| Literature DB >> 30911856 |
Cassio V Ruas1, Ronei S Pinto2, G Gregory Haff3, Camila D Lima3, Matheus D Pinto3, Lee E Brown4.
Abstract
The hamstrings-to-quadriceps muscle strength ratio calculated by peak torque has been used as an important tool to detect muscle imbalance, monitor knee joint stability, describe muscle strength properties and functionality, and for lower extremity injury prevention and rehabilitation. However, this ratio does not consider other neuromuscular variables that can also influence the antagonist to agonist muscle relationship, such as torque produced at multiple angles of range of motion, explosive strength, muscle size, muscle fatigue, or muscle activation. The aim of this study was to comprehensively review alternative methods of determining the hamstrings-to-quadriceps ratio. These include ratios calculated by angle-specific torque, rate of torque development, muscle size, fatigue index, and muscle activation (measured by electromyography). Collectively, the literature demonstrates that utilizing alternative methods of determining the hamstrings-to-quadriceps ratio can be functionally relevant for a better understanding of the neuromuscular mechanisms underpinning the interaction of strength between hamstrings and quadriceps. However, there is insufficient evidence to recommend any of the alternative methods as sensitive clinical tools for predicting injury risk and monitoring knee joint integrity. Future longitudinal studies, along with injury incidence, are needed to further investigate all alternative methods of determining the hamstrings-to-quadriceps ratio. These have potential to offer insight into how athletes and the general population should be trained for performance enhancement and injury reduction, and may be used along with traditional methods for a thorough assessment of an individual's H:Q muscle balance.Entities:
Keywords: Alternative H:Q ratios; Muscle imbalance; Risk of injury
Year: 2019 PMID: 30911856 PMCID: PMC6434009 DOI: 10.1186/s40798-019-0185-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med Open ISSN: 2198-9761
Summary of studies
| Topic | Authors | Aims related to H:Q ratio | Sample | Main outcome measures | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AST H:Q ratio | Eustace et al. 2017 [ | To compare PT and AST H:Q ratio (FR) between limbs, angles and velocities | 26 male professional soccer players | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio at 10° angles from 40 to 70° (0° = full knee extension) at three different isokinetic velocities (60, 180, and 270°/s) on the dominant and non-dominant legs | PT H:Q ratio was greater for the dominant than the non-dominant leg, and increased with higher velocities. AST H:Q ratio was greater for the dominant than the non-dominant leg at angles 60°, 50°, and 40° |
| Eustace et al. 2018 [ | To compare PT and AST H:Q ratio (FR) between senior professional and youth soccer players | 17 senior professional and 17 elite youth male soccer players | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio at ten degree angles from 40 to 70° (0° = full knee extension) at three different isokinetic velocities (60, 180 and 270°/s) on the dominant and non-dominant legs | PT H:Q ratio was greater for the dominant than the non-dominant limb and increased with higher velocities similarly for both groups. AST H:Q ratio was greater at 70° and 60° on the non-dominant leg for youth compared to senior players | |
| Aagaard et al. 1998 [ | To assess PT and AST H:Q ratio (CR and FR) at different angles and velocities | 9 track and field athletes (5 males and 4 females) | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio at 50°, 40°, and 30° of knee flexion (0° full knee extension) at two different isokinetic velocities (30 and 240°/s) | PT and AST H:Q ratio (FR) increased across movement velocities and at extended knee joint angles. AST H:Q ratio (CR) increased across extended knee joint angles. PT H:Q ratio (CR) was not affected by velocity | |
