- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT03745482
The Impact of Unilateral Lumbar Mobilisations on Hamstring Strength and Failure Point of the Hamstring Nordic Exercise
The Impact of Unilateral Lumbar Mobilisations on Hamstring Strength, sEMG Activity and Failure Point of the Hamstring Nordic Exercise
The aim of this study is to build on previous published work, which has indicated lumbar mobilisations have the ability to increase hamstring extensibility and decrease muscle activity. The primary aim of this project is investigate if lumbar mobilisations have an affect on the Nordic Hamstring exercise.
Aim: To investigate the short-term effects L4 and L5 Unilateral Posterior Anterior (UPA) Mobilisations on the lumbar spine on the Nordic Hamstring Exercise. Measures will include hamstring peak torque, sEMG activity and knee angle at first rapid change in angular acceleration.
Study Overview
Detailed Description
The study aims to investigate the short-term effects L4 and L5 Unilateral Posterior Anterior (UPA) Mobilisations on the lumbar spine on the Nordic Hamstring Exercise. Measures will include hamstring peak torque, sEMG activity and knee angle at first rapid change in angular acceleration.
Recruitment will take place via flyer and email. All testing will take place in the biodex laboratory at Teesside University. Due to the nature of the cross-over design participants will attend the laboratory six times, two for familiarisation sessions, and a remaining four testing session all 72 hours apart. The four testing sessions will contain two control and two intervention sessions attended in a randomised order.
Following recruitment participants will be required to complete a medical questionnaire and sign a consent form following reading the participant information sheet.
The Nordic Hamstring exercise will be performed by each participant across the intervention and control conditions. Participants will watch a video of a subject completing the Nordic exercise program. They will also receive the following verbal instructions:
'Players start in a kneeling position, with the torso from the knees upward held rigid and straight. The training partner ensures that the player's feet are in contact with the ground throughout the exercise by applying pressure to the player's heels/lower legs. The player then lowers his upper body to the ground, as slowly as possible to maximize loading in the eccentric phase. Hands and arms are used to break his forward fall and to push him back up after the chest has touched the ground, to minimize loading in the concentric phase (Mjølsne et al, 2005; Petersen et al, 2011).
All participants will be given the opportunity to ask questions as necessary.
A standardised warm-up on an ergometer will be undertaken for 5 minutes at 60% max resting heart rate.
Following the warm-up all participants will familiarise themselves with the Nordic Hamstring Exercise on the hamstring solo equipment. They will be able to practice up to 8 repetitions. This data will be used for a reliability study to understand the number of required repetitions for the main study.
During testing participants will attend the same laboratory for the remaining four testing sessions. They will receive two intervention sessions, when the lumbar mobilisations will be performed, and two when the control is administered.
The same warm-up undertaken during the familiarisation session will be undertaken prior to testing.
The intervention will consist of unilateral lumbar mobilisations at the L4 and L5 level in a Posterior Anterior direction. The side of the mobilisation will be determined by dominate leg - considered the kicking foot. The mobilisations will be administered by a physiotherapist with at least 12 years clinical experience. Teksan grip sensors will be worn by the physiotherapist to calculate the force applied to the participant. Grade three mobilisations will be applied for a one minute period three times at both L4 and L5 level.
For the control, all participants will be laid prone on the medical plinth in the same position will no mobilisations administered.
Outcome measures will include collection of hamstring peak force data, sEMG of the Biceps Femoris, 3D Motion capture data and subjective likert scale of exercise difficulty.
