Research article - (2024)23, 656 - 662 DOI: https://doi.org/10.52082/jssm.2024.656 |
Characterizing Muscle Activity in Soccer Players with a History of Hamstring Strain Injuries during Accelerated Sprinting |
Ryo Ohtsubo1,, Hiromi Saito1, Norikazu Hirose2 |
Key words: Previous hamstring injury, Injury recurrence, Football, Electromyography, Trunk instability, Rehabilitation |
Key Points |
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Participants |
This study was a comparison between three groups: the dominant foot of the Healthy group with no history of HSI (Healthy), and the injured side (injured) and non-injured side(uninjured) of those with a history of HSI. The participants comprised male soccer players aged 18 to 30 years, with 13 individuals in the HSI group (age 23.7 ± 3.9 years, height 173.2 ± 4.9 cm, weight 66.8 ± 4.0 kg) and 13 in the healthy group (age 23.6 ± 2.3 years, height 170.0 ± 6.6 cm, weight 63.5 ± 4.9 kg) without a history of previous HSI. The sample size for this study was determined using G*Power 3.1.3 software (Heinrich Heine University, Dusseldorf, Germany). It was set as a two-way repeated measure analysis of variance (ANOVA) with a significance level of 0.05 and a power of 0.8. As a result, it was confirmed that a sample size of 10 was sufficient. Participants were active soccer players who were able to sprint. The inclusion criteria for the HSI group were previous sprinting-related HSI, with the injury occurring in a non-contact fashion during sprinting, inability to participate in competition due to hamstring pain for at least one week, and current participation in normal training for at least three months after the most recent injury. To be included in the study they also should not have any factors that could affect muscle activity or biomechanics during sprinting. Patients with pain, hamstring, sacroiliac, or lumbar spine dysfunction, lumbar intervertebral joint discomfort, or a history of lower-extremity surgery within the past 2 years were excluded. Time since most recent injury for the HSI group ranged from 3 to 36 months, while the Healthy group had no previous history of HSI. Participants reported no hamstring pain or discomfort during sprinting in this study. Measurements were taken at least 24 h after the last team activity to mitigate the effects of fatigue. |
Ethical issues |
This study was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee and adhered to the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. Written informed consent was obtained from each participant (Approval No. 2022-528). |
Measurement method |
The measurement area consisted of a straight section measuring 30 m in length and 2 m in width on an outdoor artificial turf field with a designated measurement zone spanning 10-20 m. After an adequate warm-up, the participants initiated the sprint from an arbitrary standing position located 15 m before the center of the measurement area, aiming to traverse the area with maximum effort. The participants were instructed to achieve the maximum speed as quickly as possible. A 2-minute rest period was allowed between each trial to mitigate fatigue effects, and data from three trials were collected. The participants wore the same spikes used during normal training and the measurements were conducted on both sunny and cloudy days. |
Surface electromyography |
Surface electromyography (EMG) was conducted using a Trigno Wireless EMG System (Delsys Inc., Boston, MA, USA) with 10 electrodes attached. Bipolar surface Ag/AgCl electrodes, positioned at a fixed distance of 10 mm between electrodes, were attached bilaterally to the long head of the biceps femoris (BF), semitendinosus (ST), gluteus maximus (Gmax), gluteus medius (Gmed), and external oblique muscle (EO), following SENIAM recommendations (Hermens et al., |
Joint angles |
The angles of the hip and knee joints during each stride were calculated for each running phase. Markers were affixed to the bilateral acromion, greater trochanter, lateral knee joint epicondyle, and external knee joints. The hip joint angle was defined as the angle formed by the line connecting the acromion, greater trochanter, and lateral epicondyle of the knee joint. The knee joint flexion angle was defined as the angle formed by the line connecting the greater trochanter, lateral epicondyle of the knee joint, and malleolus lateralis. Video data were captured using a high-speed camera (EX-ZR1000; CASIO, Japan) at a frame rate of 240 fps. The camera was positioned to cover a 10-20 m section (5 m before and after the 15 m point in the measurement area). To synchronize the time with the EMG data, an optical signal was captured immediately before entering the measurement area, and the electrical signal from the optical signal generator (DKH PH-145 all-surrounding optical presenter) was recorded together with the EMG data. |
Data analysis |
Three strides of each foot were averaged and analyzed, with a stride defined as the distance from the ground surface of the foot to the ground contact of the same foot until the foot contacted the ground again. The running speed was calculated as the time required to traverse the measured section. A single stride was defined as the distance from the initial foot contact to the subsequent contact of the same foot. To calculate the timing of the appearance of the maximum root mean square (RMS) value, data for one gait cycle was interpolated to 101 points (IGOR Pro 4.04J; WaveMetrics, Inc.), and the stride cycle was defined as 100%. To thoroughly analyze the average muscle activity for each phase, one stride was classified into the following five phases: early stance, late stance, early swing, middle swing, and late swing. Early stance encompassed from initial foot contact to maximal knee flexion during stance, late stance from maximal knee flexion during stance to toe-off, early swing from toe-off to maximal knee flexion during swing, mid-swing from maximal knee flexion to maximal hip flexion, and late swing from maximal hip flexion to initial foot contact. Motion analysis was performed using a two-dimensional motion analysis system (Frame Dias System. DKH Co., Ltd., Japan). The joint angle data were filtered using a second-order low-pass Butterworth filter to block frequencies above 6 Hz. EMG data analysis utilized Delsys EMG Works Analysis software (Delsys Inc., Boston, MA, USA). A bandpass filter with cutoff frequencies ranging from 20 Hz to 450 Hz was used. After filtering, the RMS of each muscle was calculated and smoothed using the moving average method for 100 ms. The filtered data were normalized by the mean value of muscle activity during the trial. The average muscle activity of each muscle in the five phases and the timing of the appearance of the maximum RMS value in one cycle were determined. |
Statistical analysis |
