Influence of force-time parameters of hip abductors on maintaining balance in frontal plane in young healthy females

3Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Puropse: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of isometric and isokinetic hip abductor muscle strength on the quality of maintaining static balance in healthy subjects. Methods: The study enrolled 51 healthy women aged 18-25. Balance assessment was carried out according to the M-CTSIB protocol and Single Leg Stance Test (with eyes open and closed) using the Biodex Balance System. An isokinetic evaluation conducted at 30°/s and an isometric evaluation of the hip abductors were performed with the Humac Norm system. Results: Regression analysis for Sway Index (SW) and Stability Index (ST) in bipedal standing showed a significant importance of the presence of visual feedback (RSW EO =-0.922; p <0.0001; RST EO =-0.613; p = 0.0493), and unstable surface (RSW US = 1.253; p <0.0001; RSW US = 2.547; p <0.0001. Regression analysis for single-leg stance showed correlations between the following indexes: overall sway index (OR) in single-leg stance, the antero-posterior (AP) sway index and the medio-lateral (ML) sway index on the one hand and isometric abduction time to peak torque (ROR TPT= 0.769; p = 0.0005; RAP TPT = 0.565; p = 0.008; RML TPT =-1.74; p <0.05, respectively) as well as the test conditions on the other. Conclusions: Physiological activation of the hip abductors may be important for physiological maintenance of postural balance in young people, in both leg standing as well as in single-leg stance. The present results warrant prospective, randomized studies of larger groups that are diversified with regard to age and gender of the participants.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Bugalska, A., Hadamus, A., Wójtowicz, S., Daniluk, A., Wiaderna, K., & Grabowicz, M. (2021). Influence of force-time parameters of hip abductors on maintaining balance in frontal plane in young healthy females. Acta of Bioengineering and Biomechanics, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.37190/ABB-01945-2021-04

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free