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Prevention of Musculoskeletal Injuries in Slovenian Armed Forces

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Ankle Injuries and Disorders
Knee Injuries and Disorders
Low Back Pain
Interventions
Other: Exercise
Registration Number
NCT03415464
Lead Sponsor
University of Ljubljana
Brief Summary

Physical readiness of military personnel is a cornerstone of any army, as soldiers are expected to meet high physical demands on a daily basis, and soldiers must complete one hour of physical conditioning each day. Participation in physical conditioning increases the risk of musculoskeletal injuries, and our 10-year retrospective analysis shows that 5% of soldiers sustain a sports injury during physical conditioning each year, and that ankle and knee injuries have the highest incidence rates of 25% and 20%, respectively. The primary objective of our study is to decrease the rate of ankle and knee injuries by implementing a preventive training program. The study is designed as a prospective randomized controlled trial with two arms (experimental and control).

Detailed Description

Members of Slovenian Armed Forces - SAF (age range 18-51 years) are expected to participate in the study. Prior to recruitment the whole project will be explained to soldiers in a form of briefing during which they have the opportunity to ask and have answers to any questions concerning the nature of subsequent research. Following that explanation each participant will sign a consent form to voluntarily participate. No compensation will be given or promised for participation in a study that was approved by the Ethical board of the Faculty of Sport in Ljubljana (No. 454/2017). At the time of testing all soldiers must be free of acute injuries and should not reported any pain in musculo-skeletal system. Prior to the implementation of the preventive program all participants will underwent the set of functional testing that includes counterMovement jump (CMJ) testing, stork balANce test, pUll-ups, single leg hAmstrings bridge test, and loaded prone pLank test - MANUAL. Following initial testing a 15-week preventive training program will be implemented in experimental group, while control group will be training as usual. Following the intervention final testing will be performed to check for effectiveness of the intervention. After that a follow-up period will start during which injuries will be registered in both groups and later compared between groups (control and experimental) and within (2016-2017 injuries) groups to see if incidence rate of ankle and knee injuries has fallen.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
160
Inclusion Criteria
  • no major injuries that would require more than 4 weeks to recover upon entry into the study
  • age >18 y
  • finished initial Army training
Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Functional trainingExercise15 weeks of structured exercise intervention in the form of functional training. We have divided 15 weeks into 5 cycles each cycle lasting 3 weeks. Intervention will be administered twice per week, and each session will last 45 minutes.Each 45 minutes will be further divided into 10 minutes of functional warm-up, 30 minutes of neuromuscular training (strength, agility, balance, coordination) and 5 minutes of cool down. During the 3 week period the intensity of exercise will be increased with different form of same exercise, different number of repetitions and exercise duration.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of Soldiers With Ankle and Knee Injuries1 year

Percentage of soldiers with ankle and knee injuries during the study period.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Vertical Jump Performance15 weeks

jump height in countermovement jump

Pull-ups Performance15 weeks

number of overhand pull-ups in one minute

Hamstring Repetitive Strength15 weeks

Number of single leg raises on the 60 cm box

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University in Ljubljana

🇸🇮

Ljubljana, Slovenia

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