TY - JOUR
T1 - Individuals with both perceived ankle instability and mechanical laxity demonstrate dynamic postural stability deficits
AU - Brown, Cathleen N.
AU - Ko, Jupil
AU - Rosen, Adam B.
AU - Hsieh, Katherine
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research completed: University of Georgia College of Education Summer Faculty Research Grant . The funding source had no involvement in study design, collection, analysis and interpretation of data, in writing the manuscript or in the decision to submit for publication.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2015/12/1
Y1 - 2015/12/1
N2 - Background Chronic ankle instability is a frequent and serious consequence of lateral ankle sprains. The contribution of perceived instability and potential for mechanical laxity to contribute to the overall deficit in dynamic postural stability is unclear. The purpose was to determine if those with mechanical laxity demonstrated significant differences in dynamic postural stability compared to controls, copers and those with perceived instability. Methods Of 93 participants, 83 recreationally active individuals were divided into 4 groups: controls, copers, those with perceived instability, and those with both perceived instability and mechanical laxity. Injury history and the Cumberland Ankle Instability Tool were collected, and an instrumented arthrometer was applied. Participants completed a single limb jump landing, balancing upon completion. Ground reaction force data were collected, scaled to body mass, and the Dynamic Postural Stability Indices were calculated for anterior-posterior, medial-lateral, vertical and composite. One-way ANOVAs with Tukey post-hoc tests (α < 0.05) were conducted on each of the stability indices among the four groups. Findings The mechanically lax group had significantly greater mean (standard deviation) medial-lateral stability index scores 0.57 (0.62) than the coper group 0.24 (0.20; P = 0.02) and significantly greater composite index scores 0.73 (0.57) than the perceived instability 0.49 (0.09) and coper groups 0.47 (0.12 P = 0.05). No other indices were significantly different among groups. Interpretation Individuals with perceived instability and mechanical laxity exhibited dynamic postural deficits compared to copers and those with perceived instability alone. Mechanical laxity may contribute to the deficits in dynamic postural stability.
AB - Background Chronic ankle instability is a frequent and serious consequence of lateral ankle sprains. The contribution of perceived instability and potential for mechanical laxity to contribute to the overall deficit in dynamic postural stability is unclear. The purpose was to determine if those with mechanical laxity demonstrated significant differences in dynamic postural stability compared to controls, copers and those with perceived instability. Methods Of 93 participants, 83 recreationally active individuals were divided into 4 groups: controls, copers, those with perceived instability, and those with both perceived instability and mechanical laxity. Injury history and the Cumberland Ankle Instability Tool were collected, and an instrumented arthrometer was applied. Participants completed a single limb jump landing, balancing upon completion. Ground reaction force data were collected, scaled to body mass, and the Dynamic Postural Stability Indices were calculated for anterior-posterior, medial-lateral, vertical and composite. One-way ANOVAs with Tukey post-hoc tests (α < 0.05) were conducted on each of the stability indices among the four groups. Findings The mechanically lax group had significantly greater mean (standard deviation) medial-lateral stability index scores 0.57 (0.62) than the coper group 0.24 (0.20; P = 0.02) and significantly greater composite index scores 0.73 (0.57) than the perceived instability 0.49 (0.09) and coper groups 0.47 (0.12 P = 0.05). No other indices were significantly different among groups. Interpretation Individuals with perceived instability and mechanical laxity exhibited dynamic postural deficits compared to copers and those with perceived instability alone. Mechanical laxity may contribute to the deficits in dynamic postural stability.
KW - Arthrometry
KW - Chronic ankle instability
KW - Talar tilt
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U2 - 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2015.08.008
DO - 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2015.08.008
M3 - Article
C2 - 26324333
AN - SCOPUS:84959247566
SN - 0268-0033
VL - 30
SP - 1170
EP - 1174
JO - Clinical Biomechanics
JF - Clinical Biomechanics
IS - 10
ER -