Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, AB, Canada
2. Running Injury Clinic, and, University of Calgary, AB, Canada
3. Faculty of Nursing, University of Calgary, AB, Canada
Abstract
Abstract
Context:
Very few authors have investigated the relationship between hip-abductor muscle strength and frontal-plane knee mechanics during running.
Objective:
To investigate this relationship using a 3-week hip-abductor muscle-strengthening program to identify changes in strength, pain, and biomechanics in runners with patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS).
Design:
Cohort study.
Setting:
University-based clinical research laboratory.
Patients or Other Participants:
Fifteen individuals (5 men, 10 women) with PFPS and 10 individuals without PFPS (4 men, 6 women) participated.
Intervention(s):
The patients with PFPS completed a 3-week hip-abductor strengthening protocol; control participants did not.
Main Outcome Measure(s):
The dependent variables of interest were maximal isometric hip-abductor muscle strength, 2-dimensional peak knee genu valgum angle, and stride-to-stride knee-joint variability. All measures were recorded at baseline and 3 weeks later. Between-groups differences were compared using repeated-measures analyses of variance.
Results:
At baseline, the PFPS group exhibited reduced strength, no difference in peak genu valgum angle, and increased stride-to-stride knee-joint variability compared with the control group. After the 3-week protocol, the PFPS group demonstrated increased strength, less pain, no change in peak genu valgum angle, and reduced stride-to-stride knee-joint variability compared with baseline.
Conclusions:
A 3-week hip-abductor muscle-strengthening protocol was effective in increasing muscle strength and decreasing pain and stride-to-stride knee-joint variability in individuals with PFPS. However, concomitant changes in peak knee genu valgum angle were not observed.
Publisher
Journal of Athletic Training/NATA
Subject
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,General Medicine
Cited by
147 articles.
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