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  5. Single-leg drop landing movement strategies 6 months following first-time acute lateral ankle sprain injury
 
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Single-leg drop landing movement strategies 6 months following first-time acute lateral ankle sprain injury

Alternative Title
Single leg drop landing motor control strategies, 6 months following an acute lateral ankle sprain injury
Ankle sprain and landing performance
Author(s)
Doherty, Cailbhe  
Bleakley, Chris J.  
Hertel, Jay  
Caulfield, Brian  
Ryan, John  
Delahunt, Eamonn  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/8474
Date Issued
2015-12
Date Available
2017-05-05T09:59:09Z
Abstract
No research exists predicating a link between acute ankle sprain injury-affiliated movement patterns and those of chronic ankle instability (CAI) populations. The aim of the current study was to perform a biomechanical analysis of participants, 6 months after they sustained a first-time acute lateral ankle sprain (LAS) injury to establish this link. Fifty-seven participants with a 6-month history of first-time LAS and 20 noninjured participants completed a single-leg drop landing task on both limbs. Three-dimensional kinematic (angular displacement) and sagittal plane kinetic (moment of force) data were acquired for the joints of the lower extremity, from 200 ms pre-initial contact (IC) to 200 ms post-IC. Individual joint stiffnesses and the peak magnitude of the vertical component of the ground reaction force (GRF) were also computed. LAS participants displayed increases in hip flexion and ankle inversion on their injured limb (P < 0.05); this coincided with a reduction in the net flexion-extension moment at the hip joint, with an increase in its stiffness (P < 0.05). There was no difference in the magnitude of the peak vertical GRF for either limb compared with controls. These results demonstrate that altered movement strategies persist in participants, 6 months following acute LAS, which may precipitate the onset of CAI.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wiley
Journal
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports
Volume
25
Issue
6
Start Page
806
End Page
817
Copyright (Published Version)
2015 Wiley
Subjects

Personal sensing

Ankle joint

Kinematics

Task performance and ...

Kinetics

DOI
10.1111/sms.12390
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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original manuscript 6-monthDL.pdf

Size

374.11 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

f9523ac4251ed4bede1c51001245608f

Owning collection
Insight Research Collection
Mapped collections
Institute for Sport & Health Research Collection•
Public Health, Physiotherapy and Sports Science Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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