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Experimental Group (Neuromuscular Warm-up Protocol):
Participants assigned to the experimental group underwent a structured neuromuscular warm-up (NM-W) program before their routine gym training sessions. The intervention was conducted four times per week over a period of six weeks, with each warm-up session lasting approximately 10-12 minutes at a low to moderate intensity. The protocol began with a light aerobic phase, consisting of treadmill jogging at 50-60% of maximum heart rate for two minutes, followed by dynamic mobility exercises such as arm circles and leg swings. This was followed by a core activation and strengthening phase, which included front planks, side planks, and single-leg glute bridges aimed at enhancing trunk stability and proximal muscle control. The final phase focused on balance and plyometric activities, including single-leg balance with eyes closed, step-ups, BOSU mini squats, and diagonal hopping drills combined with medicine-ball interception gestures. This neuromuscular warm-up protocol was specifically designed to improve neuromuscular integration, enhance dynamic balance, and increase muscular strength prior to resistance-based training.
Control Group ( conventional warmup Protocol):
Participants allocated to the control group received a conventional (traditional) warm-up protocol prior to their routine workout sessions. The warm-up was performed four times per week for six weeks same as in experimental group, with each session lasting approximately 12 minutes, matching the frequency and duration of the experimental group. The conventional warm-up consisted of a general aerobic component aimed at increasing body temperature and heart rate, followed by dynamic mobility exercises. The aerobic phase included treadmill jogging at 50-60% of maximum heart rate for approximately five minutes, after which participants performed dynamic movements such as leg swings, dynamic hip circles, arm swings, high knees, and butt kicks. The overall intensity of the warm-up was maintained at a low to moderate level (RPE 4-5). This protocol was intended to enhance blood circulation, improve muscle flexibility, and prepare the musculoskeletal system for subsequent exercise, without targeting specific neuromuscular, balance, or plyometric training components.
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46 participants in 2 patient groups
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Shoaib Waqas, Phd
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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