Fanchini Maurizio, Steendahl Ida Bo, Impellizzeri Franco M, Pruna Ricard, Dupont Gregory, Coutts Aaron J, Meyer Tim, McCall Alan
Performance Department, AS Roma Football Club, Piazzale Dino Viola, 1, 00128, Rome, RM, Italy.
Department of Neuroscience, Biomedicine and Movement Sciences, University of Verona, Verona, Italy.
Sports Med. 2020 Sep;50(9):1653-1666. doi: 10.1007/s40279-020-01282-z.
Exercise-based strategies are used to prevent muscle injuries in football and studies on different competitive-level populations may provide different results.
To evaluate the effectiveness of exercise-based muscle injury prevention strategies in adult elite football.
A systematic search was conducted in PubMed (MEDLINE), Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and SPORTDiscuss (EBSCO). We considered only elite adult (> 16 year-old) football players with no distinction for gender; the intervention to be any exercise/s performed with the target to prevent lower-limb muscle injuries; the comparison to be no injury prevention exercise undertaken; the outcome to be the number of injuries, injury incidence, and severity. We searched systematic reviews, randomized-controlled trials (RCTs), and non-randomized-controlled trials (NRCTs), limited for English language. Risk of bias was assessed using the Risk of Bias in Systematic Reviews tool, the Cochrane Collaboration's Tool for assessing risk of bias in RCTs, and the Risk of Bias in NRCTs of Interventions tool.
15 studies were included. Three systematic reviews showed inconsistent results, with one supporting (high risk of bias) and two showing insufficient evidence (low risk of bias) to support exercise-based strategies to prevent muscle injuries in elite players. Five RCTs and seven NRCTs support eccentric exercise, proprioception exercises, and a multi-dimensional component to an injury prevention program; however, all were deemed to be at high/critical risk of bias. Only one RCT was found at low risk of bias and supported eccentric exercise for preventing groin problems.
We found limited scientific evidence to support exercise-based strategies to prevent muscle injury in elite footballers.
PROSPERO CRD42017077705.
基于运动的策略被用于预防足球运动中的肌肉损伤,而针对不同竞技水平人群的研究可能会得出不同结果。
评估基于运动的肌肉损伤预防策略在成年精英足球运动员中的有效性。
在PubMed(MEDLINE)、科学网、考克兰图书馆和SPORTDiscuss(EBSCO)中进行了系统检索。我们仅纳入16岁以上的成年精英足球运动员,不区分性别;干预措施为任何旨在预防下肢肌肉损伤的运动;对照为未进行任何损伤预防运动;结局指标为损伤数量、损伤发生率和严重程度。我们检索了系统评价、随机对照试验(RCT)和非随机对照试验(NRCT),限定语言为英语。使用系统评价中的偏倚风险工具、考克兰协作网评估RCT偏倚风险的工具以及干预性NRCT的偏倚风险工具评估偏倚风险。
纳入15项研究。三项系统评价结果不一致,一项支持(偏倚风险高),两项证据不足(偏倚风险低),无法支持基于运动的策略预防精英球员肌肉损伤。五项RCT和七项NRCT支持离心运动、本体感觉训练以及损伤预防计划中的多维度组成部分;然而,所有这些研究均被认为偏倚风险高/极高。仅发现一项RCT偏倚风险低,支持离心运动预防腹股沟问题。
我们发现支持基于运动的策略预防精英足球运动员肌肉损伤的科学证据有限。
PROSPERO CRD42017077705。