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Activation of the Ankle Musculature in Basketball Players With Chronic Ankle Instability

C

Camilo Jose Cela University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Ankle Instability, CAI

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06687954
15_24_CQSI

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: Lateral ankle sprain (LAS) is a very common injury in the general population and in the world of basketball in particular, initially Its recurrence rate is very high, generating chronic ankle instability (CAI), accompanied by decreased muscle activation in the ankle musculature and lack of motor control. The aim of this study is to evaluate the activation of the peroneal musculature during the sports gestures of layup and free throw, and the motor control of both in healthy patients and in patients with CAI.

Method: Using a surface electromyography study (sEMG) of 58 basketball players of amateur teams, 36 women and 22 men, with and without CAI, in the peroneus lateralis longus (PLL) and peroneus lateralis brevis musculature (PLB).

Full description

Design A case-control study was conducted. The entire procedure was carried out for human experimentation. The case control study followed the CONSORT guidelines.

Meassurement Muscle activity was recorded using an mDurance R surface EMG system (mDurance Solutions SL, Granada, Spain), a portable sEMG system that consists of three parts(i) A Shimmer3 EMG unit (Realtime Technologies Ltd., Dublin, Ireland), which is a bipolar sEMG sensor for muscle activity acquisition. Each Shimmer sensor is composed of two sEMG channels, with a sampling rate of 104 Hz. (ii) The mDurance mobile application (Android), which receives data from the Shimmer unit and sends it to a cloud service(iii) The mDurance cloud service, where the sEMG signals were stored, filtered and analysed, and reports were generated.

Surface electrode placement was performed following the recommendations of Surface EMG for Non-Invasive Muscle Assessment (SENIAM),bilaterally and parallel to the direction of the muscle fibres.

Protocol Firstly, anthropometric variables and personal information, training hours of the participants as well as ankle and lower limb injuries were collected through a Microsoft Forms.

In this study, changes in the sEMG signal of PLL and PLB in patients with and without CAI were investigated in the performance of various basketball-specific sport gestures . These changes in signal amplitude (root mean square) reflect the level of activation during the sporting gesture in the PLL and PLB muscles.

Maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) measurement First, participants were asked to perform a MVC, both PLL and PLB towards eversion and in the supine position, from the inversion position. Three maximal attempts of 5 seconds each, separated by 1 minute of rest, were performed. The best performance was chosen for statistical analysis.

Participants were verbally encouraged as the investigators conducted the assessment. The purpose of this test was to compare maximal amplitudes with submaximal amplitudes.

EMG recording in sport gesture The participants first warmed up for 10 minutes on the court, after which they were ready to shoot 3 series of 18 free throws each, with a rest of 35 seconds between each of them. The first sport gesture measured was the free throw, that is a sporting gesture that is always performed from a distance of 4.57 metres from the basket, which is 305 cm high. They were always performed with the same ball, with a perimeter size of 74.93 - 78 cm in the case of the male category and 72.4 - 73.7 cm in the case of the female category, as per National Basketball Association standards. To avoid fatigue, each shot was separated by a 10-15 second break and each series by 35 seconds. All participants in the study performed the throws without instructions or instructions on how to execute each personal routine.

This was followed by 1 series of 10 right-handed basket layups(first step starting with the right leg and second starting with the left leg) and another series of 10 left-handed basket layups (first step starting with the left leg and second starting with the right leg). In between, the players were asked to rest for 5 minutes.

The drive to the basket is a sporting gesture that consists of taking 3 steps towards the basket, (i) a short step towards the basket, (ii) a long step towards the basket, and (iii) a final jump.

Enrollment

58 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Volunteers aged 18-45 years
  • Physical activity level of at least 3 hours per week
  • First sprain more than one year ago
  • No sprain in the 6 weeks prior to the test
  • Scored ≥ 11 on the functional ankle instability identification questionnaire.

Exclusion criteria

  • Having undergone lower limb surgery and/or diseases that may influence neuromuscular control
  • Suffering from any type of incapacity to complete the proposed sporting gesture
  • Patients without CAI should not have a history of ankle sprains.

Trial design

58 participants in 2 patient groups

Control
Description:
Players of basketball team without CAI: this players have no history of ankle sprain
Case
Description:
Players of basketball team with CAI: scored ≥ 11 on the functional ankle instability identification questionnaire.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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