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Investigating strength and range of motion of the hip complex in ice hockey athletes

Wilcox, Christopher R. J.; Osgood, Chad T.; White, Hollie S. F.; Vince, Rebecca V.

Authors

Profile image of Chris Wilcox

Dr Chris Wilcox C.Wilcox@hull.ac.uk
Associate Dean Student Experience, Faculty of Health Sciences

Chad T. Osgood

Hollie S. F. White



Abstract

CONTEXT: Ice hockey athletes frequently injure the hip complex via a non-contact mechanism. We investigated patterns of strength and range of motion (ROM) to establish major differences compared to soccer athletes. Soccer athletes were compared to ice hockey athletes due to similarities between the two sports with regards to the intermittent nature and high number of lower limb injuries. OBJECTIVE: To compare the differences in ROM and strength of the hip for both the dominant (Dom) and non-dominant (Ndom) limb in ice hockey and soccer athletes. DESIGN: Case control study. SETTING: Bilateral ROM in hip flexion in sitting (FS) and lying (FL), extension, abduction, adduction, and internal rotation (IR) and external rotation (ER) was measured using a goniometer and assessed for strength using a hand held dynamometer on both the Dom and Ndom limbs. Participants. Twenty four male, active, uninjured NCAA division III ice hockey (16) and soccer (8) athletes. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: ROM and strength for hip FS, FL extension, abduction, adduction, IR and ER. A mixed model ANOVA was used to investigate interactions and main effects. RESULTS: Ice hockey athletes exhibited greater hip adduction ROM compared to soccer athletes in the Dom leg (both p=0.002) and when both limbs were combined (p = 0.010). Ice hockey athletes had less ROM in ER (p = 0.042) than soccer athletes. Ice hockey athletes displayed less strength in adduction in their Ndom leg compared to their Dom leg (p=0.02) along with less adduction than soccer players in their Ndom leg (p=0.40). Ice hockey athletes displayed less strength in hip adduction (p=0.030), FS (p=0.023) and FL (p=0.030) than soccer athletes. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that ice hockey athletes may present an 'at risk' profile for non-contact hip injuries, in comparison with soccer athletes with regards to strength and ROM of the hip.

Citation

Wilcox, C. R. J., Osgood, C. T., White, H. S. F., & Vince, R. V. (2015). Investigating strength and range of motion of the hip complex in ice hockey athletes. Journal of sport rehabilitation, 24(3), 300-306. https://doi.org/10.1123/jsr.2014-0175

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 6, 2015
Publication Date 2015-08
Deposit Date Jun 2, 2015
Publicly Available Date Apr 12, 2022
Journal Journal of sport rehabilitation
Print ISSN 1056-6716
Publisher Human Kinetics
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 24
Issue 3
Pages 300-306
DOI https://doi.org/10.1123/jsr.2014-0175
Keywords Hip injury; Soccer; Dominant; Nondominant; Noncontact
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/374624
Publisher URL http://journals.humankinetics.com/jsr-back-issues/jsr-volume-24-issue-3-august/investigating-strength-and-range-of-motion-of-the-hip-complex-in-ice-hockey-athletes
Contract Date Jun 2, 2015

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