Study Type
Enrollment (Actual)
Phase
- Not Applicable
Contacts and Locations
Study Locations
-
-
Tyne And Wear
-
Middlesbrough,, Tyne And Wear, United Kingdom, TS1 3BA
- School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Law
-
-
Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Genders Eligible for Study
Description
Inclusion Criteria:
Current Teesside University Students/Staff 18+ years Engaged in Football related activity once a week Provide Informed Consent No current musculoskeletal Injury
Exclusion Criteria:
Current symptomatic low back pain or lower limb pathology including any injuries to the lower limb/lumbar spine within the last 6 months Previous ACL/Hamstring Rupture tear or diagnosed anterior knee pain. Under supervision of another health clinician Medical questionnaire not completed Red flags on medical questionnaire Any neurological problems Contraindications or precautions to spinal mobilisation
- malignancy, inflammatory or infectious processes involving the spine or peripheral joints,
- osteoporosis,
- spinal disorders including spondylolisthesis, ankylosing spondylitis, spinal fusion
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Design Details
- Primary Purpose: Treatment
- Allocation: Randomized
- Interventional Model: Crossover Assignment
- Masking: Quadruple
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group / Arm |
Intervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
|
Experimental: Mobilisations
The intervention will consist of unilateral lumbar mobilisations at the L4 and L5 level in a Posterior Anterior direction. The plinth will rest on force plates to allow the authors to analyse the force placed through the vertebrae. Grade three mobilisations will be applied for a one minute period three times at both L4 and L5 level. Each level will be determined by a passive physiological intervertebral movement. Participants will receive the mobilisations at L5 first for one minute followed by L4. This is an appropriate dose for mobilisation application (Maitland, 2013). This process will be carried out three times. Following application of the mobilisations outcome measures including hamstring strength, sEMG activity and 3D motion analysis will take place. |
The intervention will consist of unilateral lumbar mobilisations at the L4 and L5 level in a Posterior Anterior direction.
The side of the mobilisation will be determined by dominant leg - considered the kicking foot.
The mobilisations will be administered by a physiotherapist with at least 10 years clinical experience.
Teksan grip sensors will be worn by the physiotherapist to calculate the force applied to the participant.
Grade three mobilisations will be applied for a one minute period three times at both L4 and L5 level.
Each level will be determined by a passive physiological intervertebral movement.
Participants will receive the mobilisations at L5 first for one minute followed by L4.
This is an appropriate dose for mobilisation application (Maitland, 2013).
This process will be carried out three times.
|
|
No Intervention: Control
The control condition will consist of the participant lying prone on a plinth for the same time if takes for intervention to be applied approximately 10 minutes. Following the control condition outcome measures including hamstring strength, sEMG activity and 3D motion analysis will take place. |
What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Hamstring Peak Force
Time Frame: Immediate data collection during Nordic Hamstring Exercise
|
Peak Force of the Hamstring as measured by the Hamstring Solo Device during a Nordic eccentric hamstring exercise The hamstring solo device calculates Force (N), time of exercise (secs), Torque (Nm) and Torque per kg. This is collected in real-time. The hamstring solo calculates the eccentric force of the hamstring in real time. Participants are placed on the board with their ankle strapped. They follow previously discussed instructions to eccentrically lower themselves to the ground from a kneeling position. |
Immediate data collection during Nordic Hamstring Exercise
|
|
sEMG of Biceps Femoris
Time Frame: Immediate data collection during Nordic Hamstring Exercise
|
Record electromyography (SEMG) activity in the muscles of the participants in this study the Zerowire Cometa system will be used.
Every electrode unit is equipped with a small unit for signal processing and transmission to the data receiver.
The electrodes are single use disposable, self-adhesive silver chloride dual snap on electrodes pre-set at a distance of 20mm.
All participants will have the skin prepared prior to the noraxon electrode being placed on their skin.
Electrodes will be attached according to European recommendation (seniam) to the Biceps Femoris of both limbs.
