TY - JOUR
PY - 2015//
TI - Assessment and training of visuomotor reaction time for football injury prevention
JO - Journal of sport rehabilitation
A1 - Wilkerson, Gary B.
A1 - Simpson, Kevin A.
A1 - Clark, Ryan A.
SP - ePub
EP - ePub
VL - ePub
IS - ePub
N2 - CONTEXT: Neurocognitive reaction time has been associated with musculoskeletal injury risk, but visuomotor reaction time (VMRT) derived from tests that present greater challenges to visual stimulus detection and motor response execution may have a stronger association.
OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to assess VMRT as a predictor of injury and the extent to which improvement may result from VMRT training.
DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING: University athletic performance center. PARTICIPANTS: Seventy-six NCAA Division-I FCS American football players (19.5 ±1.4 years; 1.85 ± 0.06 m; 102.98 ±19.06 kg). INTERVENTIONS: Pre-participation and post-season assessments. A subset of players who exhibited slowest VMRT in relation to the cohort's post-season median value participated in a 6-week training program. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Injury occurrence was related to pre-participation VMRT, which was represented by both number of target hits in 60 s and average elapsed time between hits (ms). Receiver operating characteristic analysis identified the optimum cut point for a binary injury risk classification. A non-parametric repeated measures analysis of ranks procedure was used to compare post-training VMRT values for slow players who completed at least half of the training sessions (n=15) to those for untrained fast players (n=27).
RESULTS: A pre-participation cut point of ≤ 85 hits (≥ 705 ms) discriminated injured from non-injured players with OR = 2.30 (90% CI: 1.05, 5.06). Slow players who completed the training exhibited significant improvement in visuomotor performance compared to baseline (SRM = 2.53), whereas untrained players exhibited a small performance decrement (group x trial interaction effect, L2 = 28.74; P <.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Slow VMRT appears to be an important and modifiable injury risk factor for college football players. More research is needed to refine visuomotor reaction time screening and training methods and to determine the extent to which improved performance values can reduce injury incidence.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1056-6716 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10-1123/jsr.2015-0068 ID - ref1 ER -