Kevin P. Granata Biomechanics Lab, Bisaomedical Engineering and Mechanics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, VA.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2019 Apr;51(4):624-629. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000001830.
Hop tests are widely used to quantify recovery from anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) surgery. However, there is evidence that simply measuring hop distance may not be indicative of the quality of movement or representative of potential limitations in hopping mechanics, particularly during landing. The first purpose of the present study was to compare hop distance and loading symmetry between ACLR athletes and healthy uninjured recreational athletes. The second was to determine the association between hop distance and loading symmetry.
Twenty-five ACLR patients and 30 healthy controls completed the single hop, triple hop, and crossover hop test on each limb while the loadsol®, a single-sensor force insole, collected impact forces (100 Hz). A limb symmetry index (LSI) was calculated for hop distance, peak impact force, loading rate, and impulse from the final landing of each trial. LSI values were compared between groups using Mann-Whitney U tests, and distance and loading LSI values were compared using Spearman rank correlations.
ACLR patients had reduced symmetry in hop distance and loading relative to healthy controls for every hop test and outcome measure (P < 0.05), except peak impact force on the single hop. Hop distance symmetry was significantly related to each loading symmetry measure on the crossover hop test (P < 0.01) and to peak impact force and impulse symmetry on the single hop test (P < 0.05) in each group.
This study demonstrates that ACLR patients both hop further and generate larger forces when hopping on their nonsurgical limb relative to their surgical limb. In addition, hop distance and loading symmetry provide clinicians and researchers with different information and therefore should be considered together when making return to sport decisions.
单足跳测试广泛用于评估前交叉韧带重建(ACL)手术后的恢复情况。然而,有证据表明,单纯测量跳跃距离可能无法反映运动质量或潜在跳跃力学的限制,尤其是在落地时。本研究的主要目的是比较 ACLR 运动员和健康未受伤的娱乐运动员的跳跃距离和负荷对称性。其次是确定跳跃距离和负荷对称性之间的相关性。
25 名 ACLR 患者和 30 名健康对照组分别在每条腿上进行单足跳、三向跳和交叉跳测试,同时负载传感器鞋垫(一种单传感器力鞋垫)采集冲击力(100Hz)。每个试验的最后一次着陆时,计算跳跃距离、峰值冲击力、负荷率和冲量的肢体对称性指数(LSI)。使用 Mann-Whitney U 检验比较组间 LSI 值,使用 Spearman 秩相关比较距离和负荷 LSI 值。
与健康对照组相比,ACL 患者在每种跳跃测试和结果测量中(P < 0.05),除单足跳的峰值冲击力外,跳跃距离的对称性均降低,负荷对称性降低。交叉跳测试的跳跃距离对称性与每个加载对称性测量指标均显著相关(P < 0.01),与单足跳测试的峰值冲击力和冲量对称性相关(P < 0.05)。
本研究表明,ACL 患者在非手术侧的跳跃距离和产生的力都大于手术侧。此外,跳跃距离和负荷对称性为临床医生和研究人员提供了不同的信息,因此在做出重返运动决策时应一起考虑。