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Acute effects of static and dynamic stretching on hamstrings’ response times

Authors :
Francisco Ayala
Fernando Santonja
Mark De Ste Croix
Pilar Sainz de Baranda
Source :
Journal of Sports Sciences. 32:817-825
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2014.

Abstract

The main purposes of this study were to (a) investigate acute effects of static and dynamic lower limb stretching routines on total response time, pre-motor time and motor time of the medial and lateral hamstrings during maximal eccentric isokinetic knee flexion; and (b) determine whether static and dynamic routines elicit similar responses. A total of 38 active adults completed the following intervention protocols in a randomised order on separate days: (a) non-stretching (control condition), (b) static stretching and (c) dynamic stretching. After the stretching or control intervention, total response time, pre-motor time and motor time of the medial and lateral hamstrings were assessed during eccentric knee flexion movements with participants prone. Measures were compared via a mixed-design factorial ANOVA. There were no main effects for total response time, pre-motor time and motor time. The results suggest that dynamic and static stretching has no influence on hamstrings response times (total response time, pre-motor time and motor time) and hence neither form of stretching reduces this primary risk factor for anterior cruciate ligament injury.

Details

ISSN :
1466447X and 02640414
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Sports Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f82a4791b532669a53838b9c48474c1