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Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills

The purpose of this study was to compare the influences of 4 ankle conditions (no support, bracing, taping, taping + spatting; all in football cleats) during 2 maximal-effort field drills (40-yd dash and 34-yd cutting drill) on perceptions of comfort and stability and performance outcomes. Fourteen...

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Autores principales: REUTER, GRANT D, DAHL, ANGELA R, SENCHINA, DAVID S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Berkeley Electronic Press 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4961238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27478530
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author REUTER, GRANT D
DAHL, ANGELA R
SENCHINA, DAVID S
author_facet REUTER, GRANT D
DAHL, ANGELA R
SENCHINA, DAVID S
author_sort REUTER, GRANT D
collection PubMed
description The purpose of this study was to compare the influences of 4 ankle conditions (no support, bracing, taping, taping + spatting; all in football cleats) during 2 maximal-effort field drills (40-yd dash and 34-yd cutting drill) on perceptions of comfort and stability and performance outcomes. Fourteen young adult males participated. Subjects’ perceptions of comfort and stability were assessed by visual analogue scales after each drill for each ankle condition. Time-to-completion and post-completion heart rate were recorded. For both drills, significant differences in comfort perception were found such that subjects perceived no support as equivocal to bracing but more comfortable than either taping or spatting + taping. Stability results differed by drill. For the dash, significant differences in stability perception were found such that subjects perceived no support as equivocal to bracing but less stable than either taping or spatting + taping. By contrast, for the cutting drill significant differences in stability perception were found such that subjects perceived their ankles as less stable during the no support condition as compared to all 3 other conditions. Generally, bracing was perceived as equivocal to all 3 other conditions for comfort and stability. There were no significant differences in time-to-completion or heart rate for any comparison. Compared to bracing or taping, spatting + taping (a) did not influence performance time in explosive/sprint-type drills, (b) was perceived as equivalent to taping alone in terms of ankle comfort and stability, and (c) was perceived as equivalent to bracing in terms of stability but not comfort.
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spelling pubmed-49612382016-07-28 Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills REUTER, GRANT D DAHL, ANGELA R SENCHINA, DAVID S Int J Exerc Sci Original Research The purpose of this study was to compare the influences of 4 ankle conditions (no support, bracing, taping, taping + spatting; all in football cleats) during 2 maximal-effort field drills (40-yd dash and 34-yd cutting drill) on perceptions of comfort and stability and performance outcomes. Fourteen young adult males participated. Subjects’ perceptions of comfort and stability were assessed by visual analogue scales after each drill for each ankle condition. Time-to-completion and post-completion heart rate were recorded. For both drills, significant differences in comfort perception were found such that subjects perceived no support as equivocal to bracing but more comfortable than either taping or spatting + taping. Stability results differed by drill. For the dash, significant differences in stability perception were found such that subjects perceived no support as equivocal to bracing but less stable than either taping or spatting + taping. By contrast, for the cutting drill significant differences in stability perception were found such that subjects perceived their ankles as less stable during the no support condition as compared to all 3 other conditions. Generally, bracing was perceived as equivocal to all 3 other conditions for comfort and stability. There were no significant differences in time-to-completion or heart rate for any comparison. Compared to bracing or taping, spatting + taping (a) did not influence performance time in explosive/sprint-type drills, (b) was perceived as equivalent to taping alone in terms of ankle comfort and stability, and (c) was perceived as equivalent to bracing in terms of stability but not comfort. Berkeley Electronic Press 2011-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4961238/ /pubmed/27478530 Text en
spellingShingle Original Research
REUTER, GRANT D
DAHL, ANGELA R
SENCHINA, DAVID S
Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills
title Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills
title_full Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills
title_fullStr Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills
title_full_unstemmed Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills
title_short Ankle Spatting Compared to Bracing or Taping during Maximal-Effort Sprint Drills
title_sort ankle spatting compared to bracing or taping during maximal-effort sprint drills
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4961238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27478530
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