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The Pain & Therapy Bibliography, Record ID 1734 {show all records}

A randomized trial of preexercise stretching for prevention of lower-limb injury


added Jun 7, 11, updated Sep 28, 11
most detailed summaries by Paul Ingraham

summary

Several hundred army recruits stretched before every training workout for 12 weeks: “one 20-s static stretch under supervision for each of six major leg muscle groups during every warm-up.” Their injuries were compared to hundreds more who didn’t stretch. The authors of the study concluded that “typical stretching does not produce clinically meaningful reductions in risk of exercise-related injury in army recruits.”

item type
article in a journal
authors
RP Pope, RD Herbert, JD Kirwan et al.
pubmed
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10694106
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journal
Medicine Science in Sports Exercise
year
2000
month
Feb
volume
32
number
2
pages
271-7

abstract

PURPOSE: This study investigated the effect of muscle stretching during warm-up on the risk of exercise-related injury.

METHODS: 1538 male army recruits were randomly allocated to stretch or control groups. During the ensuing 12 wk of training, both groups performed active warm-up exercises before physical training sessions. In addition, the stretch group performed one 20-s static stretch under supervision for each of six major leg muscle groups during every warm-up. The control group did not stretch.

RESULTS: 333 lower-limb injuries were recorded during the training period, including 214 soft-tissue injuries. There were 158 injuries in the stretch group and 175 in the control group. There was no significant effect of preexercise stretching on all-injuries risk (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.95, 95% CI 0.77-1.18), soft-tissue injury risk (HR = 0.83, 95% CI 0.63-1.09), or bone injury risk (HR = 1.22, 95% CI 0.86-1.76). Fitness (20-m progressive shuttle run test score), age, and enlistment date all significantly predicted injury risk (P < 0.01 for each), but height, weight, and body mass index did not.

CONCLUSION: A typical muscle stretching protocol performed during preexercise warm-ups does not produce clinically meaningful reductions in risk of exercise-related injury in army recruits. Fitness may be an important, modifiable risk factor.

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