Department of Exercise and Sport Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Human Movement Science Curriculum, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Sports Med. 2018 Apr;48(4):893-905. doi: 10.1007/s40279-017-0850-8.
Visual, vestibular, and somatosensory systems contribute to postural control. Chronic ankle instability (CAI) patients have been observed to have a reduced ability to dynamically shift their reliance among sources of sensory information and rely more heavily on visual information during a single-limb stance relative to uninjured controls. Balance training is proven to improve postural control but there is a lack of evidence regarding the ability of balance training programs to alter the reliance on visual information in CAI patients.
Our objective was to determine if balance training alters the reliance on visual information during static stance in CAI patients.
The PubMed, CINAHL, and SPORTDiscus databases were searched from their earliest available date to October 2017 using a combination of keywords. Study inclusion criteria consisted of (1) using participants with CAI; (2) use of a balance training intervention; and (3) calculation of an objective measure of static postural control during single-limb stance with eyes open and eyes closed. Sample sizes, means, and standard deviations of single-leg balance measures for eyes-open and eyes-closed testing conditions before and after balance training were extracted from the included studies. Eyes-open to eyes-closed effect sizes [Hedges' g and 95% confidence intervals (CI)] before and after balance training were calculated, and between-study variability for heterogeneity and potential risks of publication bias were examined.
Six studies were identified. The overall eyes-open to eyes-closed effect size difference between pre- and post-intervention assessments was not significant (Hedges' g effect size = 0.151, 95% CI = - 0.151 to 0.453, p = 0.26). This result indicates that the utilization of visual information in individuals with CAI during the single-leg balance is not altered after balance training. Low heterogeneity (Q(5) = 2.96, p = 0.71, I = 0%) of the included studies and no publication bias were found.
On the basis of our systematic review with meta-analysis, it appears that traditional balance training protocols do not alter the reliance on visual information used by CAI patients during a single-leg stance.
视觉、前庭和躯体感觉系统有助于姿势控制。慢性踝关节不稳(CAI)患者在单腿站立时,观察到其动态转移对感觉信息来源的依赖能力降低,相对于未受伤的对照组,更多地依赖视觉信息。平衡训练已被证明可改善姿势控制,但缺乏关于平衡训练计划改变 CAI 患者对视觉信息依赖能力的证据。
我们的目的是确定平衡训练是否会改变 CAI 患者在静态站立时对视觉信息的依赖。
从最早可获得的日期到 2017 年 10 月,我们通过关键词组合在 PubMed、CINAHL 和 SPORTDiscus 数据库中进行了搜索。研究纳入标准包括:(1)使用 CAI 患者;(2)使用平衡训练干预;(3)在单腿睁眼和闭眼时计算客观的静态姿势控制测量值。从纳入的研究中提取单腿平衡睁眼和闭眼测试条件下平衡训练前后的样本量、平均值和标准差。计算平衡训练前后睁眼到闭眼的效应量[Hedges'g 和 95%置信区间(CI)],并检查研究之间的异质性和潜在发表偏倚风险的变异性。
确定了 6 项研究。干预前后评估中睁眼到闭眼的总体效应量差异无统计学意义(Hedges'g 效应量=0.151,95%CI=-0.151 至 0.453,p=0.26)。这一结果表明,在单腿平衡中,CAI 患者利用视觉信息的方式在平衡训练后并未改变。纳入研究的异质性较低(Q(5)=2.96,p=0.71,I 2=0%),未发现发表偏倚。
根据我们的系统评价和荟萃分析,传统的平衡训练方案似乎不会改变 CAI 患者在单腿站立时对视觉信息的依赖。