Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention

Sidestep-cut is a main mechanism of non-contact Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injuries that can result in high knee valgus moments (KVM), which can independently cause the ACL to rupture. The Functional Movement Screen (FMS), a battery of seven tests, has proven to predict injury risk. However, t...

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Main Author: Sim, Sophia Feng-en
Other Authors: Marcus Lee
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67252
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-672522020-09-27T20:25:32Z Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention Sim, Sophia Feng-en Marcus Lee National Institute of Education Singapore Sports Institute Kong Pui Wah, Veni DRNTU::Science Sidestep-cut is a main mechanism of non-contact Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injuries that can result in high knee valgus moments (KVM), which can independently cause the ACL to rupture. The Functional Movement Screen (FMS), a battery of seven tests, has proven to predict injury risk. However, the association between FMS test scores and KVM has yet to be investigated. This study aims to find an association between FMS test scores and peak KVM during an unplanned bilateral sidestep-cut and its implication on non-contact ACL injury prevention. It was hypothesised that FMS test scores would have a strong correlation with peak KVM. The lower the FMS scores, the greater the KVM exhibited when executing the sidestep-cut. 15 injury-free Singapore Opens team netballers (Age: 24.6±2.5; Height: 1.75±0.06m; Body mass: 63.2±7.4kg) participated in a series of sidestep-cuts and a modified FMS test in a randomised order. Peak KVM during weight acceptance phase was obtained using a 12-camera three-dimensional motion capture system. A modified, six-component FMS test, with the removal of the shoulder mobility component, was scored based on a half- point scoring system. There was no significant correlation between peak KVM and the modified FMS composite and component scores. Practitioners should not use the FMS to assess non-contact ACL injury risk via sidestepping with the current scoring criteria. Future studies should increase scoring specificity by expanding the FMS scoring criteria to include a wider spectrum of scores, and examine the relationship between peak KVM and scores of other easy-to-administer tests. Bachelor of Science (Sport Science and Management) 2016-05-13T04:19:26Z 2016-05-13T04:19:26Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67252 en 59 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Sim, Sophia Feng-en
Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention
description Sidestep-cut is a main mechanism of non-contact Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injuries that can result in high knee valgus moments (KVM), which can independently cause the ACL to rupture. The Functional Movement Screen (FMS), a battery of seven tests, has proven to predict injury risk. However, the association between FMS test scores and KVM has yet to be investigated. This study aims to find an association between FMS test scores and peak KVM during an unplanned bilateral sidestep-cut and its implication on non-contact ACL injury prevention. It was hypothesised that FMS test scores would have a strong correlation with peak KVM. The lower the FMS scores, the greater the KVM exhibited when executing the sidestep-cut. 15 injury-free Singapore Opens team netballers (Age: 24.6±2.5; Height: 1.75±0.06m; Body mass: 63.2±7.4kg) participated in a series of sidestep-cuts and a modified FMS test in a randomised order. Peak KVM during weight acceptance phase was obtained using a 12-camera three-dimensional motion capture system. A modified, six-component FMS test, with the removal of the shoulder mobility component, was scored based on a half- point scoring system. There was no significant correlation between peak KVM and the modified FMS composite and component scores. Practitioners should not use the FMS to assess non-contact ACL injury risk via sidestepping with the current scoring criteria. Future studies should increase scoring specificity by expanding the FMS scoring criteria to include a wider spectrum of scores, and examine the relationship between peak KVM and scores of other easy-to-administer tests.
author2 Marcus Lee
author_facet Marcus Lee
Sim, Sophia Feng-en
format Final Year Project
author Sim, Sophia Feng-en
author_sort Sim, Sophia Feng-en
title Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention
title_short Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention
title_full Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention
title_fullStr Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention
title_full_unstemmed Association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for ACL injury prevention
title_sort association between the functional movement screen and knee valgus moments during a sidestep-cut : implications for acl injury prevention
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/67252
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