| El-Ashker et al. 2017 [ | To investigate sex differences on PT and AST H:Q ratio (FR) | 96 young adults (50 males and 46 females) | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio at 15°, 30°, and 45° of knee extension (0° = full knee extension) at three different isokinetic velocities (60, 180 and 300°/s) | PT H:Q ratio was lower for females compared to males. PT and AST H:Q ratio decreased for both groups with increased isokinetic velocity and close to full knee extension | |
| Cohen et al. 2015 [ | To investigate the effect of simulated soccer on PT and AST H:Q ratio (FR) | 9 semi-professional male soccer players | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio at 9 knee flexion angles (from 10 to 90°; 0° = full knee extension) at 120°/s | Simulated soccer led to reduced PT H:Q ratio. Additionally, there was an AST H:Q ratio decrease at 10° of knee flexion | |
| Hiemstra et al. 2004 [ | To compare PT and AST H:Q ratio (CR and FR) at different angles, velocities and contraction types between hamstring tendon ACL reconstruction and uninjured control participants | 16 participants (9 males and 7 females) with more than 1 year of hamstring tendon ACL reconstruction and 30 active uninjured males | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio measured from 5 to 95° of knee flexion (0° = full knee extension) at five angular velocities (50, 100, 150, 200, and 250°/s). | Participants with ACL reconstruction had overall lower PT H:Q ratio compared to active participants, and presented lower AST H:Q ratio near full knee flexion and higher AST H:Q ratio near full knee extension | |
| Huang et al. 2017 [ | To investigate PT and AST H:Q ratio (CR and FR) in participants with unilateral and symptomatic ACL deficiency | 46 male participants with unilateral chronic ACL-rupture | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio at 6 knee flexion angles (from 30 to 80° of knee flexion; 0° = full knee extension) on ACL deficiency and uninvolved (healthy) limbs at 60°/s | There was no difference between groups for PT H:Q ratio. ACL deficiency limbs presented greater AST H:Q ratio compared to healthy limbs at 30° and 40° of knee flexion | |
| De Ste Croix et al. 2017 [ | To investigate sex differences on PT and AST H:Q ratio (FR) measured at different angles and velocities | 55 male and 55 female recreationally active participants | PT H:Q ratio and AST H:Q ratio at three knee flexion angles (15, 30, and 45°, 0° = full knee extension) and three angular velocities (60, 120, and 240°/s) | PT H:Q ratio was lower at 120°/s and 240°/s and AST H:Q ratio was lower at 15° and 30° of knee flexion in females compared to males | |
| Ayala et al. 2012 [ | To determine the absolute reliability of the PT and AST H:Q ratio (CR and FR) | 50 recreational athletes (26 males and 24 females) | PT H:Q, AST H:Q ratio at three different joint angles (10°, 20°, 30°), and ROM-specific torque H:Q ratios at 4 different ranges (0–10°, 11–20°, 21–30°, and 0–30°) of knee flexion measured on three different occasions | PT H:Q ratio presented moderate reliability values. AST and joint ROM-specific torque H:Q ratios demonstrated poor absolute reliability scores | |
| Evangelidis et al. 2015 [ | To compare PT, isometric, and AST H:Q ratio between soccer players and recreationally active males | 10 soccer players and 14 recreationally active males | PT H:Q ratio, isometric H:Q ratio at five angles (105°, 120°, 135°, 150°, and 165°) and AST H:Q ratio at five angles (from 100 to 160° for 60°/s; from 105 to 160° for 240°/s; and from 115 to 145° for 400°/s) | PT, isometric and AST H:Q ratios were similar between professional soccer players and recreationally active players at any velocity | |
| RTD H:Q ratio | Zebis et al. 2011 [ | To compare the RTD H:Q ratio with isometric H:Q ratio | 23 elite soccer players (11 females and 12 males) | Isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio at incrementing time periods of 10 ms (from 0 to 250 ms) | RTD H:Q ratio from 0 to 50 ms was lower than isometric H:Q ratio |
