Prat-Luri Amaya, Vera-Garcia Francisco J, Moreno-Navarro Pedro, Juan-Recio Casto, de Los Ríos-Calonge Javier, Heredia-Elvar Juan R, Elvira Jose L L, Barbado David
Sports Research Centre, Department of Sport Sciences, Miguel Hernández University, Elche, Spain.
Institute for Health and Biomedical Research (ISABIAL Foundation), Miguel Hernández University of Elche, Elche, Spain.
PLoS One. 2025 Jun 5;20(6):e0325040. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0325040. eCollection 2025.
Bridges and bird-dog exercises are commonly used in general training, as well as in warm-up and cool-down routines for young athletes to boost performance and prevent injuries. They are frequently paired with limb and other trunk exercises, and performed without precise control over intensity, which hinders the understanding of their actual impact. This double-blinded randomized controlled trial aimed to evaluate the effects of two bridging and bird-dog exercise programs (one emphasizing intensity, the other volume) on trunk performance and whole-body balance. Sixty participants were randomly assigned to a control group and two experimental groups, both of which performed bridging and bird-dog exercises at a specific intensity controlled by a smartphone-accelerometer. The exercises were conducted twice a week for six weeks at the university sports complex. The effects were assessed on: (i) trunk stability, through the bridging and the bird-dog lumbopelvic postural control, the unstable sitting and the sudden loading sitting tests, (ii) trunk endurance, through the front and the dominant side bridge endurance, and the Biering-Sorensen tests, and (iii) whole-body dynamic balance, through the Y-Balance, the tandem and single-leg stance, and the single-leg triple hop tests. Pre-post changes were reported in both absolute (Δ) and relative (Δ%) values. A two-way mixed ANOVA assessed differences between experimental and control groups, while paired t-tests analyzed within-group pre-post changes with a significance level set at p < 0.05. Neither of the experimental groups showed improvements in trunk performance and balance compared to the control group or among themselves. Nonetheless, the higher intensity group elicited greater pre-post changes in the bridging and the bird-dog lumbopelvic postural control tests (-10.4 ≤Δ% ≤-16.9 vs -4.8 ≤Δ% ≤-13.6), whilst the higher volume group did in the trunk endurance tests (10.9 ≤Δ% ≤19.5 vs 7.1 ≤Δ% ≤15.5). The lack of significant between-group differences may be due to the low exercise doses, typical for these exercises in fitness and rehabilitation routines, and the participants being active young males with no apparent postural control deficits. Additionally, the pre-post changes in the experimental groups highlight the specificity of exercise adaptations. This study questions the effectiveness of bridging and bird-dog exercises for improving trunk performance and whole-body balance in this population, beyond the tasks used in training.
臀桥和鸟狗式练习常用于常规训练,以及年轻运动员的热身和放松环节,以提高运动表现并预防损伤。它们常与肢体及其他躯干练习搭配进行,且在强度控制不精确的情况下开展,这妨碍了对其实际效果的理解。这项双盲随机对照试验旨在评估两种臀桥和鸟狗式练习方案(一种强调强度,另一种强调量)对躯干表现和全身平衡的影响。60名参与者被随机分配到一个对照组和两个实验组,两个实验组均在智能手机加速度计控制的特定强度下进行臀桥和鸟狗式练习。这些练习在大学体育中心每周进行两次,共持续六周。评估的效果包括:(i)通过臀桥和鸟狗式练习的腰骶部姿势控制、不稳定坐姿和突然加载坐姿测试来评估躯干稳定性;(ii)通过前桥和优势侧桥耐力测试以及比林-索伦森测试来评估躯干耐力;(iii)通过Y平衡测试、串联和单腿站立测试以及单腿三级跳测试来评估全身动态平衡。报告了绝对(Δ)值和相对(Δ%)值的前后变化。采用双向混合方差分析评估实验组和对照组之间的差异,同时采用配对t检验分析组内前后变化,显著性水平设定为p < 0.05。与对照组相比,两个实验组在躯干表现和平衡方面均未显示出改善,两组之间也无差异。尽管如此,高强度组在臀桥和鸟狗式练习的腰骶部姿势控制测试中前后变化更大(-10.4≤Δ%≤-16.9 vs -4.8≤Δ%≤-13.6),而高量组在躯干耐力测试中变化更大(10.9≤Δ%≤19.5 vs 7.1≤Δ%≤15.5)。组间差异不显著可能是由于这些练习在健身和康复训练中通常运动量较低,且参与者为活跃的年轻男性,无明显的姿势控制缺陷。此外,实验组的前后变化突出了运动适应的特异性。本研究对臀桥和鸟狗式练习在该人群中改善躯干表现和全身平衡的有效性提出了质疑,超出了训练中使用的任务范畴。