Association of Lower Quarter Y-Balance Test with lower extremity injury in NCAA Division 1 athletes: An independent validation study
Abstract Objectives To determine if the Lower Quarter Y-Balance Test (LQYBT) is predictive of lower extremity injury in NCAA Division 1 athletes. Design Prospective cohort, therapy; Participants One hundred eighty-nine NCAA Division 1 athletes participated in the study and underwent a pre-participat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physiotherapy 2017-06, Vol.103 (2), p.231-236 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract Objectives To determine if the Lower Quarter Y-Balance Test (LQYBT) is predictive of lower extremity injury in NCAA Division 1 athletes. Design Prospective cohort, therapy; Participants One hundred eighty-nine NCAA Division 1 athletes participated in the study and underwent a pre-participation screen that included the LQYBT. Maximal reach distances were recorded in each direction and normalized to leg length. A composite score was calculated by summing the three normalized reach distances and dividing by three times leg length. Side to side asymmetry was calculated as the lesser of the two composite scores, divided by the greater of the two composite scores, multiplied by 100. Injuries for the following season were tracked and recorded; LQYBT scores were compared between injured and non-injured athletes. Results In our sample, 90 [59 female, 31 male] of the 189 athletes participating suffered a lower extremity injury. No significant differences were found between injured and non-injured athletes for reach distance, normalized reach distance, normalized composite reach distance, or normalized composite percent score (p > 0.05). Conclusions The LQYBT does not appear to predict general lower extremity injury in a diverse population of NCAA D1 athletes. These results are in direct conflict with previous findings suggesting the LQYBT is predictive of injury suggesting its utility as an injury risk screening tool in a general collegiate athletic population should continue to be questioned. |
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ISSN: | 0031-9406 1873-1465 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.physio.2016.06.002 |