectional study.Methods: Eighty-five adolescent (age 16.9 ± 1.2 years) female elite handball and soccer athletes were assessed for maximal hip extensor, hip abductor and knee flexor muscle strength; and muscle pre-activity (electromyography recordings over a 10 ms time interval prior to foot ground contact) of the gluteus maximus (Gmax), gluteus medius (Gmed), biceps femoris (BF) and semitendinosus (ST) during a standardized sidecutting maneuver.Results: The results of the correlation analyses demonstrated poor and statistically non-significant correlations. Maximal hip extensor force (N/kg bw) and Gmax pre-activity [rs = 0.012 (95% CI -0.202 - 0.224), p = 0.91], maximal hip abductor force (N/kg bw) and Gmed pre-activity [rs = 0.171 (95% CI -0.044 - 0.371), p = 0.11], maximal knee flexor force (N/kg bw) and BF pre-activity [rs = 0.049 (95% CI -0.166 - 0.259), p = 0.65], and maximal knee flexor force and ST pre-activity [rs = 0.085 (95% CI -0.131 - 0.293), p = 0.44].Conclusion: In the present exploratory study, the results imply that no relationship exists between maximal lower extremity isometric muscle strength and lower extremity muscle pre-activity during sidecutting. This means that athletes with low muscle strength may not necessarily demonstrate high (or low) muscle pre-activity during sidecutting - a well-known risk movement for sustaining non-contact ACL injury.Levels of evidence: Level 3.

U2 - 10.26603/ijspt20180066

DO - 10.26603/ijspt20180066

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29484243

VL - 13

SP - 66

EP - 76

JO - International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy

JF - International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy

SN - 2159-2896

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 215240426