Isokinetic strength of fully operational U.S. Navy Seals with a previous history of shoulder and knee injury
Abstract
© 2016 - IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.BACKGROUND: Unintentional
musculoskeletal injury has a significant impact on military personnel which is amplified
in U.S. Navy Sea, Air, and Land Operators who participate in year round physical and
tactical training. Full recovery from injury including restoration of strength is
necessary for safe participation in training and performance of missions. Inadequate
recovery may predispose the Operator to risk of future injury. OBJECTIVE: The purpose
of this study was to examine isokinetic knee and shoulder strength of previously injured
Operators who had returned to full duty. METHODS: Two previously injured cohorts,
a knee injury group (n = 46) and a shoulder injury group (n = 55), were created from
a larger group of Operators (n = 305) who had undergone strength testing. A comparison
cohort was also created from each injury group (knee injury control group (n = 77)
and shoulder injury control group (n = 121). All participants underwent isokinetic
strength testing of their group assigned joint. This included knee flexion/extension
strength testing for the knee group and shoulder internal/external rotation strength
testing for the shoulder group. Side-to-side comparisons were made within each injury
group and to the control group (injured extremity to strongest extremity of the control
group). Individual counts within the injured Operators with strength deficits greater
than 10% in their injured extremity were also performed. RESULTS: No significant side-to-side
or between group differences were observed for the knee injury group. No significant
side-to-side or between group differences were observed except for shoulder external
rotation strength which was significantly different between groups (p = 0.003). Side-to-side
strength deficits greater than 10% were observed in 20 to 25% of the injured Operators.
CONCLUSION: The group comparisons demonstrate the effectiveness of the military group's
rehabilitation and performance training programs, but continued vigilance and tracking
of injured individuals are necessary to insure full recovery and return to duty as
a small number of each injured cohort did have strength deficits bilaterally.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13291Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.3233/IES-160637Publication Info
Sell, TC; Clark, NC; Abt, JP; Lovalekar, M; & Lephart, SM (2016). Isokinetic strength of fully operational U.S. Navy Seals with a previous history of
shoulder and knee injury. Isokinetics and Exercise Science, 24(4). pp. 349-356. 10.3233/IES-160637. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13291.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Timothy Crawford Sell
Associate Consulting Professor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery

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