Gender‐specific hip strength disparities correlate with injury patterns in NCAA men's and women's soccer players

Author:

Bakal David R.12ORCID,Hussain Farah S.3,Dzierzawski Justin T.3,Meyer Daniel T.2,Dawson Holli E.2,Olufade Oluseun A.23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Division of Sports Medicine University of California San Diego School of Medicine La Jolla California USA

2. Department of Orthopedics Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

3. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIn National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) soccer athletes, men have higher rates of hip and groin strains, whereas women have higher rates of knee ligament injuries. Strength imbalances of the hip and thigh, specifically in agonist–antagonist muscles, are known risk factors for these injuries.ObjectiveTo perform hip and thigh strength assessments in NCAA soccer players to evaluate for differences between genders and correlations with gender‐specific injury patterns.DesignWith a handheld dynamometer, weight‐normalized isometric strength of six muscle groups (hip abductors, hip adductors, hip flexors, hip extensors, knee flexors, knee extensors) was calculated in NCAA soccer players. The strength ratio of each agonist–antagonist muscle was also calculated (hip abductors/adductors, hip flexors/extensors, knee extensors/flexors).ParticipantsThirty‐six NCAA soccer players (18 men, 18 women) from a single NCAA Division III institution.InterventionsNot applicable.Main Outcome MeasuresWeight‐normalized strength of six muscle groups and their agonist–antagonist strength ratios were compared between genders using linear mixed‐effects models.ResultsCompared with male players, female players had decreased weight‐normalized strength for hip abduction (0.170 vs. 0.204, p = .012) and hip extension (0.172 vs. 0.211, p = .021). Otherwise, weight‐normalized strength was similar between genders. When comparing agonist–antagonist strength ratios, there was a significant difference between female and male players for hip flexion:extension (1.70 vs. 1.35, p = .008), whereas the hip abduction: adduction ratio did not reach statistical significance (1.45 vs. 1.62, p = .080).ConclusionsNCAA male and female soccer players had different hip strength profiles that fit their injury patterns. Male NCAA soccer players have higher rates of hip and groin strains, and men in the cohort had strength ratios that were deficient in the hip flexors and adductors compared with women. Female NCAA soccer players have higher rates of knee sprains and anterior cruciate ligament tears, and women in the cohort had strength ratios that were deficient in the hip abductors and extensors, which function to stabilize the knee. These strength disparities could be the focus of future gender‐specific soccer injury prevention programs.

Publisher

Wiley

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