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Sports Sciences

Series

2019

Articles & Book Chapters

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

A Critically Appraised Topic On The Tuck Jump Assessment: Does The Tuck Jump Assessment Demonstrate Interrater And Intrarater Reliability In Healthy Individuals?, Marissa L. Mason, Marissa N. Clemons, Kaylyn B. Labarre, Nicole R. Szymczak, Nicole J. Chimera Oct 2019

A Critically Appraised Topic On The Tuck Jump Assessment: Does The Tuck Jump Assessment Demonstrate Interrater And Intrarater Reliability In Healthy Individuals?, Marissa L. Mason, Marissa N. Clemons, Kaylyn B. Labarre, Nicole R. Szymczak, Nicole J. Chimera

Articles & Book Chapters

Clinical Scenario: Lower-extremity injuries in the United States costs millions of dollars each year. Athletes should be screened for neuromuscular deficits and trained to correct them. The tuck jump assessment (TJA) is a plyometric tool that can be used with athletes.

Clinical Question: Does the TJA demonstrate both interrater and intrarater reliability in healthy individuals?

Summary of Key Findings: Four of the 5 articles included in this critically appraised topic showed good to excellent reliability; however, caution should be taken in interpreting these results. Although composite scores of the TJA were found to be reliable, individual flaws …


Drive For Thinness Predicts Musculoskeletal Injuries In Division Ii Ncaa Female Athletes, Jennifer Scheid, Morgan Stefanik Aug 2019

Drive For Thinness Predicts Musculoskeletal Injuries In Division Ii Ncaa Female Athletes, Jennifer Scheid, Morgan Stefanik

Articles & Book Chapters

The female athlete triad is the interrelation of low energy availability, menstrual dysfunction, and low bone mineral density. Previously, the components of the female athlete triad have been linked to bone stress injuries. The objective of this study was to explore the relationship between drive for thinness, a proxy indicator of low energy availability, and musculoskeletal injuries. Fifty-seven female athletes, from an NCAA Division II college, were followed throughout their respective sport season for musculoskeletal injuries. Women were grouped based on a median split of the drive for thinness score (high drive for thinness (DT) vs. low DT). At the …