Effects of Lumbosacral Chiropractic on the Olympic Style Weightlifting Athletes
Athletic Injuries
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Athletic Injuries focused on measuring Athletes, Balance, Muscle strenght, Musculoskeletal manipulations, Pain, Range of motion
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Being a weightlifting athlete
- Presence of sacroiliac and lumbar spine asymptomatic dysfunctions in tests
Exclusion Criteria:
- Not wanting to continue education
- Not being able to come to assessments
- Having a musculoskeletal injury in the upper and lower extremities in the last month
- Having any neurological or psychiatric illness
- Having a fracture in the past
- Having a tumor in the past
- Lumbar disc hernias, spondylosis, spondylolisthesis
- Having a disease related to the cardiac and respiratory system
- Having an infectious, rheumatological, metabolic, and endocrine disease
- Having dislocation, osteoporosis, ankylosing spondylitis, discopathy, rheumatoid arthritis
- Being in the treatment of instability, acute myelopathy, anticoagulants
- Recently had a surgery
Sites / Locations
- Ankara Türkiye Olimpiyat Hazirlik Merkezi
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
No Intervention
Experimental
Control group
Chiropractic group
20 people will be included in the control group. 3 measurements will be taken one week apart in total. Measurements will consist of maximum isometric muscle strength, lumbar range of motion, balance performance, and pain intensity. And it will be evaluated respectively by back dynamometer, hand finger-to-ground distance (HFGD) and Modified Schober test, flamingo balance test, and visual analog scale.
20 people will be included in the experimental group. Lumbal chiropractic HVLA (High Velocity, Low amplitude: HVLA) spinal manipulation and sacroiliac joint chiropractic HVLA manipulation will be applied 3 times in total with a weekly interval. The maximum isometric muscle strength before and immediately after the application, lumbar joint range of motion, balance performance, and pain intensity will be evaluated respectively by back dynamometer, hand finger-to-ground distance (HFGD), and Modified Schober test, flamingo balance test, and visual analog scale.