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Ankle Joint Control in People with Chronic Ankle Instability During Run-and-cut Movements

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Publisher Thieme
Specialty Orthopedics
Date 2018 Aug 18
PMID 30119134
Citations 3
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Abstract

Despite a considerable amount of research, the deficits causing recurrent sprains in people with chronic ankle instability are still unclear. Changes in frontal plane kinematics and decreased peroneal activation have been proposed as potential underlying mechanisms, but whether people with ankle instability show deficits in control of injury-relevant movements is not well understood. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to analyse ankle joint kinematics and kinetics as well as neuromuscular activation during dynamic change-of-direction movements. Eighteen participants with functional instability, 18 participants with functional and mechanical instability and 18 healthy controls performed 45° sidestep-cutting and 180° turning movements in reaction to light signals. During sidestep-cutting both instability groups displayed significantly lower inversion angles than controls when the trials with the highest maximum inversion angle of each participant were compared. In turning movements, participants with functional instability presented significantly lower average maximum inversion angles than controls as well as higher peroneal activation before foot strike than participants with both functional and mechanical instability. We theorize that the observed changes in movement kinematics of participants with chronic ankle instability are the result of a protective strategy to limit frontal plane ankle joint loading in potentially harmful situations.

Citing Articles

Effects of mental fatigue on biomechanical characteristics of lower extremities in patients with functional ankle instability during unanticipated side-step cutting.

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PMID: 37035660 PMC: 10078947. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1123201.


Chronic ankle instability modifies proximal lower extremity biomechanics during sports maneuvers that may increase the risk of ACL injury: A systematic review.

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People with chronic ankle instability benefit from brace application in highly dynamic change of direction movements.

Fuerst P, Gollhofer A, Wenning M, Gehring D J Foot Ankle Res. 2021; 14(1):13.

PMID: 33596976 PMC: 7890883. DOI: 10.1186/s13047-021-00452-0.