Asset Details
MbrlCatalogueTitleDetail
Do you wish to reserve the book?
Report of the Primary Outcomes for Gait Mechanics in Men of the ACL-SPORTS Trial: Secondary Prevention With and Without Perturbation Training Does Not Restore Gait Symmetry in Men 1 or 2 Years After ACL Reconstruction
by
Zarzycki, Ryan
, Arundale, Amelia
, Capin, Jacob John
, Snyder-Mackler, Lynn
, Cummer, Kathleen
in
Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Anterior cruciate ligament
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - diagnosis
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction - adverse effects
/ Asymmetry
/ Athletes
/ Biomechanical Phenomena
/ Chi-Square Distribution
/ Conservative Orthopedics
/ Effusion
/ Exercise Therapy - methods
/ Gait
/ Hip
/ Hip Joint - physiopathology
/ Humans
/ Knee
/ Knee Joint - physiopathology
/ Male
/ Mechanics
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Muscle contraction
/ Muscle Strength
/ Odds Ratio
/ Orthopedics
/ Osteoarthritis
/ Pain
/ Quadriceps muscle
/ Range of Motion, Articular
/ Recovery of Function
/ Return to Sport
/ Risk Factors
/ SAP protein
/ Secondary Prevention - methods
/ Sex Factors
/ Skin & tissue grafts
/ Sports Medicine
/ Surgery
/ Surgical Orthopedics
/ Symmetry
/ Symposium: Improving Care for Patients With ACL Injuries: A Team Approach
/ Time Factors
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Walking
/ Young Adult
2017
Hey, we have placed the reservation for you!
By the way, why not check out events that you can attend while you pick your title.
You are currently in the queue to collect this book. You will be notified once it is your turn to collect the book.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Looks like we were not able to place the reservation. Kindly try again later.
Are you sure you want to remove the book from the shelf?
Report of the Primary Outcomes for Gait Mechanics in Men of the ACL-SPORTS Trial: Secondary Prevention With and Without Perturbation Training Does Not Restore Gait Symmetry in Men 1 or 2 Years After ACL Reconstruction
by
Zarzycki, Ryan
, Arundale, Amelia
, Capin, Jacob John
, Snyder-Mackler, Lynn
, Cummer, Kathleen
in
Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Anterior cruciate ligament
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - diagnosis
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction - adverse effects
/ Asymmetry
/ Athletes
/ Biomechanical Phenomena
/ Chi-Square Distribution
/ Conservative Orthopedics
/ Effusion
/ Exercise Therapy - methods
/ Gait
/ Hip
/ Hip Joint - physiopathology
/ Humans
/ Knee
/ Knee Joint - physiopathology
/ Male
/ Mechanics
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Muscle contraction
/ Muscle Strength
/ Odds Ratio
/ Orthopedics
/ Osteoarthritis
/ Pain
/ Quadriceps muscle
/ Range of Motion, Articular
/ Recovery of Function
/ Return to Sport
/ Risk Factors
/ SAP protein
/ Secondary Prevention - methods
/ Sex Factors
/ Skin & tissue grafts
/ Sports Medicine
/ Surgery
/ Surgical Orthopedics
/ Symmetry
/ Symposium: Improving Care for Patients With ACL Injuries: A Team Approach
/ Time Factors
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Walking
/ Young Adult
2017
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Report of the Primary Outcomes for Gait Mechanics in Men of the ACL-SPORTS Trial: Secondary Prevention With and Without Perturbation Training Does Not Restore Gait Symmetry in Men 1 or 2 Years After ACL Reconstruction
by
Zarzycki, Ryan
, Arundale, Amelia
, Capin, Jacob John
, Snyder-Mackler, Lynn
, Cummer, Kathleen
in
Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Anterior cruciate ligament
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - diagnosis
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction - adverse effects
/ Asymmetry
/ Athletes
/ Biomechanical Phenomena
/ Chi-Square Distribution
/ Conservative Orthopedics
/ Effusion
/ Exercise Therapy - methods
/ Gait
/ Hip
/ Hip Joint - physiopathology
/ Humans
/ Knee
/ Knee Joint - physiopathology
/ Male
/ Mechanics
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Muscle contraction
/ Muscle Strength
/ Odds Ratio
/ Orthopedics
/ Osteoarthritis
/ Pain
/ Quadriceps muscle
/ Range of Motion, Articular
/ Recovery of Function
/ Return to Sport
/ Risk Factors
/ SAP protein
/ Secondary Prevention - methods
/ Sex Factors
/ Skin & tissue grafts
/ Sports Medicine
/ Surgery
/ Surgical Orthopedics
/ Symmetry
/ Symposium: Improving Care for Patients With ACL Injuries: A Team Approach
/ Time Factors
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Walking
/ Young Adult
2017
Please be aware that the book you have requested cannot be checked out. If you would like to checkout this book, you can reserve another copy
We have requested the book for you!
