Abstract
Background Clinical researchers are trying to unravel the impact of different training interventions on the kinematics of human gait. However, the effects of long-term training experience on the kinematics of a healthy gait pattern remains unclear. Here we assess the effect of long-term training experience on joint angle variability during walking.
Methods Hip, knee, and ankle joint angles from fourteen soccer players and sixteen controls were acquired during treadmill and overground walking. Hip-knee coupling, knee-ankle coupling and coupling angle variability (CAV) of the right leg in the sagittal plane were assessed using a vector coding technique.
Results Soccer players showed reduced hip-knee CAV during the mid-stance and terminal-stance phases and reduced knee-ankle CAV during the pre-swing phase of gait compared to the control group. In addition, soccer players less often used an ankle coordination pattern, in which only the ankle joint but not the knee joint rotates.
Interpretation These findings show that soccer players had more stability in the ankle joint during the stance phase of the gait compared to the control group. Future studies can test whether these differences in the coordination of the ankle joint reflect the effects of long-term training on normal gait by comparing knee-ankle coupling and variability before and after exercise training interventions.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.