1. Center of Pressure, Vertical Ground Reaction Forces, and Neuromuscular Responses of Special-Forces Soldiers to 43-km Load Carriage in the Field
- Author
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Ilias Ntontis, Jamie M. O’Driscoll, Ioannis Gkougkoulis, Mathew Brown, James Scales, Dimitrios Giannoglou, Chrisoula Zisopoulou, and Damian A Coleman
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Orthodontics ,Load carriage ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Rehabilitation ,Biophysics ,030229 sport sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Vertical jump ,0302 clinical medicine ,Carriage ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Center of pressure (terrestrial locomotion) ,Afterload ,medicine ,Injury risk ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Ankle ,Ground reaction force ,business ,050107 human factors - Abstract
The primary purpose of this study was to examine lateral deviations in center of pressure as a result of an extreme-duration load carriage task, with particular focus on heel contact. A total of 20 (n = 17 males and n = 3 females) soldiers from a special operation forces unit (body mass 80.72 [21.49] kg, stature 178.25 [8.75] cm, age 26 [9] y) underwent gait plantar pressure assessment and vertical jump testing before and after a 43-km load carriage event (duration 817.02 [32.66] min) carrying a total external load of 29.80 (1.05) kg. Vertical jump height decreased by 18.62% (16.85%) from 0.30 (0.08) to 0.24 (0.07) m, P P = .035, Glass delta = 0.44 and 1.28 [0.40] vs 1.46 [0.41] body weight, P = .015, Glass delta = 0.45, respectively) and increases in lateral center of pressure displacement were observed as a result of the load carriage task 14.64 (3.62) to 16.97 (3.94) mm, P
- Published
- 2020
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