| Greco et al. 2012 [ | To compare PT H:Q ratio (CR) and RTD H:Q ratio in soccer players with high and low strength levels | 39 male professional soccer players | PT H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio calculated at a time interval of 0–50 ms | Soccer players who had high strength levels had greater PT H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio compared to counterparts with low strength levels. There was no correlation between ratios | |
| Hannah et al. 2014 [ | To compare isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio | 20 untrained males | Isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio at time intervals of 25, 50, 75, 100, and 150 ms of force onset | RTD H:Q ratio was lower than isometric H:Q ratio | |
| Hannah et al. 2015 [ | To investigate sex differences on isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio | 40 untrained adults (20 males and 20 female) | Isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio calculated at time intervals of 25, 50, 75, 100, and 150 ms of force onset | Isometric H:Q ratio was greater in males than females. RTD H:Q ratio was similar between sexes at each time point | |
| Jordan et al. 2015 [ | To investigate RTD H:Q ratio in elite ski racers | 29 elite alpine ski racers (13 males and 8 females uninjured and 3 males and 5 females with ACL reconstruction) | RTD H:Q ratio calculated at time intervals of 0–50, 0–100, 0–150, and 0–200 ms | Elite alpine ski racers with ACL reconstruction had greater RTD H:Q ratio at 0-50 ms compared to uninjured counterparts | |
| Palmer et al. 2017 [ | To examine the effects of age on isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio | 15 young and 15 older women | Isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio at time intervals of 0–30 and 0–200 ms | Older women had greater RTD H:Q ratio at 0–200 ms compared to young women | |
| Greco et al. 2013 [ | To investigate the effect of a fatiguing soccer-specific exercise on H:Q ratio (CR and FR) and RTD H:Q ratio | 22 male professional soccer players | PT H:Q ratio at 180°/s and RTD H:Q ratio at time intervals of 0–50 and 0–100 ms | The fatiguing soccer-specific exercise led to lower PT H:Q ratio, but there was no effect on RTD H:Q ratio | |
| Thorlund et al. 2008 [ | To investigate the effect of a simulated handball match on isometric H:Q ratio and RTD H:Q ratio | 10 male elite handball players | Isometric, and RTD and RTD impulse H:Q ratios at time intervals of 30, 50, 100, and 200 of force onset | The simulated handball match did not lead to changes on isometric H:Q ratio, but RTD and RTD impulse H:Q ratios increased at 0–30 ms | |
| FI H:Q ratio | Pinto et al. 2018 [ | To investigate the influence of neuromuscular fatigue on PT H:Q ratio (CR) and the association between FI H:Q ratio and PT H:Q ratio | 35 male elite professional soccer players | PT H:Q ratio and FI H:Q ratio at 300°/s | FI H:Q ratio was greater and weakly correlated to PT H:Q ratio. PT H:Q ratio only declined in the last three repetitions of the fatigue test, which was strongly correlated to hamstring torque decreases, but weakly correlated to quadriceps torque decreases |
| Costa et al. 2018 [ | To investigate the effect of hamstrings stretching and fatigue on H:Q ratio (CR) and FI H:Q ratio | 35 healthy adults (17 females and 18 males) | PT H:Q ratio and FI H:Q ratio at 180°/s | There was no effect of combined stretching and fatigue on PT and FI H:Q ratios | |
| MS H:Q ratio | Denadai et al. 2016 [ | To investigate the association between PT H:Q ratio (CR) and MS H:Q ratio | 9 male professional soccer players | PT H:Q ratio at 60°/s and MS H:Q ratio | PT H:Q ratio did not significantly correlate with MS H:Q ratio |
| Evangelidis et al. 2016 [ | To investigate the association between PT H:Q ratio (FR), isometric H:Q ratio and MS H:Q ratio | 31 recreationally active young men | PT H:Q ratio at 50 and 350°/s, isometric PT H:Q ratio, and MS H:Q ratio | MS H:Q ratio was positively correlated with isometric H:Q ratio and PT H:Q ratio at both velocities | |
| Wieschhoff et al. 2017 [ | To compare a MS VM:SM ratio between patients with ACL tears and participants with no ACL abnormalities | 100 ACL tear and 100 control participants without ACL abnormalities (54 male and 46 female in each group) | MS VM:SM ratio | MS VM:SM ratio of patients that had recent non-contact ACL injuries was greater than control participants without ACL abnormalities | |
