Measurement of the extreme ankle range of motion required by female ballet dancers
Russell, Jeffrey A. ; Kruse, D. W. ; Nevill, Alan M. ; Koutedakis, Yiannis ; Wyon, Matthew A.
Russell, Jeffrey A.
Kruse, D. W.
Nevill, Alan M.
Koutedakis, Yiannis
Wyon, Matthew A.
Editors
Other contributors
Affiliation
Epub Date
Issue Date
2010
Submitted date
Subjects
Alternative
Abstract
Female ballet dancers require extreme ankle motion, especially plantar flexion, but research about measuring such motion is lacking. The purposes of this study were to determine in a sample of ballet dancers whether non–weight-bearing ankle range of motion is significantly different from the weight-bearing equivalent and whether inclinometric plantar flexion measurement is a suitable substitute for standard plantar flexion goniometry. Fifteen female ballet dancers (5 university, 5 vocational, and 5 professional dancers; age 21 ± 3.0 years) volunteered. Subjects received 5 assessments on 1 ankle: non–weightbearing goniometry dorsiflexion (NDF) and plantar flexion (NPF), weightbearing goniometry in the ballet positions demi-plié (WDF) and en pointe (WPF), and non–weight-bearing plantar flexion inclinometry (IPF). Mean NDF was significantly lower than WDF (17° ± 1.3° vs 30° ± 1.8°, P < .001). NPF (77° ± 2.5°) was significantly lower than both WPF (83° ± 2.2°, P = .01) and IPF (89° ± 1.6°, P < .001), and WPF was significantly lower than IPF (P = .013). Dorsiflexion tended to decrease and plantar flexion tended to increase with increasing ballet proficiency. The authors conclude that assessment of extreme ankle motion in female ballet dancers is challenging, and goniometry and inclinometry appear to measure plantar flexion differently.
Citation
Foot & Ankle Specialist, OnlineFirst, published on June 25, 2010
Publisher
Journal
Research Unit
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Embedded videos
Additional Links
Type
Journal article
Language
en
Description
epub ahead of print
Series/Report no.
ISSN
1938-6400
1938-7636
1938-7636