Preventive Neuromuscular Training for Young Female Athletes: Comparison of Coach and Athlete Compliance Rates.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Gregory D Myer | Timothy E Hewett | Dai Sugimoto | Carl G Mattacola | Heather M Bush | Staci M Thomas | Kim D Barber Foss | T. Hewett | G. Myer | Staci Thomas | H. Bush | C. Mattacola | K. B. Foss | D. Sugimoto
[1] F. Noyes,et al. The Effect of Neuromuscular Training on the Incidence of Knee Injury in Female Athletes , 1999, The American journal of sports medicine.
[2] C. Emery,et al. The effectiveness of a neuromuscular prevention strategy to reduce injuries in youth soccer: a cluster-randomised controlled trial , 2010, British Journal of Sports Medicine.
[3] G. Guyatt,et al. Post-randomisation exclusions: the intention to treat principle and excluding patients from analysis , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[4] F R Noyes,et al. Plyometric Training in Female Athletes , 1996, The American journal of sports medicine.
[5] K. Shea,et al. Lack of effect of a knee ligament injury prevention program on the incidence of noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injury. , 2006, The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume.
[6] Katherine Kaufer Christoffel,et al. Effect of neuromuscular warm-up on injuries in female soccer and basketball athletes in urban public high schools: cluster randomized controlled trial. , 2011, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.
[7] T. Hewett,et al. PREDICTORS OF SPRINT START SPEED: THE EFFECTS OF RESISTIVE GROUND‐BASED VS. INCLINED TREADMILL TRAINING , 2007, Journal of strength and conditioning research.
[8] R. Bahr,et al. Preventing injuries in female youth football – a cluster‐randomized controlled trial , 2008, Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports.
[9] T. Hewett,et al. Critical components of neuromuscular training to reduce ACL injury risk in female athletes: meta-regression analysis , 2016, British Journal of Sports Medicine.
[10] S. Hollis,et al. What is meant by intention to treat analysis? Survey of published randomised controlled trials , 1999, BMJ.
[11] R. Heidt,et al. Avoidance of Soccer Injuries with Preseason Conditioning , 2000, The American journal of sports medicine.
[12] G H Guyatt,et al. Intention-to-treat principle. , 2001, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.
[13] John R Taylor,et al. Factors Influencing the Implementation of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Prevention Strategies by Girls Soccer Coaches , 2013, Journal of strength and conditioning research.
[14] P. Kannus,et al. Effect of a neuromuscular warm-up programme on muscle power, balance, speed and agility: a randomised controlled study , 2009, British Journal of Sports Medicine.
[15] L. Engebretsen,et al. Exercises to prevent lower limb injuries in youth sports: cluster randomised controlled trial , 2005, BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[16] T. Hewett,et al. Trunk and hip control neuromuscular training for the prevention of knee joint injury. , 2008, Clinics in sports medicine.
[17] T. Hewett,et al. A pilot study to determine the effect of trunk and hip focused neuromuscular training on hip and knee isokinetic strength , 2008, British Journal of Sports Medicine.
[18] K. Michaëlsson,et al. Prevention of soccer-related knee injuries in teenaged girls. , 2010, Archives of internal medicine.
[19] M. Hägglund,et al. Prevention of acute knee injuries in adolescent female football players: cluster randomised controlled trial , 2012, BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[20] L. Engebretsen,et al. Prevention of anterior cruciate ligament injuries in female team handball players: a prospective intervention study over three seasons , 2003, Clinical journal of sport medicine : official journal of the Canadian Academy of Sport Medicine.
[21] T. Zantop,et al. A controlled prospective case control study of a prevention training program in female team handball players: the German experience , 2005, Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery.
[22] C. Finch,et al. Evaluation of how different implementation strategies of an injury prevention programme (FIFA 11+) impact team adherence and injury risk in Canadian female youth football players: a cluster-randomised trial , 2013, British Journal of Sports Medicine.
[23] T. Hewett,et al. Compliance with neuromuscular training and anterior cruciate ligament injury risk reduction in female athletes: a meta-analysis. , 2012, Journal of athletic training.
[24] Jiri Dvorak,et al. Compliance with a comprehensive warm-up programme to prevent injuries in youth football , 2010, British Journal of Sports Medicine.
[25] H. Alfredson,et al. Balance board training: prevention of traumatic injuries of the lower extremities in female soccer players? , 2000, Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy.
[26] Jiri Dvorak,et al. A Randomized Controlled Trial to Prevent Noncontact Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury in Female Collegiate Soccer Players , 2008, The American journal of sports medicine.
[27] D. Kirkendall,et al. Effectiveness of a Neuromuscular and Proprioceptive Training Program in Preventing Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries in Female Athletes , 2005, The American journal of sports medicine.
[28] K. Froberg,et al. Comparison of two intervention programmes in young female players in European handball – with and without ankle disc , 2003, Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports.