Publications by authors named "S M Lephart"

A mode-specific swimming protocol to assess maximal aerobic uptake (VOmax) is vital to accurately evaluate swimming performance. A need exists for reliable and valid swimming protocols that assess VOmax in a flume environment. The purpose was to assess: (a) reliability and (b) "performance" validity of a VOmax flume protocol using the 457-m freestyle pool performance swim (PS) test as the criterion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Consistent differences between males and females have been shown in land-based measurements of anaerobic power and capacity. However, these differences have not been investigated for a tethered 30-s maximal swimming test (TST). The purpose of this study is to explore gender differences in land and pool-based assessments of anaerobic power (Fpeak) and capacity (Fmean), as well as the influence of body composition.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: To present a new knee isokinetic assessment procedure linked to noncontact knee injury mechanisms and examine correlations between variables relevant to noncontact knee injury prevention screening (peak torque [PT, Nm], time-to-peak torque [TTPT, ms], angle-of-peak torque [APT, °], mean PT [MPT, Nm]).

Design: Cross-sectional.

Setting: Sports medicine laboratory.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The identification of risk factors for injury is a key step for musculoskeletal injury prevention in youth sports. Not identifying and correcting for injury risk factors may result in lost opportunity for athletic development. Physical maturation and sex affect these characteristics, which may indicate the need for both age and sex-based injury prevention programs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The specialized roles of many military personnel require specific skills and high physical demands, placing unique stresses on the shoulders and increasing risk of injury. As normal dominant/nondominant shoulder asymmetries have been established in military personnel, bilateral strength comparisons must be understood in context of daily physical demands to monitor patients' progress or readiness to return to duty.

Purpose: This study aims to assess bilateral differences in strength and explosive force in United States Marines with a history of dominant or nondominant shoulder pathology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF