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CompletedNCT04668105

Dose Response of Nordic Hamstring Exercise on Performance in Athletes

Effects of Dose Response of Nordic Hamstring Exercise on Muscle Strength, Agility and Speed in Athletes

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
34 (actual)
Sponsor
Riphah International University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 30 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this research is to compare the effects of dose response of Nordic hamstring exercise on muscle strength, agility and speed in athletes a randomized controlled trial done at JKD cricket academy and sports centre, Peshawar. The sample size was 34. The subjects were divided in two groups, 17 subjects in Group 1 which will do high volume Nordic hamstring exercise and 17 in Group 2 which will do low volume Nordic hamstring exercise. Study duration was of 6 months. Sampling technique applied was non probability purposive sampling technique. Only 18-30 years athletes with BMI between 18.5-24.5 kg/m2 were included. Tools used in the study are Single leg hamstring bridge (SLHB), Agility t-test, 30-m speed test and muscles size .Data will be analyzed through SPSS 21.

Detailed description

One of the most common injury in sports is the Hamstring injury, as hamstring is very susceptible to tears and strains. Hamstring muscle strain-type injuries are common in sports that involve high degree of speed, power and agility such as sprinters, soccer, basketball, tennis and football. Occurring in both recreational and professional sports, these injuries can result in substantial time lost from sport and commonly recur. When sprinting, the hamstring muscles of the swing leg function concentrically as hip extensors to quickly swing the thigh back, whereas the same muscle group acts eccentrically as knee flexors to decelerate the forward swing leg. This last action is a probable contributing injury mechanism because of the increased peak hamstring musculotendinous stretch, activation, and active lengthening contraction of the hamstring muscles. The Nordic Hamstring Exercise (NHE) was previously termed the 'Russian hamstring exercise'. This is a partner exercise which can be performed easily on the pitch without special equipment. The NHE involves the player attempting to resist a forward-falling motion from a kneeling position, eccentrically contracting hamstring muscles and thought to replicate hamstring function during terminal swing phase. NHE is a preventive strategy which may reduce the incidence of hamstring injury, medical costs, and personal suffering of the injured player keeping in view the training exposure, training intensity, and compliance to preventive measures. Programs that include the NHE reduce hamstring injuries by up to 51%. The NHE essentially halves the rate of hamstring injuries across multiple sports in different athletes. Even in the face of promising NHE preventive effect shown by previous studies,adoption and implementation of the NHE programs is still low. Evidence show improvement in performance, agility and speed in athletes by NHE training but lowest dose of NHE required to enhance athletes' performance , agility and speed is yet to be found. This study attempts to investigate the lowest dose response of NHE by comparing the effects of high volumes of NHE with low volumes of NHE. Literature review: Mjølsnes et al first demonstrated that a NHE program performed on the training environment of professional soccer players is more effective in developing maximal eccentric hamstring strength than a comparable program based on hamstring curl machine at the fitness center. Three large prospective trials (two randomized and one non-randomized) reduced injuries by approximately 70% by implementing the NHE in a team's training regime. The results from the meta-analysis suggested that teams using the NHE (in isolation or as part of a larger injury prevention program) reduced hamstring injury rates up to 51%. Brooks et al studied the effects of the NHE on the incidence and severity of hamstring strains among 546 professional rugby union players. The NH exercise group had a significantly lower hamstring injury rate and severity than the strengthening and the stretching/ strengthening group. In a 2020, meta-analyses, positive outcomes were reported on jump performance, repeated sprint ability and agility of athletes after NHE protocol. A study conducted for 6 weeks concluded that NHE resulted in significant improvements in eccentric strength of hamstrings and performance in 10 m sprinters and also in change of direction speed immediately after the training protocol. These improvements remained even after 3 weeks of detraining. In a study NHE has shown improvements in strength and dynamic control after 10 weeks of training, a reduction in the maximum peak torque (when approaching full knee extension), and a lower incidence rate of hamstring injuries in athletes.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERHigh volume nordic hamstring exerciseTo perform Nordic Hamstring Curls, the person will kneel on a pad (for knee comfort) and lower under control, his ankles must be stabilized and kept in a place with the help of a partner, but can also use a moveable object or a loaded barbell can also be used to achieve the stability. The person must then extend his hamstrings in order to lean forward, he should lean forward from the knee and not from the hip. The movement must be kept controlled and slow. The person should go as forward/low as possible but without the help of hands or arms. The only time one can put his hands in front of him is when he can't rely on his legs and then push himself back to starting position and then repeat the procedure again.Group 1 will do the Nordic hamstring exercise with protocol 3 repetitions × 3sets× 3 times for 4 weeks.
OTHERLow volume nordic hamstring exerciseTo perform Nordic Hamstring Curls, the person will kneel on a pad (for knee comfort) and lower under control, his ankles must be stabilized and kept in a place with the help of a partner, but can also use a moveable object or a loaded barbell can also be used to achieve the stability. The person must then extend his hamstrings in order to lean forward, he should lean forward from the knee and not from the hip. The movement must be kept controlled and slow. The person should go as forward/low as possible but without the help of hands or arms. The only time one can put his hands in front of him is when he can't rely on his legs and then push himself back to starting position and then repeat the procedure again. Group 2 will do the Nordic hamstring exercise with protocol 3 repetitions × 3 sets × 1 times for 4 weeks.

Timeline

Start date
2020-08-10
Primary completion
2020-12-30
Completion
2021-01-30
First posted
2020-12-16
Last updated
2021-08-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Pakistan

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04668105. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.