| Behan et al. 2018 [ | To investigate sex differences on MS H:Q ratio | 66 healthy active young (32 males and 34 females) | MS H:Q ratio | MS H:Q ratio was lower in females compared to males | |
| Ruas et al. 2017 [ | To compare 3 different resistance training protocols involving concentric and eccentric muscle actions on MS H:Q ratio | Forty untrained males | MS H:Q ratio | No resistance training protocol led to any changes on MS H:Q ratio | |
| MA H:Q ratio | Aagaard et al. 2000 [ | To investigate the amount of antagonist coactivation during maximal quadriceps contraction and assess the MA H:Q ratio | 60 sedentary males | MA (EMG-moment) H:Q ratio at 30°/s | Hamstrings coactivation and MA H:Q ratio were increased towards full knee extension |
| Kellis and Katis 2007a [ | To investigate the AST H:Q ratio (FR) and the MA H:Q ratio at different velocities and movement directions | 17 pubertal males | AST and MA (EMG-moment) H:Q ratio from 0 to 90° of knee flexion at 60°/s and 180°/s | AST H:Q ratio increased as the knee extended and at an increased angular velocity. MA H:Q ratio increased near full extension |
AST angle-specific torque, RTD rate of torque development, FI fatigue index, MS muscle size, MA muscle activation, EMG electromyography, PT peak torque, ACL anterior cruciate ligament, VM vastus medialis, SM semimembranosus, ROM range of motion, H:Q ratio hamstrings to quadriceps ratio, CR conventional ratio, FR functional ratio
aArticle was also discussed in topic: AST H:Q ratio
Alternative H:Q ratios used by studies
| Alternative H:Q ratio | Measurement | Calculation |
|---|---|---|
| AST H:Q ratio | Maximal concentric and eccentric hamstring and quadriceps strength are measured on an isokinetic dynamometer. Tested hamstring and quadriceps ROM are divided into several corresponding degree angles (e.g., 10, 20, 30...90° of knee flexion) or joint ranges (e.g., 0–10°, 10–20°, 20–30° of knee flexion). Hamstring and quadriceps concentric and eccentric AST are measured at each angle or by the PT of each joint range | CR: Hamstring concentric AST ÷ quadriceps concentric AST |
| RTD H:Q ratio | Maximal and/or explosive hamstring and quadriceps isometric strength is measured on an isokinetic/custom built dynamometer. RTD is measured by the slope of the torque-time curve of specific time intervals from the force onset (e.g., 0–50, 0–100, 0–150 ms) | Hamstrings RTD ÷ quadriceps RTD (at each time interval) |
| FI H:Q ratio | Several maximal concentric hamstring and quadriceps strength repetitions (e.g., 30 and 50) are performed on an isokinetic dynamometer at a high angular velocity (e.g., 150°/s and 300°/s). FI can be calculated by different methods involving the difference between individual, PT or mean of the final and initial repetitions [e.g. (initial PT - final PT) ÷ initial PT × 100] | Hamstring FI ÷ quadriceps FI |
| MS H:Q ratio | Hamstring and quadriceps MS are measured by ACSA or MT obtained from MRI or ultrasound scans. The muscle average area values, the sum of MT or the volume by cubic spline interpolation of hamstrings and quadriceps muscles are calculated to determine MS H:Q ratio | Hamstring MS ÷ quadriceps MS |
| MA H:Q ratio | Maximal concentric quadriceps strength is measured on an isokinetic dynamometer. Hamstring and quadriceps muscles are fitted with EMG electrodes to measure MA during the test, allowing the MA H:Q ratio calculation. The EMG-moment relationship can also be calculated in order to account for the influence of moment during co-activation and provide a more realistic analysis of EMG H:Q ratio. For this, antagonist muscle moments can be predicted by EMG-to-moment algorithm or second order polynomial | Hamstring EMG ÷ Quadriceps EMG |
AST angle specific torque, RTD rate of torque development, FI fatigue index, MS muscle size, MT muscle thickness, ACSA anatomical cross-sectional area, MA muscle activation, EMG electromyography, PT peak torque, ROM range of motion, H:Q ratio hamstrings to quadriceps ratio, CR conventional ratio, FR functional ratio