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Journal Article

Citation

van der Worp H, Vrielink JW, Bredeweg SW. Br. J. Sports Med. 2016; 50(8): 450-457.

Affiliation

University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Center for Sports Medicine, Groningen, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bjsports-2015-094924

PMID

26729857

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Vertical ground reaction force (VGRF) parameters have been implicated as a cause of several running-related injuries. However, no systematic review has examined this relationship.

AIM: We systematically reviewed evidence for a relation between VGRF parameters and specific running-related injuries.

METHODS: MEDLINE, Web of Science and EMBASE databases were searched. Two independent assessors screened the articles and rated the methodological quality. The 3 key VGRF parameters we measured were vertical loading rate, impact/passive peak (Fz1) and propulsive/active peak (Fz2). Standardised mean differences of these parameters were calculated using a random-effects model. Meta-regression was performed using injury type, study type and methodological quality as factors.

RESULTS: The search yielded 2016 citations and 18 met the inclusion criteria for the systematic review. The loading rate was higher in studies that included patients with a history of stress fractures and patients with all injury types, both compared with controls. Only studies that included patients with a history of symptoms at the time of kinetic data collection showed higher loading rates overall in cases than in controls. There were no differences between injured subjects and controls for the active and passive peaks of the VGRF. SUMMARY: The loading rate is higher in respondents with a history of stress fractures than in respondents without running injuries. Owing to the absence of prospective studies on other injury types, it is not possible to draw definite conclusions regarding their relation with loading rate.


Language: en

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