| Literature DB >> 27747841 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Injury prevention measures might reduce the impact of injury on footballers and football clubs. Increasing research has evaluated the use of exercise for injury prevention. However, research has focused on adolescent females. No high-quality systematic reviews have evaluated the efficacy of all forms of exercise on preventing injury in adult male football.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 27747841 PMCID: PMC4532702 DOI: 10.1186/s40798-014-0004-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med Open ISSN: 2198-9761
Example of a search strategy (the Medline OvidSP search)
| 1 | (Football* OR Soccer).ti,ab |
| 2 | exp FOOTBALL/ |
| 3 | exp SOCCER/ |
| 4 | 1 OR 2 OR 3 |
| 5 | (injur* OR ruptur* OR sprain* OR strain* OR disloc* OR accident* OR trauma* OR tendin* OR tendon* OR tear* OR fractur* OR break*).ti,ab |
| 6 | exp WOUNDS AND INJURIES/ |
| 7 | exp RUPTURE/ |
| 8 | exp SPRAINS AND STRAINS/ |
| 9 | exp ACCIDENTS/ |
| 10 | exp TENDINOPATHY/OR exp TENDON INJURIES/ |
| 11 | exp ATHLETIC INJURIES/ |
| 12 | exp SOFT TISSUE INJURIES/ |
| 13 | exp KNEE INJURIES/ |
| 14 | exp FRACTURES, BONE/ |
| 15 | exp ANKLE INJURIES/ |
| 16 | exp HIP INJURIES/ |
| 17 | exp BACK INJURIES/ |
| 18 | 5 OR 6 OR 7 OR 8 OR 9 OR 10 OR 11 OR 12 OR 13 OR 14 OR 15 OR 16 OR 17 |
| 19 | (exercis* OR neuromuscular OR proprio* OR strength* OR stretch* OR “warm-up” OR balance OR flexibility OR training OR intervention* OR kinesiotherapy OR program*).ti,ab |
| 20 | exp EXERCISE/OR exp EXERCISE MOVEMENT TECHNIQUES/OR exp EXERCISE THERAPY/OR exp PLYOMETRIC EXERCISE/ |
| 21 | exp MUSCLE STRETCHING EXERCISES/OR exp PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND TRAINING/ |
| 22 | 19 OR 20 OR 21 |
| 23 | (prevent* OR protect* OR risk* OR reduc* OR avoid* OR prehab* OR reccuren*).ti,ab |
| 24 | exp ACCIDENT PREVENTION/ |
| 25 | exp RECURRENCE/ |
| 26 | 23 OR 24 OR 25 |
| 27 | 22 OR 26 |
| 28 | (trial* OR random* OR control* OR rct).ti,ab |
| 29 | (trial* OR random* OR control* OR rct).pt |
| 30 | exp RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL/ |
| 31 | 28 OR 29 OR 30 |
| 32 | 4 AND 18 AND 27 |
| 33 | 31 AND 32 |
Figure 1Study selection flow diagram [ 22 ].
Summary of trial characteristics
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| Askling et al. [ | Time loss Injuries to the hamstring% Injury occurrence | IG: 15 CG: 15 Mean age IG: 24 CG: 26 | 10 weeks preseason intervention encompassing 16 sessions of hamstring training using concentric and eccentric actions, after a standardized warm-up | 1 season of 10 months | NR | IG 20% CG 67% Significantly fewer injuries in the IG ( | Eccentric hamstring training may result in a lower occurrence of hamstring strains | High injury rate in the CG (67%) No loss to FU |
| Engebretsen et al. [ | Time loss Injuries to the ankle, knee, groin, or hamstring in high-risk players Mean injury Incidence per 1,000 h/RR) | High-risk players IG: 193 CG: 195 Mean age NR | Progressive exercise program for the ankle, knee, groin, and/or hamstring 3 × a week for 10 weeks then × 1 a week for the rest of the season | 1 season of 7 months | 19–30% during the preseason intervention | IG = 4.9 CG = 5.3 RR 0.93 (0.71–1.21) This was NS ( | The risk of injury in players deemed at higher risk was not changed with a targeted training program | 19 of the 31 teams already performed preventive exercises in regular training ITT analysis conducted 3% players lost to FU |
| Fredberg et al. [ | All injuries to the Achilles and/or patellar tendon% Injury risk/RD | IG: 98 CG: 146 Mean age 25 | Eccentric exercise and stretching program of Achilles and patellar tendons All exercises performed for 10 min 3 times a week | 12 months | 2.25/week | Patella = RD 0% ( | Eccentric exercise had no positive effects on the risk of Achilles or patella tendon injury | CG ‘allowed to continue with the different types of flexibility training that they all used’ No ITT analysis 17% team withdrawn |