Your request is successful and it will be processed during the Library working hours. Please check the status of your request in My Requests.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Looks like we were not able to place your request. Kindly try again later.
Report of the Primary Outcomes for Gait Mechanics in Men of the ACL-SPORTS Trial: Secondary Prevention With and Without Perturbation Training Does Not Restore Gait Symmetry in Men 1 or 2 Years After ACL Reconstruction
Journal Article
Report of the Primary Outcomes for Gait Mechanics in Men of the ACL-SPORTS Trial: Secondary Prevention With and Without Perturbation Training Does Not Restore Gait Symmetry in Men 1 or 2 Years After ACL Reconstruction
2017
Request Book From Autostore
and Choose the Collection Method
Overview
Background
Movement asymmetries during walking are common after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury and reconstruction and may influence the early development of posttraumatic osteoarthritis. Preoperative neuromuscular training (like perturbation training, which is neuromuscular training requiring selective muscle activation in response to surface perturbations) improves gait asymmetries and functional outcomes among people who are ACL-deficient, but the effect of postoperative perturbation training on gait mechanics after ACL reconstruction is unknown.
Questions/purposes
Among men undergoing ACL reconstruction, we sought to compare strength, agility, and secondary prevention (SAP) treatment with SAP plus perturbation training (SAP+PERT) with respect to (1) gait mechanics; and (2) elimination of gait asymmetries 1 and 2 years after ACL reconstruction.
Methods
Forty men were randomized into a SAP group or a SAP+PERT group after ACL reconstruction and before returning to preinjury activities. Participants were required to achieve ≥ 80% quadriceps muscle strength symmetry, minimal knee effusion, full ROM, no reports of pain, and completion of a running progression (all between 3 and 9 months postoperatively) before enrollment. Of 94 potentially eligible athletic male patients evaluated < 9 months after ACL reconstruction, 54 were excluded for prespecified reasons. Participants underwent motion analysis during overground walking at 1 and 2 years postoperatively. Variables of interest included (1) sagittal and frontal plane hip and knee angles and moments at peak knee flexion angle; (2) sagittal plane hip and knee angles and moments at peak knee extension angle; (3) sagittal plane hip and knee excursion during weight acceptance; and (4) sagittal plane hip and knee excursion during midstance. We also calculated the proportion of athletes in each group who walked with clinically meaningful interlimb asymmetry in sagittal plane hip and knee variables and compared these proportions using odds ratios. There was no differential loss to followup between groups.
Results
There were no differences between the SAP or SAP+PERT groups for the biomechanical gait variables. The involved limb’s knee excursion during midstance for the SAP (mean ± SD: 1 year: 15° ± 5°; 2 years: 16° ± 5°) and SAP+PERT (1 year: 16° ± 5°; 2 years: 15° ± 4°) athletes was not different between groups at 1 year (mean difference: −1°; 95% confidence interval [CI], −5° to 2°; p = 0.49) or 2 years (mean difference: 1°; 95% CI, −2° to 4°; p = 0.54). There were no differences between SAP and SAP+PERT athletes regarding the elimination of gait asymmetries, and gait asymmetries persisted to a large degree in both groups 1 and 2 years postoperatively. At 1 year, 11 of 18 SAP and 11 of 20 SAP+PERT athletes walked with truncated knee excursions during weight acceptance (odds ratio: 0.8, p = 0.70) and midstance (SAP 12 of 18, SAP+PERT 12 of 20; odds ratio: 0.8, p = 0.67), whereas at 2 years postoperatively, truncated knee excursions during weight acceptance (SAP seven of 17, SAP+PERT eight of 19; odds ratio: 1.0, p = 0.96) and midstance (SAP five of 17, SAP+PERT 11 of 19; odds ratio: 3.3, p = 0.09) remained prevalent.
Conclusions
We found that a comprehensive, progressive return-to-sport training program with or without perturbation was not effective at restoring interlimb symmetry among men 1 or 2 years after ACL reconstruction. Although gait asymmetries improved from 1 to 2 years postoperatively, meaningful asymmetries persisted in both groups. To restore gait symmetry after ACL reconstruction, additional interventions likely are necessary.
Level of Evidence
Level II, therapeutic study.
Publisher
Springer US,Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Ovid Technologies
Subject
/ Adult
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - diagnosis
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - physiopathology
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries - surgery
/ Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction - adverse effects
/ Athletes
/ Effusion
/ Gait
/ Hip
/ Humans
/ Knee
/ Knee Joint - physiopathology
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Pain
/ Secondary Prevention - methods
/ Surgery
/ Symmetry
/ Symposium: Improving Care for Patients With ACL Injuries: A Team Approach
/ Walking
This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.