Context: Anterior cruciate ligament injury commonly occurs via noncontact motor coordination errors that result in excessive multiplanar loading during athletic movements. Preventing motor coordination errors requires neural sensorimotor integration activity to support knee-joint neuromuscular control, but the underlying neural mechanisms driving injury-risk motor control are not well understood. Objective: To evaluate brain activity differences for knee sensorimotor control between athletes with high or low injuryrisk mechanics. Design: Case-control study. Setting: Research laboratory. Patients or Other Participants: Of 38 female high school soccer players screened, 10 were selected for analysis based on magnetic resonance imaging compliance, injury-risk classification via 3-dimensional biomechanics during a drop vertical jump, and matching criteria to complete neuroimaging during knee motor tasks. Main Outcome Measure(s): Peak knee-abduction moment during landing was used for group allocation into the high (≥21.74 newton meters [Nm], n = 9) or low (≤10.6 Nm, n = 11) injury-risk classification (n = 11 uncategorized, n = 7 who were not compliant with magnetic resonance imaging). Ten participants (5 high risk, 5 low risk) with adequate data were matched and compared across 2 neuroimaging paradigms: unilateral knee-joint control and unilateral multijoint leg press against resistance. Results: Athletes with high injury-risk biomechanics had less neural activity in 1 sensory-motor cluster for isolated kneejoint control (precuneus, peak Z score = 4.14, P ≤ .01, 788 voxels) and greater brain activity for the multijoint leg press in 2 cognitive-motor clusters: the frontal cortex (peak Z score=4.71,
CITATION STYLE
Grooms, D. R., Diekfuss, J. A., Slutsky-Ganesh, A. B., Ellis, J. D., Criss, C. R., Thomas, S. M., … Myer, G. D. (2022). Preliminary Report on the Train the Brain Project, Part I: Sensorimotor Neural Correlates of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Risk Biomechanics. Journal of Athletic Training, 57(9–10), 902–910. https://doi.org/10.4085/1062-6050-0547.21
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