Giesche Florian, Stief Felix, Groneberg David A, Wilke Jan
Institute of Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine, Division of Preventive and Sports Medicine, Goethe University Frankfurt, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590, Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
Function and Motion Lab, Berufsgenossenschaftliche Unfallklinik Frankfurt, Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2025 Sep 12;15(1):32476. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-18746-9.
Lower limb injuries are common in team sports, often occurring during athletic tasks with high cognitive demands, such as time-constrained decision-making. This systematic review and meta-analysis used robust variance estimation to compare ankle biomechanics during unplanned (time-constrained) versus pre-planned (no decision-making) tasks. Standardized mean differences (SMD) and 95% confidence intervals were pooled to assess differences in ankle kinematics and kinetics. A literature search was conducted in PubMed, Google Scholar, Cochrane Library, and ScienceDirect (until April 2025). Trials assessing ankle kinematics and/or kinetics during pre-planned and unplanned jump-landing or cutting tasks in healthy athletes were included. The GRADE approach was used to rate the certainty of evidence for each outcome as low, moderate, or high. Fifteen trials (162 men, 152 women) with fair to high methodological quality (modified Downs and Black checklist) were identified. In the sagittal plane, low to moderate certainty evidence indicated higher ankle plantarflexion angles during unplanned movement (SMD = 0.27, p = .017). Subgroup analyses showed this effect was most evident in run-and-cut tasks, at initial ground contact, and among elite athletes (SMD = 0.24 to 0.36, p = .017 to .045). Sensitivity analysis excluding outliers indicated low-certainty evidence of increased ankle dorsiflexion angles during unplanned tasks (SMD = 0.25, p = .044), predominantly during the stance phase. Unplanned sports movements may increase ankle plantar- and dorsiflexion, but their impact on injury risk remains uncertain, as these changes may also reflect performance or protective adaptations. Due to the limited number of studies, low certainty of the available evidence, small effect sizes in the sagittal plane, and limited findings in the frontal and transverse planes, further research is warranted to draw more specific conclusions. PROSPERO registration number: CRD42024598492 (date of registration: 18 October 2024).
下肢损伤在团队运动中很常见,通常发生在认知要求较高的体育任务中,比如时间紧迫的决策过程。这项系统评价和荟萃分析采用稳健方差估计,比较了无计划(时间受限)任务与预先计划(无需决策)任务期间的踝关节生物力学。汇总标准化均数差(SMD)和95%置信区间,以评估踝关节运动学和动力学的差异。在PubMed、谷歌学术、Cochrane图书馆和ScienceDirect数据库中进行了文献检索(截至2025年4月)。纳入了评估健康运动员在预先计划和无计划的跳跃落地或变向任务期间踝关节运动学和/或动力学的试验。采用GRADE方法将每个结局的证据确定性评为低、中或高。确定了15项试验(162名男性,152名女性),方法学质量为中等至高(改良的唐斯和布莱克检查表)。在矢状面,低至中等确定性证据表明,无计划运动期间踝关节跖屈角度更高(SMD = 0.27,p = 0.017)。亚组分析表明,这种效应在跑-变向任务、初始触地时以及精英运动员中最为明显(SMD = 0.24至0.36,p = 0.017至0.045)。排除异常值的敏感性分析表明,无计划任务期间踝关节背屈角度增加的证据确定性较低(SMD = 0.25,p = 0.044),主要发生在站立期。无计划的体育动作可能会增加踝关节的跖屈和背屈,但它们对损伤风险的影响仍不确定,因为这些变化也可能反映了表现或保护性适应。由于研究数量有限、现有证据确定性低、矢状面效应量小以及额状面和横断面研究结果有限,有必要进行进一步研究以得出更具体的结论。PROSPERO注册号:CRD42024598492(注册日期:2024年10月18日)。