All statistical analyses were performed using the SPSS ver. 14.0 (SPSS Statistics 29.0 IBM). For the comparison of speeds between groups, the Shapiro-Wilk test was used to confirm normality followed by an unresponsive t-test. The three groups included Healthy and injured, uninjured. A repeated-measures two-way ANOVA (groups × phase) was conducted between the three groups and five phases for each muscle (early stance, late stance, early swing, middle swing, and late swing phase) to examine the main effects and interaction effects. For the peak timing of muscle activity, a repeated-measures two-way ANOVA (groups × muscle) was conducted among the three groups to examine the main effects and interactions. Multiple comparison tests were conducted as post-tests for the factors for which significant main effects and interactions were found using the Bonferroni method. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05. Hedge's g was used as the effect size, with g ≥ 0.20 defined as a small effect size, g ≥ 0.50 as a medium effect size, and g ≥ 0.80 as a large effect size. The effect sizes were reported when statistical significance was observed. |
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The characteristics of the participants are presented in |
BF |
Compared to the early stance phase, the values were significantly lower during the late stance phase (p < 0.001) and early swing phase (p < 0.001), but significantly higher during the mid swing phase (p < 0.001) and late swing phase (p < 0.001). Additionally, compared to the late stance phase, the values were significantly higher during the mid swing phase (p < 0.001) and late swing phase (p < 0.001). Furthermore, when compared to the early swing phase, the values were significantly higher during the mid swing phase (p < 0.001) and late swing phase (p < 0.001). The mean values and standard deviations for muscle activity during each phase of sprinting are presented below for the injured, uninjured and Healthy. |
ST |
Gmax |
Compared to the early stance phase, values were significantly lower during the late stance phase (p < 0.001) and early swing phase (p < 0.001), but significantly higher during the mid swing phase (p < 0.001) and late swing phase (p < 0.001). When compared to the late stance phase, values were significantly higher during the mid swing phase (p < 0.001) and late swing phase (p < 0.001). Additionally, compared to the early swing phase, values were significantly higher during the mid swing phase (p < 0.001) and late swing phase (p < 0.001). |
Gmed |
Compared to the early stance phase, values were significantly lower during the late stance phase (p < 0.001), early swing phase (p < 0.001), and mid swing phase (p < 0.001), but significantly higher during the late swing phase (p = 0.003). Additionally, compared to the mid swing phase, values were significantly higher during the late swing phase (p < 0.001). |
EO |
Compared to the mid swing phase, values were significantly lower during the early stance phase (p < 0.001), late stance phase (p < 0.001), early swing phase (p < 0.001), and late swing phase (p < 0.001). |
Timing of RMS peak value appearance |
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This study aimed to characterize the muscle activity of individuals with a history of HSI during accelerated sprinting. The results showed that Gmax activity during the late swing phase on the injured was approximately 30% lower. The timing of the peak RMS value appearance of the Gmed on the injured and uninjured were delayed by 6% when compared to that in the Healthy; muscle activity was 40% higher on both sides of the HSI group during the early stance phase; and EO was 20% lower on the injured side during the early stance phase when compared to the Healthy and the uninjured. In sprinting, a greater angular velocity of the thigh during the late swing phase is effective in acquiring the ground reaction force during contact and is a factor for high performance (Clark et al., Normally, the Gmed is involved in ground stability during running by working in advance during the late swing phase to control the pelvis in the anterior plane, thereby preventing pelvic subduction (Semciw et al., Trunk muscle activity during the swing phase is important since previous prospective studies have reported that trunk muscle activity during the early swing phase reduces the risk of HSI injury (Schuermans et al., One characteristic of soccer players during sprinting is a large hip flexion angle before and after ground contact (Masamichi et al., The study results offer new insights that are different from those of prior research concerning muscles other than the hamstrings. HSI are reported to have a high risk of recurrence, and exercises emphasizing centrifugal loading are commonly used to prevent recurrence but have not effectively reduced their incidence (Impellizzeri et al., A few limitations of this study hindered the specificity of the injury sites in the recruited subjects. Consequently, the results of this study cannot be confined to the long head of the BF muscle alone but must be viewed as a result of hamstring separation in its entirety. Moreover, determining whether the characteristics of the HSI group in this study were present before or after HSI injury is challenging. Future prospective studies may obtain more definitive results regarding the characteristics of the HSI group by longitudinally measuring data before and after injury. Additionally, the type of rehabilitation that the HSI group conducted in order to return to competition also varied from subject to subject. In this study, 3-D motion analysis was not analyzed. Therefore, the results of this study should be considered as characteristics of muscle activity of individuals with a history of HSI. |
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This study examined the muscle activity characteristics in soccer players with a history of HSI during accelerated sprinting. The findings indicated that the EO, Gmax, and Gmed before and after ground contact from the late swing phase to the early stance phase exhibited distinct characteristics in healthy and previously injured players. These results imply that individuals with HSI experience insufficient muscle activity contributing to trunk stability, including that of the pelvis, before and after ground contact during accelerated sprinting. Consequently, rehabilitation exercises focusing on the behavior of these muscles during the late swing to early stance phases may be necessary in clinical practice. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
The authors would like to acknowledge the facilities and assistance of the Graduate School of Sport Sciences, Waseda University. The experiments comply with the current laws of the country in which they were performed. The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are not publicly available but are available from the corresponding author who was an organizer of the study. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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