Relationships between throwing injuries and functional movement screen in junior high school baseball players

Recently, the problem of the high incidence of throwing injuries in young people has been gaining attention. Identifying high-risk players before the onset of the throwing injury is important for prevention. One of the most widely used screening tests for sports-related injuries is the Functional Mo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2016/04/01, Vol.65(2), pp.237-242
Hauptverfasser: Uchida, Tomoya, Matsumoto, Shintaro, Komatsu, Minoru, Noda, Yuki, Ishida, Miya, Tsukuda, Michiru, Nakayama, Ryota, Takeda, Yuta, Hirakawa, Rieko, Muto, Kohei, Okubo, Satoshi, Furukawa, Hiroyuki, Fujita, Kenji
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container_end_page 242
container_issue 2
container_start_page 237
container_title Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine
container_volume 65
creator Uchida, Tomoya
Matsumoto, Shintaro
Komatsu, Minoru
Noda, Yuki
Ishida, Miya
Tsukuda, Michiru
Nakayama, Ryota
Takeda, Yuta
Hirakawa, Rieko
Muto, Kohei
Okubo, Satoshi
Furukawa, Hiroyuki
Fujita, Kenji
description Recently, the problem of the high incidence of throwing injuries in young people has been gaining attention. Identifying high-risk players before the onset of the throwing injury is important for prevention. One of the most widely used screening tests for sports-related injuries is the Functional Movement Screen (FMS), which assesses the quality of movement; however, its correlation with throwing injuries has not been established. The purpose of this study was to investigate the correlation between the FMS score and throwing injuries. The FMS was used during the medical check for two hundred and thirty junior high school baseball players. We allotted those who had experienced throwing injuries multiple times to the injury group and those who had never experienced throwing injury to the control group. We then calculated the FMS cutoff value using the receiver operating characteristic curve. In addition, we investigated differences in the incidence of throwing injury between above and below the cutoff value using chi-square test. The FMS cutoff score was 17. Players who scored ≤17 had a significantly higher incidence of throwing injuries than those who scored ≥18. Conclusion: We believe that FMS score is correlated to throwing injuries. In addition, the results suggest that throwing injuries might be prevented in junior high school baseball players who scored ≤17 on the FMS if they undergo training in the correct movement patterns.
doi_str_mv 10.7600/jspfsm.65.237
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Identifying high-risk players before the onset of the throwing injury is important for prevention. One of the most widely used screening tests for sports-related injuries is the Functional Movement Screen (FMS), which assesses the quality of movement; however, its correlation with throwing injuries has not been established. The purpose of this study was to investigate the correlation between the FMS score and throwing injuries. The FMS was used during the medical check for two hundred and thirty junior high school baseball players. We allotted those who had experienced throwing injuries multiple times to the injury group and those who had never experienced throwing injury to the control group. We then calculated the FMS cutoff value using the receiver operating characteristic curve. In addition, we investigated differences in the incidence of throwing injury between above and below the cutoff value using chi-square test. The FMS cutoff score was 17. Players who scored ≤17 had a significantly higher incidence of throwing injuries than those who scored ≥18. Conclusion: We believe that FMS score is correlated to throwing injuries. 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1881-4751
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source J-STAGE Free; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects baseball
functional
lower extremity
movement
screening
title Relationships between throwing injuries and functional movement screen in junior high school baseball players
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