Giesche Florian, Engeroff Tobias, Wilke Jan, Niederer Daniel, Vogt Lutz, Banzer Winfried
Department of Sports Medicine, Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany.
BMJ Open. 2018 Sep 19;8(9):e023048. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023048.
Current evidence suggests that the loss of mechanoreceptors after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears might be compensated by increased cortical motor planning. This occupation of cerebral resources may limit the potential to quickly adapt movements to unforeseen external stimuli in the athletic environment. To date, studies investigating such neural alterations during movement focused on simple, anticipated tasks with low ecological validity. This trial, therefore, aims to investigate the cortical and biomechanical processes associated with more sport-related and injury-related movements in ACL-reconstructed individuals.
ACL-reconstructed participants and uninjured controls will perform repetitive countermovement jumps with single leg landings. Two different conditions are to be completed: anticipated (n=35) versus unanticipated (n=35) successful landings. Under the anticipated condition, participants receive the visual information depicting the requested landing leg prior to the jump. In the unanticipated condition, this information will be provided only about 400 msec prior to landing. Neural correlates of motor planning will be measured using electroencephalography. In detail, movement-related cortical potentials, frequency spectral power and functional connectivity will be assessed. Biomechanical landing quality will be captured via a capacitive force plate. Calculated parameters encompass time to stabilisation, vertical peak ground reaction force, and centre of pressure path length. Potential systematic differences between ACL-reconstructed individuals and controls will be identified in dependence of jumping condition (anticipated/ unanticipated, injured/uninjured leg and controls) by using interference statistics. Potential associations between the cortical and biomechanical measures will be calculated by means of correlation analysis. In case of statistical significance (α<0.05.) further confounders (cofactors) will be considered.
The independent Ethics Committee of the University of Frankfurt (Faculty of Psychology and Sports Sciences) approved the study. Publications in peer-reviewed journals are planned. The findings will be presented at scientific conferences.
At the time of submission of this manuscript, recruitment is ongoing.
NCT03336060; Pre-results.
目前的证据表明,前交叉韧带(ACL)撕裂后机械感受器的丧失可能通过增加皮质运动计划得到补偿。这种大脑资源的占用可能会限制在运动环境中快速调整动作以适应意外外部刺激的潜力。迄今为止,研究运动过程中这种神经改变的研究主要集中在生态效度较低的简单、可预期任务上。因此,本试验旨在研究ACL重建个体中与更多运动相关和损伤相关动作相关的皮质和生物力学过程。
ACL重建参与者和未受伤的对照组将进行单腿落地的重复性反向运动跳跃。要完成两种不同的情况:可预期(n = 35)与不可预期(n = 35)的成功落地。在可预期的情况下,参与者在跳跃前会收到描绘所需落地腿的视觉信息。在不可预期的情况下,此信息仅在落地前约400毫秒提供。运动计划的神经相关性将使用脑电图进行测量。具体而言,将评估与运动相关的皮质电位、频谱功率和功能连接性。生物力学落地质量将通过电容式测力板进行采集。计算参数包括稳定时间、垂直峰值地面反作用力和压力中心路径长度。通过使用干扰统计,将根据跳跃情况(可预期/不可预期、受伤/未受伤腿和对照组)确定ACL重建个体与对照组之间潜在的系统差异。皮质和生物力学测量之间的潜在关联将通过相关分析进行计算。如果具有统计学意义(α<0.05),将考虑进一步的混杂因素(辅助因素)。
法兰克福大学(心理学与体育科学学院)独立伦理委员会批准了该研究。计划在同行评审期刊上发表文章。研究结果将在科学会议上展示。
在提交本手稿时,招募工作正在进行中。
NCT03336060;预结果。