Abstract

The present study aimed to investigate the effects of gender on hip muscle strength and activity during a controlled cutting maneuver in preadolescent athletes. Fifty-six football and handball preadolescent players participated (35 females and 21 males). Normalized mean activity of the gluteus medius (GM) muscle was measured using surface electromyography during cutting maneuvers in pre-activation and eccentric phases. The stance duration and the strength of hip abductors and external rotators were recorded with a force plate and a handheld dynamometer, respectively. Descriptive statistics and mixed model analysis were used to assess statistical difference (α=0.05). The results showed that boys activate the GM muscle significantly more than girls during the pre-activation phase (P=0.022). Boys also demonstrated greater normalized strength of hip external rotation than girls (P=0.038), but not for hip abduction or duration of stance (P>0.05). When adjusted for abduction strength, however, boys had significantly shorter stance duration than girls (P=0.006). It seems that sex-dependent differences are present in preadolescent athletes as observed in the strength of hip external rotator muscles and neuromuscular activity of the GM muscle during a cutting maneuver. Future studies are needed to investigate whether these changes influence risk of lower limb/ACL injury during sport activities.

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