Login / Signup

Tri-axial loading response to anti-gravity running highlights movement strategy compensations during knee injury rehabilitation of a professional soccer player.

Matt GreigLiam MasonAndy Mitchell
Published in: Research in sports medicine (Print) (2023)
Anti-gravity treadmills have been used in rehabilitation to manipulate exposure to loading and to prescribe return to outside running. Analysis is typically restricted to the vertical plane, but tri-axial accelerometry facilitates multi-planar analysis with relevance to injury mechanism. In this case a professional male soccer player, 4 weeks post-operative surgery to repair a medial meniscectomy, 8 months after Anterior Cruciate Ligament reconstruction to the same knee, completed anti-gravity treadmill running at 70-95% bodyweight (BW) at 5% increments. Tri-axial accelerometers were placed proximal to the Achilles tendon of the injured and healthy leg, and at C7. The planar acceleration at touchdown highlighted an increase at 85% BW, identifying 70% and 85% BW as discrete loading progressions. C7 (3.21 ± 0.68 m·s -2 ) elicited lower ( P  < 0.001) vertical acceleration than the lower limb (9.31 ± 1.82 m·s -2 ), with no difference between limbs suggesting bilateral symmetry. However, in the medio-lateral plane the affected limb (-0.15 ± 1.82 m·s -2 ) was exposed to lower ( P  = 0.001) medio-lateral acceleration than the non-affected limb (2.92 ± 1.35 m·s -2 ) at touchdown, indicative of bilateral asymmetry. PlayerLoad during foot contact was sensitive to accelerometer location, with the affected limb exposed to greater loading in all planes ( P  ≤ 0.082), exacerbated at 90-95% BW. Tri-axial accelerometry provides a means of assessing multi-planar loading during rehabilitation, enhancing objective progression.
Keyphrases
  • anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
  • minimally invasive
  • lower limb
  • high intensity
  • total knee arthroplasty
  • knee osteoarthritis
  • physical activity
  • acute coronary syndrome
  • case report
  • atrial fibrillation