| Literature DB >> 31493206 |
Thomas Dos'Santos1, Christopher Thomas2, Paul Comfort2, Paul A Jones2.
Abstract
Change of direction (COD) manoeuvres are associated with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury risk due to the propensity to generate large multiplanar knee joint loads. Given the short- and long-term consequences of ACL injury, practitioners are interested in methods that reduce knee joint loads and subsequent ACL loading. An effective strategy to reduce ACL loading is modifying an athlete's movement mechanics to reduce knee joint loading. The purpose of this scoping review was to critically appraise and comprehensively synthesise the existing literature related to the effects of training interventions on COD biomechanics associated with increased knee joint loads and subsequent ACL loading, and identify gaps and recommend areas for future research. A review of the literature was conducted using Medline and Sport DISCUS databases. Inclusion criteria consisted of pre-post analysis of a COD task, a minimum 4-week training intervention, and assessments of biomechanical characteristics associated with increased ACL loading. Of the 1,027 articles identified, 22 were included in the scoping review. Based on current literature, balance training and COD technique modification are the most effective training modalities for reducing knee joint loading (small to moderate effect sizes). One study reported dynamic core stability training was effective in reducing knee joint loads, but further research is needed to definitively confirm the efficacy of this method. Perturbation-enhanced plyometric training, the F-MARC 11 + soccer specific warm-up, Oslo Neuromuscular warm-up, and resistance training are ineffective training modalities to reduce COD knee joint loads. Conflicting findings have been observed for the Core-Pac and mixed training programme. Consequently, practitioners should consider incorporating balance and COD technique modification drills into their athletes' training programmes to reduce potentially hazardous knee joint loads when changing direction. However, training intervention studies can be improved by investigating larger sample sizes (> 20), including a control group, acknowledging measurement error when interpreting their findings, and considering performance implications, to confirm the effectiveness of training interventions and improve adherence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31493206 PMCID: PMC6851221 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-019-01171-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Fig. 1Flow diagram illustrating the different phases of the scoping review; based on PRISMA recommendations. COD change of direction, ACL anterior cruciate ligament
Summary of research that has investigated the effects of COD technique modification and COD speed and footwork training on COD biomechanics
| Study | Subjects | Training intervention | COD task | Results (post-intervention) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dempsey et al. [ | Twelve male non-elite team sport (6 Australian football, 5 rugby union, and 1 soccer) athletes *3 withdrawals | 6-week COD technique modification 2 × a week (15-min sessions) With immediate feedback (visual and oral) | 45° ± 5° side-step. PP and UP ~5 m.s−1 | At IC: At WA: ↓ peak Both postural changes were correlated with the change in KAM ↔ in approach speed, knee flexion IC, and torso rotation | No CG Did not establish reliability, measurement error, or meaningful difference Implications on performance unclear Controlled approach velocity |
| Jones et al. [ | Ten female netball players | 6-week COD technique modification 2 × a week Technique drills that encouraged PFC braking, backwards trunk inclination, and neutral foot position. Weeks: 1 and 2—deceleration emphasis; 3 and 4—randomly with greater entry velocity; 5 and 6—drills performed randomly at speed unanticipated stimulus | 180° turn –PP ~3 m.s−1 | ↓ ↓ ↓ i | Athletes were not fast to begin with No CG Did not establish reliability, measurement error, or meaningful difference Conference proceeding format |
| Wilderman et al. [ | 30 female basketball players | 6-week agility (COD speed, footwork, and manoeuvrability drills)—4 × a week ( plus a CG ( | 45° side-step Sidesteps—PP 3.3–4.3 m.s−1 | ↔ in knee flexion angle and vertical GRF ( | Lack of feedback regarding COD technique Absence of specific side-stepping drills |
↑ increase, ↓ decrease, ↔ no significant change, KAM knee abduction moment, IC initial contact, WA weight acceptance, IRM internal rotation moment; ROM range of motion, GCT ground contact time, BW body weight, GRF ground reaction force, PP pre-planned, UP unplanned, BW body weight, EMG electromyography, PFC penultimate foot contact, FFC final foot contact, ES effect size, CG control group, IG intervention group, COD change of direction, GRF ground reaction force
Summary of research that has investigated the effects of balance, dynamic core stability control training and perturbation-enhanced plyometric training on COD biomechanics