| Hölmich et al. [ | All injuries to the groin Time to first groin injury/HR | IG: 524 CG: 453 Mean age IG: 24 CG: 25 | 6 exercises including hip adduction and abdominal strengthening, coordination and stretching, 2–4 times a week | 1 season of 10 months | NR | HR 0.69 (0.40–1.19) This was NS ( | Intervention resulted in no significant reduction in groin injury risk | No ITT analysis Injured players censored 56% teams and 7% of remaining players withdrawn |
| Mohammadi [ | All ankle inversion sprain re-injuries RR of injury per 1,000 h | Each IG: 20 CG: 20 Mean age 25 | Progressive ankle disc training for 30 min daily (PT) Isometric and dynamic specific evertor strength training (ST). | 1 season after injury | NR | PT − RR 0.13 (0.003–0.93) significantly fewer injuries in the IG ( | Progressive ankle disc training may reduce the risk of recurrent ankle inversion injuries | Information on much of the study design is lacking No ITT analyses No loss to FU |
| Petersen et al. [ | All hamstring injuries Injury rates per 100 player seasons/rate ratio | IG: 461 CG: 481 Mean age IG: 23 CG: 24 | 10 weeks of progressive eccentric hamstring training followed by a weekly program | 1 season (2 half seasons over 12 months) | 91% of the initial 27 sessions | IG 3.8 CG 13.1 Rate ratio 0.292 (0.136–0.631) Significantly fewer injuries in the IG ( | Additional eccentric hamstring training significantly reduced the risk of hamstring strain | No ITT analysis 7% teams and 8% of remaining players withdrawn |
| Tropp et al. [ | Time loss ankle sprains in those with a history of sprain% Injury risk | CG: 75 IG: 65 Mean age NR | 10 min of ankle disc training 5 times a week for 10 weeks. Then 5 min, 3 times a week | 6 months | NR | IG 5% CG 25% Significantly fewer re-injuries in the IG ( | In players with a history of ankle sprain, ankle disc training is indicated to reduce the risk of re-injury | Information on key aspects of study design lacking No loss to FU |
| van Beijsterveldt et al. [ | All injury incidences Injury incidence per 1,000 sports h | IG: 223 CG: 233 Mean age IG: 24 CG: 25 | 10 exercises, used at each training session, 2/3 times a week. Included core stability, muscle strengthening, proprioceptive, stabilization and plyometric exercises | 1 season of 9 months | 71% player compliance | IG: 9.6 (8.4–11.0) CG: 9.7 (8.5–11.1) This was NS ( | No significant differences found in the overall injury incidence or injury severity between the IG and CG | No ITT analysis 6% players lost to FU |
CG control group, CI confidence interval, FU follow-up, HR hazard risk, IG intervention group, ITT intention-to-treat analysis, NR not reported, NS not significant, RD risk difference, RR relative risk, ST strength training, PT proprioceptive training.
Summary of risk of bias scores [20], reported in line with Rushton et al. [49]
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| Askling et al. [ | U | U | H | U | U | U | High 1 Unclear 5 Low 0 | High-risk components: 1 No participant, intervention provider, or outcome assessor blinding |
| Engebretsen et al. [ | U | U | H | L | U | U | High 1 Unclear 4 Low 1 | High-risk components: 1 No participant, intervention provider, or outcome assessor blinding |
| Fredberg et al. [ | U | U | H | U | U | U | High 1 Unclear 5 Low 0 | High-risk components: 1 No participant, intervention provider, or outcome assessor blinding |
| Hölmich et al. [ | L | U | H | U | U | L | High 1 Unclear 3 Low 2 | High-risk components: 1 No participant, intervention provider, or outcome assessor blinding |
| Mohammadi [ | U | U | U | L | U | H | High 1 Unclear 4 Low 1 | High-risk components: 1 Inadequate reporting of many aspects of study design |
| Petersen et al. [ | L | U | H | L | L | L | High 1 Unclear 1 Low 4 | High-risk components: 1 No participant, intervention provider, or outcome assessor blinding |
| Tropp et al. [ | U | U | U | L | U | H | High 1 Unclear 4 Low 1 | High-risk components: 1 Inadequate reporting of many aspects of study design |
| van Beijsterveldt et al. [ | L | U | H | L | U | U | High 1 Unclear 3 Low 2 | High-risk components: 1 Insufficient participant, intervention provider, and outcome assessor blinding |
aComponents of risk of bias: 1, random sequence generation; 2, allocation concealment; 3, blinding of participants, personnel, and outcome assessors; 4, incomplete outcome data; 5, selective reporting; 6, other bias. Levels of risk of bias: H, high risk of bias; U, unclear risk of bias; L, low risk of bias.