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Journal Article

Citation

Gkrilias P, Zavvos A, Fousekis K, Billis E, Matzaroglou C, Tsepis E. J. Phys. Ther. Sci. 2018; 30(9): 1141-1144.

Affiliation

Department of Physical Therapy, School of Health and Welfare, Technological Educational Institute (TEI) of Western Greece: Psarron 6, Aigio Achaias 25100, Greece.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Society of Physical Therapy Science)

DOI

10.1589/jpts.30.1141

PMID

30214113

PMCID

PMC6127494

Abstract

[Purpose] The purpose of this preliminary study was to investigate whether young players with no history of injury, have developed early asymmetries in dynamic balance ability tested via the recommended for screening in sports, Modified Star Excursion Balance Test (MSEBT). [Participants and Methods] Twenty-four young healthy male soccer players participated in the study having at least 4 years of systematic soccer training. The Waterloo Footedness Questionnaire was used to discriminate the stability dominant leg (STAB) from the non-stability dominant leg (NSTAB). Dynamic balance was assessed via the MSEBT. Participants, after familiarization, made 3 attempts in each direction for both legs: a) Anterior (AN), b) Posterolateral (PL) and c) Posteromedial (PM). [Results] The sole statistically significant performance asymmetry was in the PL direction, in favor of the STAB (94.5 ± 13.3 cm vs. 98.1 ± 10.4 cm). [Conclusion] The results of this pilot study showed a potential for developing dynamic balance asymmetries, in soccer players at the age of 13-14 years. Since asymmetry was significant in only one direction, further long term monitoring would be helpful to evaluate whether this is a growing functional deficit, potentially involving any of the other two directions of testing or if it is alleviated with increasing training age. These asymmetries could comprise an injury risk factor.


Language: en

Keywords

Dynamic balance asymmetries; Injury prevention; Youth soccer players

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