| Study | Subjects | Training intervention | COD task | Results (post-intervention) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oliveira et al. [ | 26 healthy men—recreational athletes | 6-week balance training—4 × a week (30 mins) ( plus a CG ( | 90° cut and 1 unexpected perturbed cut (10 cm translation) ~ 2.5 m.s−1 | Balance group during perturbed cutting ↓ ↑ ↑ ↔ changes in peak force, approach and exit velocity ( | Presents findings for the perturbed trial only, and this was for only 1 trial Low approach velocity |
| Cochrane et al. [ | Fifty male AFL players | Allocated either to a CG or to one of four 12-wk training programs: Machine weights Free weights Balance Machine weights and balances | 30˚ and 60˚ side-step, 30˚ XOC PP and UP and—light delay ~4–4.5 m.s−1 Preferred leg | Balance group Strength training | Implications on performance unclear Controlled approach velocity |
| Cochrane et al. [ | Fifty male AFL players | Allocated either to a CG or to one of four 12-wk training programs: Machine weights Free weights Balance Machine weights and balance | 30˚ and 60˚ side-step, 30˚ XOC PP and UP and—light delay ~4–4.5 m.s−1 Preferred leg | Change in moments across WA in all manoeuvres (Mean and SD not provided, thus ES cannot be calculated): ↔ peak KAM and IRM ↓ ↔ peak KAM and IRM ↑ | Did not establish reliability, measurement error or meaningful difference Implications on performance unclear Controlled approach velocity |
| Whyte et al. [ | 31 male varsity footballers | 6-week dynamic trunk control/core stability programme—3 × a week ( plus a CG ( | 45° side-step PP and UP | ↔ | Use of SPM Contains CG |
| Weltin et al. [ | 28 females (soccer, handball, and basketball)* 4 withdrawals: | Perturbation-enhanced plyometric training (PPT) (n = 12): lateral reactive jumps—4-week training—3 times a week Plyometric only—CG ( | 45° side-step UP—4.0 ± 0.2 m.s−1 | ↔ lateral trunk lean (ES = 0.26) | Perturbation-enhanced method is unfeasible to implement in real world as it required motored platform |
↑ increase, ↓ decrease, ↔ no significant change, GRF ground reaction force, PP pre-planned, UP unplanned, ES effect size, CG control group, IG intervention group, SPM statistical parametric mapping, PPT perturbation and plyometric training, KAM knee abduction moment, IRM internal rotation moment, XOC crossover cut
Summary of research that has investigated the effects of a mixed training programmes and combined programmes on COD biomechanics
| Study | Subjects | Training intervention | COD task | Results (post-intervention) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weir et al. [ | 10 elite female hockey players | 16-week maintenance training program (3 × 10-min sessions a week) which directly followed a high-dose 9-week initial training intervention (4 × 20-min sessions a week), as part of a biomechanically informed ACL injury prevention program BW plyometric, resistance, and balance exercises | 45˚ side-step—UP | ↓ High-risk responders displayed | Highlight the importance of continuing the training Acknowledged there will be responders and non-responder Abstract format |
| Weir et al. [ | 13 elite female hockey players | 8-week 4 × 15-min multi-component sessions consisting of BW plyometric, resistance, and balance exercises | 45˚ side-step—UP | ↑ TMA of the gluteal (grouped maximus and medius) by 10% during WA ( ↔ in frontal plane knee moments ( | No differences in frontal plane knee moments Abstract format No CG |
| Yang et al. [ | 22 male, 18 female (basketball and volleyball) | 4-week multi-component programme consisting trunk strengthening, stretching, proprioceptive training, hip extension strength training and plyometric training intervention—3 × a week (N = 18, 9 male and 9 female) Plus a CG (N = 18, 9 male and 9 female) | 45° side-step Sidesteps—PP—5 step run-up | ↔ no differences in knee flexion angles, peak impact posterior GRF, or exit velocities compared to CG following intervention (4–12 weeks post-training intervention) | Multicomponent programme; however, strength exercises were prescribed for, strength/ muscular endurance Considered only limited number of variables—unknown the effect of frontal plane biomechanics Short duration |
| Bencke et al. [ | 17 male handball players | Mixed programme consisting of jump landings, unilateral squats, hamstring pulls, hip abductions, and one-leg coordinated hopping IG (n = 10) 12 weeks twice a week Plus a CG (n = 7) | Side-step (no other decsriptions provided) | IG | No joint kinetics/kinematics examined |
| Staynor et al. [ | 25 female community-level team sport athletes *6 withdrawals for training group | Split into IG ( Combination of BW plyometric, resistance, and balance exercises | Side-step—UP (full details not provided) | IG IG | Did not establish reliability, measurement error, or meaningful difference Attendance and compliance rates of 71 ± 14 and 77 ± 7% |
| Donnelly et al. [ | AFL male athletes ( 34 athletes for biomechanical testing (BTT, | Balance and COD technique training (BTT) or acceleration training (ST) 2 × week—20 min/week—18 weeks 1 × week—weeks 19–28 | 45° ± 5°, side-step Sidesteps—PP and UP | Both training groups: | High athlete to coach ratio (40:1) Low athlete compliance (45 ± 22%) |
| Jamison et al. [ | 22 males (previously played American football) N of 10 and 11 completed testing | RT only or Resistance and trunk stabilisation (TS) 6 weeks—3 sessions a week | 45° ± 5°, side-step 3 steps self-selected jog | (SD not provided, thus ES cannot be calculated) | Did not achieve Did not establish reliability, measurement error, or meaningful difference Static trunk exercises were used |
