Change your sidestep, save your knee
24 June 2008
Footballers and netballers may be able to reduce the risk
of knee injuries simply by modifying the way they change direction, researchers
at The University of Western Australia have found in research supported by the
AFL.
The risk of athletes suffering an injury to the anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) is increased by particular techniques of direction
change, they have shown. And modification of the way they do it may be enough to
avoid injury.
“Athletes should not use techniques which involve leaning
or turning their body in the opposite direction to where they want to end up, or
placing their foot a long way from the body,” says biomechanist Alasdair Dempsey
from the School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health. “These body postures are
often what you see when an athlete suffers an ACL injury.”
The work was published recently in the journal Medicine
and Science in Sports and Exercise.
ACL injuries can be severe and very debilitating. The
standard treatment involves surgery followed by nine to 12 months of
rehabilitation. After rupturing an ACL sufferers are at increased risk of
re-injuring it later in life, as well as developing arthritis in their knees.
ACL injuries often occur without the injured athlete
coming into contact with another player or piece of equipment. This indicates
an athlete can make changes to sidestepping, which may reduce their risk of
injury.
ACL injuries can be high profile—such as that of Sydney
Swans AFL footballer Nick Malceski or Michael Owen at the 2006 FIFA World
Cup—but they occur right down to the grass roots level.
According to the AFL Injury Report: Season 2007 there
were 11 new ACL injuries among AFL-listed players last year. “If this number
is scaled up to all Australian rules footballers in the country, and you assume
that similar rates occur in soccer, basketball, netball and other team sports,
then we are looking at a large number of ACL injuries each year,” says
Alasdair.
Based on measurements of the loads experienced at the
knee, the researchers identified dangerous techniques. Then they tested
athletes before and after six weeks of training to change their method of
sidestepping to try to reduce the loads on the knee.
“We have incorporated these results into a training
program which, in conjunction with the University of Ballarat, is now being
tested on Australian rules footballers in Victoria and Western Australia,”
Alasdair says. “The work will provide us with more information on the impact of
such training on knee forces, as well as on the number of injuries occurring.”
Alasdair Dempsey is one of 16 early-career scientists
chosen for Fresh Science, a national program sponsored by the Federal and
Victorian governments.
Media contacts: Alasdair Dempsey on 08 6488 2370,
0417900955; Sarah Brooker on 0413 332 489; and Niall Byrne on 0417 131 977 or
niall@freshscience.org
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