Araştırma Makalesi

4-weeks Dynamic Balance training fails to improve ankle and knee joint position sense

Cilt: 40 Sayı: 3 30 Eylül 2018
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4-weeks Dynamic Balance training fails to improve ankle and knee joint position sense

Abstract

Objective: Research clearly shows that balance training improves balance and reduces recurrent injuries. However, the existing data is inconclusive about the effect of balance training exercises on proprioceptive outcomes. While some studies have reported positive effects of balance training on position sense other have reported insignificant findings. For that reason  the purpose of this study was to determine if a dynamic balance training program centered on the use of unstable surface exercises can improve lower extremity joint position sense.

Setting: University Research Laboratory

Participants: Twelve healthy men (age: 22.5 ± 4.58 years, height: 181.58 ± 7.57 cm, weight:85.25 ±10.67 kg, BMI: 25.87 ± 3.01 kg/m2) and 16 healthy women (age: 20.87 ± 3.4 years, height: 164.13 ± 6.15 cm, weight: 63.75 ±13.3 kg, BMI: 23.53 ± 3.94 kg/m2 ) volunteered to participate.

Intervention(s): All participants underwent a total of 12 supervised training sessions over a 4-week period of time with each session lasting about 30 minutes. The specific exercises that were performed during each training session included: 1) hop to stabilization onto and off of a BOSU ball in four directions (anterior, lateral, anteriomedial, and anteriolateral; 2) mini-squats on a BOSU ball while in a single limb stance; 3) unanticipated reach sequences while stabilizing on a BOSU ball in a single limb stance; and 4) static single limb stance on a BOSU ball.

Main Outcome Measure(s):   Ankle joint position sense and knee joint position sense were assessed by a passive reproduction of passive positioning protocol. Target angles of 10° and 20° of inversion were used for ankle joint position sense; 30° and 45° of knee flexion were used for knee joint position sense assesment. Average absolute error for the dominant limb quantifed joint-position sense.

Results: At the end of 4 weeks dynamic balance training program centered on the use of unstable surface, absolute error score for ankle inversion at 10° improved from 2.29±1.61 to 2.09±1.86, knee flexion at 30° improved from 5.07±2.78 to 4.80±2.55, and knee flexion at 45° improved from 4.12±2.19 to 3.87±2.25. However, this improvements were not significant (p>0.05)

Conclusion: There were improvements noted (absolute error decreased for 10o of inversion and 30o and 45o of knee flexion) despite the lack of significant differences and small effect sizes with 95% CIs that crossed 0. The lack of a significant improvement in absolute errors scores could be due to methodological considerations, participant characteristics and/or a training volume dose response.

Keywords

Kaynakça

  1. Philiph A Gribble Patrick OMckeon

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil

İngilizce

Konular

Sağlık Kurumları Yönetimi

Bölüm

Araştırma Makalesi

Yazarlar

Mutlu Cuğ *
Cumhuriyet University Physical Education and Sport Department, Sivas, Turkey
0000-0002-1265-0073
Türkiye

Erik Wikstrom
Department of Exercise and Sport Science 311 Woollen Gym University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599
0000-0002-7260-0502
United States

Yayımlanma Tarihi

30 Eylül 2018

Gönderilme Tarihi

26 Şubat 2018

Kabul Tarihi

13 Eylül 2018

Yayımlandığı Sayı

Yıl 2018 Cilt: 40 Sayı: 3

Kaynak Göster

AMA
1.Cuğ M, Wikstrom E. 4-weeks Dynamic Balance training fails to improve ankle and knee joint position sense. CMJ. 2018;40(3):257-264. doi:10.7197/223.vi.398881

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