Tibial Accelerations During the Single-Leg Hop Test: Influence of Fixation

J Sport Rehabil. 2020 Dec 8;30(5):832-835. doi: 10.1123/jsr.2020-0309.

Abstract

Context: Performance on single-leg hopping (SLH) assessments is commonly included within return-to-sport criteria for rehabilitating athletes. Triaxial accelerometers have been used to quantify impact loading in a variety of movements, including hopping; however, they have never been attached to the tibia during SLH, and their method of fixation has not been investigated.

Objective: The purpose of this study was to quantify triaxial accelerations and evaluate the influence of the fixation method of a lightweight inertial measurement unit (Blue Trident) mounted to the tibia during SLH performance.

Design: Single cohort, repeated-measures experimental design.

Participants: Sixteen healthy participants (10 females and 6 males; 20 [0.9] y; 1.67 [0.08] m; 66.0 [8.5] kg) met the inclusion criteria, volunteered, and completed this study.

Interventions: Participants performed 2 sets of 3 SLH trials with an inertial measurement unit (1500 Hz) fixated to the tibia, each set with 1 of 2 attachment methods (double-sided tape [DST] with athletic tape and silicon strap [SS] with Velcro adhesion).

Main outcome measures: Hop distance, peak tibial acceleration (PTA), time to PTA, and the acceleration slope were assessed during each hop landing.

Results: Repeated-measures analysis of variance determined no significant effect of the attachment method on hop metrics (P = .252). Across 3 trials, both fixation methods (DST and SS) had excellent reliability values (intraclass correlation coefficient: .868-.941) for PTA and acceleration slope but not for time to PTA (intraclass correlation coefficient: .397-.768). The PTA for DST (27.22 [7.94] g) and SS (26.21 [10.48] g) was comparable and had a moderate, positive relationship (DST: r = .72, P < .01; SS: r = .77, P < .01) to SLH distance.

Conclusions: Tibial inertial measurement units with triaxial accelerometers can reliably assess PTA during performance of the SLH, and SS is a viable alternative tibial attachment to DST.

Keywords: IMU; hopping; return to sport.

MeSH terms

  • Acceleration
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Exercise Test / instrumentation*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Movement / physiology*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Tibia / physiology*
  • Wearable Electronic Devices*
  • Young Adult