| King et al. [ | 112 athletes with athletic groin pain were assessed pre- and post- rehabilitation | Athletes were subjected to three levels of rehabilitation: Level 1 intersegmental control and strength training Level 2 linear running drills (lumbo-pelvic control and posture) Level 3 multidirectional technique drills that emphasised segmental control (using holding a medball, or arms locked overhead) and lateral propulsion | 110° cut -PP, ~ 2 m.s−1 | ↔ in approach velocity ( ↓ ↑ Large increase in total work done at the ankle, a moderate reduction in the total work done at the hip, and a small reduction at the knee after rehabilitation. | Considered performance implications Showed positive effects for injury risk and performance No CG Did not establish reliability, measurement error, or meaningful difference |
↑ increase, ↓ decrease, ↔ no significant change, XOC crossover cut, KAM knee abduction moment, WA weight acceptance, IRM internal rotation moment, SD standard deviation, BW body weight, GRF ground reaction force, PP pre-planned, UP unplanned, BW body weight, ACL anterior cruciate ligament, RT resistance training, ES effect size, CG control group, TMA total muscle activation, CG control group, COD change of direction, VL vastus lateralis, BF biceps femoris, ST semitendinosus, VPF vertical propulsive force
Summary of research that has investigated the effects of injury prevention warm-up protocols on COD biomechanics
| Study | Subjects | Training intervention | COD task | Results (post-intervention) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thompson et al. [ | 51 females aged 10–12 years soccer players *5 withdrawals | F-MARC 11 + ( 2 × a week for 7–8 weeks—15 sessions total plus CG ( | 45° ± 5°, side-step Sidesteps -PP and UP ~ 4 m.s−1 | Did not establish reliability, measurement error, or meaningful difference Athlete compliance 70.2 ± 14.0% | |
| Thompson-Kolaser et al. [ | 51 preadolescent females (28 intervention, 23 CG)* 5 withdrawals and 43 adolescent (22 intervention, 21 CG)* 6 withdrawals | F MARC 11 + ( 2 × a week for 7–8 weeks—15 sessions total plus CG ( | 45° ± 5°, side-step Sidesteps -PP and UP ~ 4 m.s−1 | ↔ in | Highlights ineffectiveness of intervention for addressing cutting mechanics—only effective for bilateral task Lack of volume and exercises that addresses COD mechanics with feedback, and lack of dynamic trunk exercises |
| Zebis et al. [ | Elite handball ( | Oslo NMS warm intervention—20 min warm up—one season | Side-step (no other decsriptions provided) | ↔ ↔ | Low sample size Investigated low number of biomechanical variables No CG |
| Zebis et al. [ | 40 adolescent female football and handball players | 12 week Oslo NMS warm up—3 × a week ( plus a CG ( | Side-step (no other decsriptions provided) | IG ↔ (Descriptive data not provided, thus ES cannot be calculated) | Only frontal plane knee kinetics and kinematics |
| Celebrini et al. [ | Ten adolescent female soccer players | baseline testing—acute changes ( 4 week—Core-Pac training intervention ( | 15–55° side-step PP and UP | 5 of 7 subjects displayed | Individual differences in response to training intervention No CG |
| Celebrini et al. [ | Twenty adolescent female soccer players | 6 week—Core-Pac training intervention—4 × a week ( plus a CG ( | 15–55° side-step PP and UP | IG ↔ (Raw data not provided, thus ES cannot be calculated) | Low sample size No immediate feedback regarding their technique or biofeedback |
↑ increase, ↓ decrease, ↔ no significant change, KAM knee abduction moment, IC initial contact, IRM internal rotation moment, GCT ground contact time, BW body weight, NMS neuromuscular, PP pre-planned, UP unplanned, EMG electromyography, RT resistance training, ES effect size, CG control group, IG intervention group, COD change of direction, SD standard deviation, VL vastus lateralis, BF biceps femoris, ST semitendinosus, VPF vertical propulsive force, MVC maximal voluntary contraction, Core-Pac core position and control, F MARC 11 + FIFA NMS warm-up, IC initial contact
| Modifying an athlete’s change of direction mechanics by addressing biomechanical and neuromuscular deficits associated with hazardous knee joint loading is an effective strategy to reduce anterior cruciate ligament loading. This can be achieved through biomechanical and neuromuscular informed training interventions. |
| Balance training is a potentially effective strategy to reduce knee joint loads during cutting, most likely attributed to eliciting safer knee agonist-antagonist muscle patterns and hip and trunk muscle activity. Further research is necessary in greater sample sizes and acknowledging measurement error when interpreting findings, to definitively confirm the efficacy of this method. |
| Change of direction technique modifications that focus on reducing lateral trunk flexion, reducing lateral foot plant distances, increasing knee flexion, and promoting earlier braking (during the penultimate foot contact), provide an effective training modality for reducing COD knee joint loading. However, in order to confirm the efficacy and adherence of this method, studies can be improved by including a control group, investigating larger sample sizes, acknowledging measurement error when interpreting findings, and considering the performance implications. |