*Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine, Medical Clinic, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany; †Department of Orthopedics, Sportklinik Stuttgart GmbH, Stuttgart, Germany; and ‡Department of Orthopedics and Biomechanics, German Sports University Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Clin J Sport Med. 2014 Jan;24(1):51-7. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0b013e31829ddc74.
To evaluate the presupposed preventive residual mechanical effectiveness of the widespread use of adhesive elastic ankle tape after a nonlaboratory, realistic soccer-specific outfield intervention reflecting a soccer halftime.
A prospective nonrandomized test-retest design was used.
Laboratory.
Seventeen professional male outfield players (mean age, 25.5) without any signs of chronic ankle instability.
Participants were investigated before and after a 45-minute soccer-specific field intervention.
The passive inversion range of motion (ROM) of the ankle was tested unloaded on a self-developed inversion device with and without a standardized ankle tape before and after the intervention. Additionally, electromyography signal was taken to assure the inactivity of the protective evertor muscles, and reliability tests for the inversion device (test-retest and trial to trial) were conducted in 12 healthy controls.
Tape restricted the maximum passive inversion ROM of the uninjured ankle significantly to 50.3%. The protection declined nearly completely after 45 minutes of outfield soccer performance to a negligible nonsignificant ROM restriction of 9.7%. Pearson correlation coefficient for the reliability was 0.931 (P ≤ 0.001) for the test-retest and 0.983 (P ≤ 0.001) for the trial-to-trial test.
The initial significant protection of external ankle-tape support declines almost completely without relevant remaining residual mechanical effect after 45 minutes, reflecting a soccer halftime. The so far presupposed residual mechanical effectiveness of tape to prevent injury is increasingly irrelevant during soccer performance and consequently antidromic to the increasing injury risk toward the end of a soccer halftime.
评估在非实验室、现实的足球专项场外干预后,广泛使用粘性弹性踝贴的预设预防残留机械效果,该干预反映了足球半场休息。
使用前瞻性非随机测试-再测试设计。
实验室。
17 名没有任何慢性踝关节不稳定迹象的职业男性外场球员(平均年龄 25.5 岁)。
参与者在 45 分钟的足球专项场地干预前后接受了调查。
踝关节的被动内翻范围(ROM)在使用和不使用标准化踝贴的情况下,在自行开发的内翻装置上进行非负重测试,在干预前后进行。此外,还记录了肌电图信号以确保保护外翻肌的不活动,并对 12 名健康对照者进行了内翻装置的可靠性测试(测试-再测试和试验到试验)。
贴扎限制了未受伤踝关节的最大被动内翻 ROM 至 50.3%。在进行 45 分钟的场外足球比赛后,保护作用几乎完全下降,仅对内翻 ROM 产生了可忽略的无显著限制,为 9.7%。测试-再测试的 Pearson 相关系数为 0.931(P ≤ 0.001),试验到试验的 Pearson 相关系数为 0.983(P ≤ 0.001)。
在反映足球半场休息的 45 分钟后,外部踝贴支持的初始显著保护作用几乎完全下降,没有相关的残留机械效果。到足球半场结束时,踝贴对预防受伤的假设残留机械效果变得越来越不重要,与不断增加的受伤风险背道而驰。