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NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY

BACKGROUND: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury is secondary to a multifactorial etiology encompassing anatomical, biological, mechanical, and neurological factors. The nature of the injury being primarily due to non-contact mechanics further implicates neural control as a key injury-risk factor...

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Autores principales: Grooms, Dustin R., Diekfuss, Jed A., Slutsky-Ganesh, Alexis B., Criss, Cody R., Anand, Manish, DiCesare, Christopher A., Kiefer, Adam W., Riley, Michael A., Thomas, Staci, Kitchen, Katie, Riehm, Christopher, Bonnette, Scott, Gadd, Brooke, Foss, Kim D. Barber, Myer, Gregory D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8283062/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00154
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author Grooms, Dustin R.
Diekfuss, Jed A.
Slutsky-Ganesh, Alexis B.
Criss, Cody R.
Anand, Manish
DiCesare, Christopher A.
Kiefer, Adam W.
Riley, Michael A.
Thomas, Staci
Kitchen, Katie
Riehm, Christopher
Bonnette, Scott
Gadd, Brooke
Foss, Kim D. Barber
Myer, Gregory D.
author_facet Grooms, Dustin R.
Diekfuss, Jed A.
Slutsky-Ganesh, Alexis B.
Criss, Cody R.
Anand, Manish
DiCesare, Christopher A.
Kiefer, Adam W.
Riley, Michael A.
Thomas, Staci
Kitchen, Katie
Riehm, Christopher
Bonnette, Scott
Gadd, Brooke
Foss, Kim D. Barber
Myer, Gregory D.
author_sort Grooms, Dustin R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury is secondary to a multifactorial etiology encompassing anatomical, biological, mechanical, and neurological factors. The nature of the injury being primarily due to non-contact mechanics further implicates neural control as a key injury-risk factor, though it has received considerably less study. PURPOSE: To determine the contribution of neural activity to injury-risk mechanics in ecological sport-specific VR landing scenarios. METHODS: Ten female high-school soccer players (15.5±0.85 years; 165.0±6.09 cm; 59.1±11.84 kg) completed a neuroimaging session to capture neural activity during a bilateral leg press and a 3D biomechanics session performing a header within a VR soccer scenario. The bilateral leg press involved four 30 s blocks of repeated bilateral leg presses paced to a metronome beat of 1.2 Hz with 30 s rest between blocks. The VR soccer scenario simulated a corner-kick, requiring the participant to jump and head a virtual soccer ball into a virtual goal (Figure 1A-E). Initial contact and peak knee flexion and abduction angles were extracted during the landing from the header as injury-risk variables of interest and were correlated with neural activity. RESULTS: Evidenced in Table 1 and Figure 1 (bottom row), increased initial contact abduction, increased peak abduction, and decreased peak flexion were associated with increased sensory, visual-spatial, and cerebellar activity (r(2)= 0.42-0.57, p (corrected) < .05, z (max) > 3.1, table & figure 1). Decreased initial contact flexion was associated with increased frontal cortex activity (r(2)= 0.68, p (corrected) < .05, z (max) > 3.1). CONCLUSION: Reduced neural efficiency (increased activation) of key regions that integrate proprioceptive, visual-spatial, and neurocognitive activity for motor control may influence injury-risk mechanics in sport. The regions found to increase in activity in relation to higher injury-risk mechanics are typically activated to assist with spatial navigation, environmental interaction, and precise motor control. The requirement for athletes to increase their activity for more basic knee motor control may result in fewer neural resources available to maintain knee joint alignment, allocate environmental attention, and handle increased motor coordination demands. These data indicate that strategies to enhance efficiency of visual-spatial and cognitive-motor control during high demand sporting activities is warranted to improve ACL injury-risk reduction.
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spelling pubmed-82830622021-08-02 NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY Grooms, Dustin R. Diekfuss, Jed A. Slutsky-Ganesh, Alexis B. Criss, Cody R. Anand, Manish DiCesare, Christopher A. Kiefer, Adam W. Riley, Michael A. Thomas, Staci Kitchen, Katie Riehm, Christopher Bonnette, Scott Gadd, Brooke Foss, Kim D. Barber Myer, Gregory D. Orthop J Sports Med Article BACKGROUND: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury is secondary to a multifactorial etiology encompassing anatomical, biological, mechanical, and neurological factors. The nature of the injury being primarily due to non-contact mechanics further implicates neural control as a key injury-risk factor, though it has received considerably less study. PURPOSE: To determine the contribution of neural activity to injury-risk mechanics in ecological sport-specific VR landing scenarios. METHODS: Ten female high-school soccer players (15.5±0.85 years; 165.0±6.09 cm; 59.1±11.84 kg) completed a neuroimaging session to capture neural activity during a bilateral leg press and a 3D biomechanics session performing a header within a VR soccer scenario. The bilateral leg press involved four 30 s blocks of repeated bilateral leg presses paced to a metronome beat of 1.2 Hz with 30 s rest between blocks. The VR soccer scenario simulated a corner-kick, requiring the participant to jump and head a virtual soccer ball into a virtual goal (Figure 1A-E). Initial contact and peak knee flexion and abduction angles were extracted during the landing from the header as injury-risk variables of interest and were correlated with neural activity. RESULTS: Evidenced in Table 1 and Figure 1 (bottom row), increased initial contact abduction, increased peak abduction, and decreased peak flexion were associated with increased sensory, visual-spatial, and cerebellar activity (r(2)= 0.42-0.57, p (corrected) < .05, z (max) > 3.1, table & figure 1). Decreased initial contact flexion was associated with increased frontal cortex activity (r(2)= 0.68, p (corrected) < .05, z (max) > 3.1). CONCLUSION: Reduced neural efficiency (increased activation) of key regions that integrate proprioceptive, visual-spatial, and neurocognitive activity for motor control may influence injury-risk mechanics in sport. The regions found to increase in activity in relation to higher injury-risk mechanics are typically activated to assist with spatial navigation, environmental interaction, and precise motor control. The requirement for athletes to increase their activity for more basic knee motor control may result in fewer neural resources available to maintain knee joint alignment, allocate environmental attention, and handle increased motor coordination demands. These data indicate that strategies to enhance efficiency of visual-spatial and cognitive-motor control during high demand sporting activities is warranted to improve ACL injury-risk reduction. SAGE Publications 2021-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8283062/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00154 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open-access article is published and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - No Derivatives License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits the noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction of the article in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. You may not alter, transform, or build upon this article without the permission of the Author(s). For article reuse guidelines, please visit SAGE’s website at http://www.sagepub.com/journals-permissions.
spellingShingle Article
Grooms, Dustin R.
Diekfuss, Jed A.
Slutsky-Ganesh, Alexis B.
Criss, Cody R.
Anand, Manish
DiCesare, Christopher A.
Kiefer, Adam W.
Riley, Michael A.
Thomas, Staci
Kitchen, Katie
Riehm, Christopher
Bonnette, Scott
Gadd, Brooke
Foss, Kim D. Barber
Myer, Gregory D.
NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY
title NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY
title_full NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY
title_fullStr NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY
title_full_unstemmed NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY
title_short NEURAL ACTIVITY PROFILES ASSOCIATED WITH ACL INJURY-RISK MECHANICS IN ECOLOGICAL SPORT SPECIFIC VIRTUAL REALITY
title_sort neural activity profiles associated with acl injury-risk mechanics in ecological sport specific virtual reality
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8283062/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00154
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