Abstract
Research has shown that diminished lumbopelvic control has a negative effect on pitching performance and can lead to more days on the disabled list. Despite the identified correlation between lumbopelvic control and injury, there is no research that has shown whether insufficient lumbopelvic control increases the force placed on the throwing arm. Forty-three asymptomatic, National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I and professional minor league baseball pitchers participated. We measured the bilateral amount of anterior-posterior lumbopelvic tilt during a single-leg stance trunk stability test. We measured the shoulder and elbow kinetics of the throwing arm during the pitching motion using a 3-dimensional, high-speed video capture system. We used 2-tailed Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients (r) to determine the strength of the relationships between variables (P < .05). There were no significant relationships between the stride leg and any of the pitching kinetic variables (r < 0.23, P > .14). Similarly, there were no significant relationships between the drive leg and maximum shoulder distraction force, shoulder external rotation torque, or elbow distraction force (r <-0.24, P > .13). However, the drive leg did have significant relationships with both maximum shoulder horizontal torque (r = 0.44, P = .003) and elbow valgus torque (r = 0.46, P = .002). Our results show that a relationship exists between lumbopelvic control of the drive leg and both shoulder horizontal torque and elbow valgus torque during the throwing motion. Because of these relationships, clinicians should consider incorporating lumbopelvic control training exercises to minimize the kinetic force placed on the throwing shoulder and elbow during the pitching motion.
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