Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 10 of 10 items for :

  • "childhood" x
  • Journal of Sport Rehabilitation x
  • Refine by Access: All Content x
Clear All
Restricted access

Incidence of Decreased Hip Range of Motion in Youth Soccer Players and Response to a Stretching Program: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Jacqueline Vieira de Castro, Karina Costa Machado, Kelly Scaramussa, and João Luiz Ellera Gomes

Context:

After years of focusing on the management of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries, the most common soccer-related injuries, the orthopedic community has concluded that soccer players have a wide range of variation in joint biomechanics and has thus started to focus research efforts on the morphological factors that might contribute to ACL trauma. One such factor is decreased hip-rotation range of motion (ROM), which may be due to compensatory musculoskeletal changes occurring in response to longstanding soccer practice since childhood.

Objective:

This study sought to assess decreased hip rotation and the influence of stretching exercises on the behavior of the hip joint in players of the youth soccer categories of a Brazilian soccer team.

Design:

Randomized clinical trial.

Setting:

University hospital.

Patients:

262 male soccer players.

Interventions:

Subjects were randomly allocated into 2 groups—control or a stretching program.

Main Outcome Measures:

Subjects were reassessed after 12 wk.

Results:

The findings suggest that hip-rotation ROM decreases over the years in soccer players. In the study sample, adherence to a stretching program improved only external hip-rotation ROM in the nondominant limb.

Conclusion:

Playing soccer can restrict rotation ROM of the hip, and adherence to stretching exercises may decrease the harmful effects on the hip joints.

Restricted access

Engagement in Sedentary and Physically Active After-School Programs Among African American Children with ADHD and Disruptive Behavior Disorders

Jared D. Ramer, María Enid Santiago-Rodriguez, Dana B. Rusch, Tara G. Mehta, Grace E. Cua, Stacy L. Frazier, Marc S. Atkins, Karrie L. Hamstra-Wright, and Eduardo E. Bustamante

Attention deficit-hyperactivity/impulsivity disorder (ADHD) is the most common childhood mental health disorder in the United States, affecting 10% of youth aged 3–17, or approximately 6-million children. 1 ADHD is characterized by inattentive and impulsive behaviors, slower rates of information

Restricted access

The Effect of Social Determinants of Health on Clinical Recovery Following Concussion: A Systematic Review

Tamerah N. Hunt, Kylie Roberts, Erica M. Taylor, Carolina P. Quintana, and Melissa K. Kossman

Behavioral health, mental health, health insurance coverage, and health literacy Education access and quality Education, school type, language, and early childhood education and development Social and community context Race/ethnicity, social connections, sense of belonging to a community, discrimination, and

Restricted access

Type of Turnout and Injury Rates in Elite Dancers: A Critically Appraised Topic

Victoria A. Parr, Marie L. Pettitt, Ryan Krzyzanowicz, Sarah Krzyzanowicz, and Riana R. Pryor

balance impairments Inclusion criteria:  Students undertaking a modern dance core curriculum Exclusion criteria:  None listed Inclusion criteria:  Females aged 14−35 y  History of at least 4 y of ballet training in childhood or adolescence Exclusion criteria:  History of hip surgery, lower

Restricted access

Humeral Torsion in Relation to Shoulder Range of Motion in Elite Field Hockey Players

Fran Vanderstukken, Valentien Spanhove, Ann Cools, and Dorien Borms

players. 12 These athletes consistently show greater humeral retroversion at their dominant or throwing shoulder compared with their nondominant side. The increased humeral retroversion is described as an adaptive response to stress caused by repetitive throwing during childhood. 34 In this study, a

Restricted access

Why Is There a Range in Time Returning to Preoperative Activity Habits After Femoroacetabular Impingement Treatment in Recreational Athletes?

Nils Wirries, Marco Ezechieli, Michael Schwarze, Alexander Derksen, Stefan Budde, Manuel Ribas, Henning Windhagen, and Thilo Floerkemeier

skeleton performing high-impact sports activities, for example, ice hockey, basketball, and football. 3 – 7 In addition, some hip disorders in childhood, like a slipped capital femoral epiphysis, or genetic factors were associated with an occurrence of an FAI. 8 All types of FAI lead to damage of the

Restricted access

High Thoracic Kyphosis and Backward Trunk Inclination Angles in the Single-Leg Standing Position Associate With Medial Elbow Injuries in Youth Baseball Players: A Cross-Sectional Study

Akira Saito, Kyoji Okada, Hiromichi Sato, Kazuyuki Shibata, and Tetsuaki Kamata

position on the nonthrowing side are needed. Fourth, the ORs for the thoracic kyphosis and trunk inclination angles in the single-leg standing position were low. Since the muscle function and sensory systems in childhood are immature compared with adulthood, various factors may have affected the spinal

Restricted access

Evaluation of Shoulder and Knee Isokinetic Strength Profile Among Elite Adolescent Badminton Players

Noh Zulfikri, Victor S. Selvanayagam, and Ashril Yusof

players . J Athl Train . 2017 ; 52 ( 2 ): 137 – 144 . PubMed ID: 28145740 doi:10.4085/1062-6050.52.1.10 28145740 10.4085/1062-6050.52.1.10 27. Ploegmakers J , Hepping A , Geertzen J , Bulstra S , Stevens M . Grip strength is strongly associated with height, weight and gender in childhood

Restricted access

Flexibility, Position, and Strength of the Shoulder Complex in Pediatric and Adult Amateur Tennis Athletes

Germanna M. Barbosa, Larissa P. Ribeiro, Ana B. Nasser, Gretchen D. Oliver, and Paula R. Camargo

to take place during childhood and adolescence. 11 In contrast to shoulder ER gain is shoulder ER insufficiency, defined by having less than 5° more ER in the dominant shoulder than nondominant shoulder. 14 In baseball pitchers, shoulder ER insufficiency was associated with in-season upper

Open access

The Nocebo Effect and Pediatric Concussion

Michael W. Kirkwood, David R. Howell, Brian L. Brooks, Julie C. Wilson, and William P. Meehan III

randomized trial . J Head Trauma Rehab . 2020 ;36(2):79–86. doi:10.1097/HTR.0000000000000609 61. Plourde V , Kung JY , Gates A , Jun S , Brooks BL , Sebastianski M . How perceptions impact recovery from concussion in childhood and adolescence: a systematic review . Neuropsychol Rev