Lumbar- and Cervicothoracic-Spine Loading During a Fast-Bowling Spell

Greig, Matt and Nagy, Philip (2017) Lumbar- and Cervicothoracic-Spine Loading During a Fast-Bowling Spell. Journal of Sport Rehabilitation, 26 (4). pp. 257-262.

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Abstract

Context: Epidemiological studies highlight a prevalence of lumbar vertebrae injuries in cricket fast bowlers, with governing bodies implementing rules to reduce exposure. Analysis typically requires complex and laboratory-based biomechanical analyses, lacking ecological validity. Developments in GPS microtechnologies facilitate on-field measures of mechanical intensity, facilitating screening toward prevention and rehabilitation. Objective: To examine the efficacy of using GPS-mounted triaxial accelerometers to quantify accumulated body load and to investigate the effect of GPS-unit placement in relation to epidemiological observations. Design: Repeated measures, field-based. Setting: Regulation cricket pitch. Participants: 10 male injury-free participants recruited from a cricket academy (18.1 ± 0.6 y). Intervention: Each participant was fitted with 2 GPS units placed at the cervicothoracic and lumbar spines to measure triaxial acceleration (100 Hz). Participants were instructed to deliver a 7-over spell of fast bowling, as dictated by governing-body guidelines. Main Outcome Measures: Triaxial total accumulated body and the relative uniaxial contributions were calculated for each over. Results: There was no significant main effect for overs bowled, in either total load or the triaxial contributions to total load. This finding suggests no cumulative fatigue effect across the 10-over spell. However, there was a significant main effect for GPS-unit location, with the lumbar unit exposed to significantly greater load than the cervicothoracic unit in each of the triaxial planes. Conclusions: There was no evidence to suggest that accumulated load significantly increased as a result of spell duration. In this respect the governing-body guidelines for this age group can be considered safe, or potentially even conservative. However, the observation of higher body load at the lumbar spine than at the cervicothoracic spine supports epidemiological observations of injury incidence. GPS microtechnologies might therefore be considered in screening and monitoring of players toward injury prevention and/or during rehabilitation.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Journal of Sport Rehabilitation
ID Code:
171547
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
10 Jun 2022 09:20
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
19 Sep 2024 10:51