| Literature DB >> 30413424 |
Matthew Buckthorpe1,2,3, Steve Wright1, Stewart Bruce-Low1, Gianni Nanni4, Thomas Sturdy1, Aleksander Stephan Gross1, Laura Bowen1, Bill Styles1, Stefano Della Villa2, Michael Davison3, Mo Gimpel1.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: football; hamstrings; injury prevention; sports medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30413424 PMCID: PMC6579500 DOI: 10.1136/bjsports-2018-099616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Sports Med ISSN: 0306-3674 Impact factor: 13.800
Figure 1A diagram of factors to consider in hamstring muscle injury prevention. CV, cardiovascular.
Risk factors linked to hamstring strain injuries, either through prospective, retrospective or anecdotal evidence. The table shows the typical manner in which our team would classify the risk factors associated with hamstring strain injury
| Important | Semi-important | Recognised but does not inform normal practice | |
| Specific risk factors | General risk factors | ||
| Previous hamstring injury | ACWR (all parameters) | BFlh muscle/tendon architecture | Wisdom teeth/dental hygiene |
| Hamstring eccentric strength (fresh) | Lumbopelvic hip stability | Glute dominant hip extension pattern | TMJ dysfunction |
| Weekly speed exposure | Functional strength | SIJ kinematics | |
| Hamstring fatigue resistance | ACWR (HSR/vHSR) | Muscle fascicle length | |
| Psychosocial factors | Tib/Fib joint | ||
| Individual recovery rates/strategies (sleep, rest, nutrition, massage, cryotherapy, hydrotherapy) | Environmental factors (eg, playing surface, travel, location of match, footwear, and so on) | ||
| Time between games | |||
| Movement quality | |||
| Previous recent injury (any) | |||
| Aerobic fitness | |||
ACWR, acute:chronic workload ratio; BFlh, biceps femoris long head; Fib, fibula; HSR, high-speed running; SIJ, sacroiliac joint; Tib, tibia; TMJ, temporomandibular joint; vHSR, very high-speed running.
Figure 2Graphical representation of the progressive increase of a player’s chronic high-speed running over the course of an 8-week intervention. The player begins with a chronic load of 2000 m representing a two-match load and is trained with the goal of progressively increasing his chronic training load, adopting a structured periodisation model to fluctuate the weekly training demands to achieve a chronic high-speed running of three matches equivalent per week. The current programme used a 2-week overload and 1-week deload maintaining the acute:chronic workload ratio below 1.4 (peak 1.35) and deload week remaining above 0.8 (lowest 0.82) to prevent acute heightened risk of injury. A, acute; C, chronic; HSR, high-speed running.