Cincinnati Children's Hospital Sports Medicine, Sports Medicine Biodynamics Center and Human Performance Laboratory, OH, USA.
J Athl Train. 2012 Nov-Dec;47(6):714-23. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-47.6.10.
No consensus exists about the influence of compliance with neuromuscular training programs on reduction of the risk of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury.
To systematically review and synthesize the published literature to determine if compliance with neuromuscular training is associated with reduced incidence of ACL injury in young female athletes.
We searched PubMed, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL, and MEDLINE for articles published from 1995 to 2010 using the key words anterior cruciate ligament prevention, ACL prevention, knee prevention, prospective knee prevention, neuromuscular training, and neuromuscular intervention.
Criteria for inclusion required that (1) the number of ACL injuries was reported, (2) a neuromuscular training program was used, (3) females were included as participants, (4) the study design was prospective and controlled, and (5) compliance data for the neuromuscular training program were provided.
Extracted data included the number of ACL injuries, total number of participants per group, observation time period, number of participants who completed each session, number of sessions completed by an entire team, and number of total sessions. Attendance was calculated as the number of participants who completed each session converted into a percentage of the total number of participants. Intervention completion was calculated as the number of sessions completed by an entire team converted into a percentage of the total number of training sessions. These data were used to calculate an overall rate of compliance.
Six of 205 identified studies were included. Incidence rates of ACL injury were lower in studies with high rates of compliance with neuromuscular training than in studies with low compliance rates (incidence rate ratio = 0.27 [95% confidence interval = 0.07, 0.80]). Tertile analysis indicated rates of ACL injury incidence were lower in studies with high compliance rates than in studies with moderate and low compliance rates (incidence rate ratio = 0.18 [95% confidence interval = 0.02, 0.77]).
A potential inverse dose-response relationship exists between compliance with neuromuscular training and incidence of ACL injury. Attending and completing recommended neuromuscular sessions appears to be an important factor for preventing ACL injuries.
目前对于是否遵守神经肌肉训练计划会影响前交叉韧带(ACL)损伤的风险,尚无共识。
系统回顾和综合已发表的文献,以确定年轻女性运动员遵守神经肌肉训练计划是否与 ACL 损伤发生率降低有关。
我们在 PubMed、SPORTDiscus、CINAHL 和 MEDLINE 中检索了 1995 年至 2010 年发表的文章,使用的关键词包括前交叉韧带预防、ACL 预防、膝关节预防、前瞻性膝关节预防、神经肌肉训练和神经肌肉干预。
纳入标准包括:(1)报告 ACL 损伤的数量,(2)使用神经肌肉训练计划,(3)将女性纳入参与者,(4)研究设计为前瞻性和对照性,(5)提供神经肌肉训练计划的依从性数据。
提取的数据包括 ACL 损伤的数量、每组的总参与者数量、观察时间段、完成每个疗程的参与者数量、整个团队完成的疗程数量以及总疗程数量。出勤率是将完成每个疗程的参与者数量转换为总参与者数量的百分比。干预完成率是将整个团队完成的疗程数量转换为总训练疗程数量的百分比。这些数据用于计算整体依从率。
在 205 项已确定的研究中,有 6 项研究被纳入。与依从率低的研究相比,依从率高的研究中 ACL 损伤的发生率较低(发生率比=0.27[95%置信区间=0.07,0.80])。三分位分析表明,与中、低依从率的研究相比,高依从率的研究中 ACL 损伤的发生率较低(发生率比=0.18[95%置信区间=0.02,0.77])。
遵守神经肌肉训练与 ACL 损伤发生率之间存在潜在的逆剂量反应关系。参加并完成推荐的神经肌肉疗程似乎是预防 ACL 损伤的一个重要因素。