Abstract

BackgroundThe application of ankle braces is an effective method for the prevention of recurrent ankle sprains. It has been proposed that the reduction of injury rates is based on the mechanical stiffness of the brace and on beneficial effects on proprioception and neuromuscular activation. Yet, how the neuromuscular system responds to the application of various types of ankle braces during highly dynamic injury-relevant movements is not well understood. Enhanced stability of the ankle joint seems especially important for people with chronic ankle instability. We therefore aimed to analyse the effects of a soft and a semi-rigid ankle brace on the execution of highly dynamic 180° turning movements in participants with and without chronic ankle instability.MethodsFifteen participants with functional ankle instability, 15 participants with functional and mechanical ankle instability and 15 healthy controls performed 180° turning movements in reaction to light signals in a cross-sectional descriptive laboratory study. Ankle joint kinematics and kinetics as well as neuromuscular activation of muscles surrounding the ankle joint were determined. Two-way repeated measures analyses of variance and post-hoc t-tests were calculated.ResultsMaximum ankle inversion angles and velocities were significantly reduced with the semi-rigid brace in comparison to the conditions without a brace and with the soft brace (p ≤ 0.006, d ≥ 0.303). Effect sizes of these reductions were larger in participants with chronic ankle instability than in healthy controls. Furthermore, peroneal activation levels decreased significantly with the semi-rigid brace in the 100 ms before and after ground contact. No statistically significant brace by group effects were found.ConclusionsBased on these findings, we argue that people with ankle instability in particular seem to benefit from a semi-rigid ankle brace, which allows them to keep ankle inversion angles in a range that is comparable to values of healthy people. Lower ankle inversion angles and velocities with a semi-rigid brace may explain reduced injury incidences with brace application. The lack of effect of the soft brace indicates that the primary mechanism behind the reduction of inversion angles and velocities is the mechanical resistance of the brace in the frontal plane.

Highlights

  • The application of ankle braces is an effective method for the prevention of recurrent ankle sprains

  • Ankle inversion angles at foot strike as well as maximum ankle inversion angles, velocities and moments during the first 200 ms of ground contact were determined using custom-made scripts in Matlab (Version R2015b, The MathWorks, Natick, USA) using BTK toolbox [40]

  • In the absence of GROUP x CONDITION effects, no post-hoc t-tests to determine the effect of brace application on specific groups were calculated

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Summary

Introduction

The application of ankle braces is an effective method for the prevention of recurrent ankle sprains. We aimed to analyse the effects of a soft and a semi-rigid ankle brace on the execution of highly dynamic 180° turning movements in participants with and without chronic ankle instability. It has been proposed that the primary mechanism behind the reduction of injuries is that the brace provides additional mechanical stiffness to the ankle joint [11]. This may lead to a more neutral joint position already at foot strike and may restrict excessive inversion angles during ground contact to a healthy range [12, 13]. A question which needs to be addressed is whether the mechanical support is able to significantly stabilize the ankle joint against the enormous forces that appear during these dynamic movements in competitive sports situations

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