跳跃的
生物力学
运动学
跳跃
脚踝
物理医学与康复
计算机科学
膝关节
毒物控制
模拟
物理疗法
医学
外科
解剖
物理
经典力学
环境卫生
量子力学
生理学
作者
Juan Baus,John R. Harry,James Yang
标识
DOI:10.1615/critrevbiomedeng.2020034795
摘要
Noncontact lower extremity injuries are commonly related to jumping and landing activities. This review presents an overview of relevant biomechanical variables that can be modified in training to improve jumping performance, landing mechanics, and consequently, reduce injury risks. Relevant studies from the last 2 decades in the Compendex, Pubmed, and Scopus databases were considered for this review. Studies related to jumping and landing kinetics, kinematics, injuries, performance, and/or simulation were included. The use of experimental methods as the drop jump landing and jumping countermovement are widely used to measure biomechanical variables. At the same time, there has been a continuous development of simulation models that could present results without the need for testing on human subjects, with the final objective of exploring the limits of an athlete's performance without increasing the risk of any injury. The most common injuries occur in the knee and ankle ligaments and are directly related to joint angles and moments (i.e., torque or joint loading) at the hip, ankle, and knee joints. Jumping and landing biomechanics are considerably different between male and female subjects for different experimental methods and in both cases, these kinematics factors can be improved over shorter- or longer-time training to develop a better landing strategy.
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