Artículo o Paper
The Hamstrings: Anatomic and Physiologic Variations and Their Potential Relationships With Injury Risk
Fecha
2021-07-07Registro en:
Afonso, J., Rocha-Rodrigues, S., Clemente, F. M., Aquino, M., Nikolaidis, P. T., Sarmento, H., ... & Ramirez-Campillo, R. (2021). The hamstrings: anatomic and physiologic variations and their potential relationships with injury risk. Frontiers in physiology, 12, 694604.
1664-042X
WOS: 000674997800001
PMID: 33917037
10.3389/fphys.2021.694604
Autor
Afonso, Jose
Rocha-Rodrigues, Silvia
Clemente, Filipe M.
Aquino, Michele
Nikolaidis, Pantelis T.
Sarmento, Hugo
Filter, Alberto
Olivares-Jabalera, Jesus
Ramirez-Campillo, Rodrigo [Univ Mayor, Fac Ciencias, Ctr Invest Fisiol Ejercicio, Chile]
Institución
Resumen
The incidence and recurrence of hamstrings injuries are very high in sports, posing elevated performance and financial-related costs. Attempts to identify the risk factors involved in predicting vulnerability to hamstrings injury is important for designing exercise-based programs that aim to mitigate the rate and severity of hamstrings injuries and improve rehabilitation strategies. However, research has shown that non-modifiable risk factors may play a greater role than modifiable risk factors. Recognizing non-modifiable risk factors and understanding their implications will afford the prescription of better suited exercise programs, i.e., that are more respectful of the individual characteristics. In a nutshell, non-modifiable risk factors can still be acted upon, even if indirectly. In this context, an underexplored topic is how intra and inter- individual anatomic and physiologic variations in hamstrings (e.g., muscle bellies, fiber types, tendon length, aponeurosis width, attachment sites, sex- and age-related differences) concur to alter hamstrings injuries risk. Some anatomic and physiologic variations may be modifiable through exercise interventions (e.g., cross-sectional area), while others may not (e.g., supernumerary muscle bellies). This apparent dichotomy may hide a greater complexity, i.e., there may be risk factors that are partially modifiable. Therefore, we explored the available information on the anatomic variations of the hamstrings, providing a deeper insight into the individual risk factors for hamstrings injuries and contributing with better knowledge and potential applications toward a more individualized exercise prescription.