Knapik Joseph J, Cosio-Lima Ludimila M, Reynolds Katy L, Shumway Richard S
1Fitness, Injury, and Performance Analysis, Abingdon, Maryland; 2Department of Health, Leisure, and Exercise Science, University of West Florida, Pensacola, Florida; 3United States Naval Hospital Pensacola, Department of Orthopedics, Pensacola, Florida; and 4United States Coast Guard Academy, New London, Connecticut.
J Strength Cond Res. 2015 May;29(5):1157-62. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000000704.
Functional movement screening (FMS) examines the ability of individuals to perform highly specific movements with the aim of identifying individuals who have functional limitations or asymmetries. It is assumed that individuals who can more effectively accomplish the required movements have a lower injury risk. This study determined the ability of FMS to predict injuries in the United States Coast Guard (USCG) cadets. Seven hundred seventy male and 275 female USCG freshman cadets were administered the 7 FMS tests before the physically intense 8-week Summer Warfare Annual Basic (SWAB) training. Physical training-related injuries were recorded during SWAB training. Cumulative injury incidence was calculated at various FMS cutpoint scores. The ability of the FMS total score to predict injuries was examined by calculating sensitivity and specificity. Determination of the FMS cutpoint that maximized specificity and sensitivity was determined from the Youden's index (sensitivity + specificity - 1). For men, FMS scores ≤ 12 were associated with higher injury risk than scores >12; for women, FMS scores ≤ 15 were associated with higher injury risk than scores >15. The Youden's Index indicated that the optimal FMS cutpoint was ≤ 11 for men (22% sensitivity, 87% specificity) and ≤ 14 for women (60% sensitivity, 61% specificity). Functional movement screening demonstrated moderate prognostic accuracy for determining injury risk among female Coast Guard cadets but relatively low accuracy among male cadets. Attempting to predict injury risk based on the FMS test seems to have some limited promise based on the present and past investigations.
功能性动作筛查(FMS)旨在通过检查个体执行高度特定动作的能力,来识别存在功能限制或不对称的个体。一般认为,能够更有效地完成所需动作的个体受伤风险较低。本研究确定了FMS对美国海岸警卫队(USCG)学员受伤情况的预测能力。770名男性和275名女性USCG一年级学员在为期8周的高强度夏季作战年度基础(SWAB)训练前接受了7项FMS测试。在SWAB训练期间记录与体育训练相关的损伤情况。计算了不同FMS切点分数下的累积损伤发生率。通过计算敏感性和特异性来检验FMS总分预测损伤的能力。根据约登指数(敏感性+特异性-1)确定使特异性和敏感性最大化的FMS切点。对于男性,FMS得分≤12的学员比得分>12的学员受伤风险更高;对于女性,FMS得分≤15的学员比得分>15的学员受伤风险更高。约登指数表明,男性的最佳FMS切点为≤11(敏感性22%,特异性87%),女性为≤14(敏感性60%,特异性61%)。功能性动作筛查显示,在确定女性海岸警卫队学员的受伤风险方面具有中等的预测准确性,但在男性学员中准确性相对较低。根据目前和过去的调查,试图基于FMS测试预测受伤风险似乎有一定的局限性。