The electrode placement and sEMG recording will be taken by a qualified laboratory technician employed by Teesside University.
|
Immediate data collection during Nordic Hamstring Exercise
|
|
Vicon 3D Motion Capture
Time Frame: Immediate data collection during Nordic Hamstring Exercise
|
Participants will have their mass (kg), height (cm), knee joint (between the medial and lateral epicondyle), ankle joint width (malleoli) and leg length (ASIS to medial malleolus) measured prior to recording.Widths will be measured using anthropometric calipers. Stretch height will be performed to improve the accuracy of the measurement. Six wall-mounted Vicon MX13 infrared cameras (Vicon) will collect 3D motion capture data at a sampling frequency of 100 Hz.. 3D motion capture data will be processed via Vicon Nexus version 1.8.5 using inbuilt pipeline functions to calculate 3D kinematic data (hip,pelvis, knee). Participants will have retroflective markers (14 mm) attached to the following landmarks on both the right and left side of the body; ASIS, PSIS, greater trochanter, mid-thigh, lateral epicondyle (of the knee), mid-tibia, lateral malleolus, calcaneus, and 2nd toe. The markers will be affixed with double-sided tape placed on the overlaying skin of the bony landmark. |
Immediate data collection during Nordic Hamstring Exercise
|
Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Likert Scale
Time Frame: Immediate post Nordic hamstring Exercise
|
Following the Nordic exercise participants will be asked to rate the difficulty of the exercise on a 0-10 likert scale.
|
Immediate post Nordic hamstring Exercise
|
Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Paul Chesterton, MSc, Teesside University
Publications and helpful links
General Publications
- Chesterton P, Payton S, McLaren S. Acute effects of centrally- and unilaterally-applied posterior-anterior mobilizations of the lumbar spine on lumbar range of motion, hamstring extensibility and muscle activation. J Back Musculoskelet Rehabil. 2018;31(6):1013-1023. doi: 10.3233/BMR-171000.
- Chesterton P & Payton S (2017) Effects of spinal mobilisations on lumbar and hamstring ROM and sEMG: A randomised control trial. Physiotherapy Practice and Research, 38, 17-25
Study record dates
Study Major Dates
Study Start (Actual)
Primary Completion (Actual)
Study Completion (Actual)
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (Actual)
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (Actual)
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Other Study ID Numbers
- TeessideUniversity
Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)
Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?
Drug and device information, study documents
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product
This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.
Clinical Trials on Hamstring Injury
-
Isra UniversityCompletedHamstring Tightness | Hamstring Injury PreventionPakistan
-
Riphah International UniversityCompletedPost Isometric Relaxation and Mulligan Bent Leg Raise on Hamstring Tightness in High School StudentsHamstring Injury | Hamstring Tendon InjuryPakistan
-
Gdansk University of Physical Education and SportRecruiting
-
Gdansk University of Physical Education and SportActive, not recruiting
-
University GhentCompletedHamstring InjuryBelgium
-
Tianjin University of SportCompleted
-
Universidad Católica San Antonio de MurciaCompleted
-
Cairo UniversityEnrolling by invitation
-
Universidad de ZaragozaCompleted
-
Istanbul Medipol University HospitalCompletedHamstring InjuryTurkey
Clinical Trials on Lumbar Mobilisations
-
Teesside UniversityCompleted
-
Edinburgh Napier UniversityScottish Hospital Endowments Research Trust; Pacla Medical LtdCompletedLower Back PainUnited Kingdom
-
Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation TrustCompletedCystic FibrosisUnited Kingdom
-
University of PlymouthCompletedDiabetic Peripheral Neuropathy | Limited Joint Mobility Syndrome | Ankle Joint Range of Motion | Forefoot Peak Plantar Pressure | Foot and Ankle Mobilisations | Home Exercise Programme / StretchesUnited Kingdom
-
Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation TrustCompleted
-
Universidad de MurciaCompletedSciatic Nerve | Flexibility | Hamstring MusclesSpain
-
The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS TrustCompleted
-
Federal University of São PauloCompleted
-
Ithaca CollegeRecruitingLow Back PainUnited States
-
Poznan University of Physical EducationCompletedObesity | Low Back PainPoland