To investigate the effects of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) combined with Bosu ball training on the injury potential during drop landing in people with chronic ankle instability (CAI).
A total of 40 participants with CAI were recruited and randomly divided into the tDCS + Bosu and Bosu groups. The people in the tDCS + Bosu group received intervention of tDCS combined with Bosu ball training, and those in the Bosu group received intervention of sham tDCS and Bosu ball training, for 6 weeks with three 20-min sessions per week. Before (week0) and after (week7) the intervention, all participants drop-landed on a trap-door device, with their affected limbs on a moveable platform, which could be flipped 24° inward and 15° forward to mimic an ankle inversion condition. The kinematic data were captured using a twelve-camera motion capture system. Two-way ANOVA with repeated measures was used to analyze data.
Significant group-by-intervention interactions were detected in the peak ankle inversion angular velocity (
Compared with the Bosu ball training, the tDCS combined with Bosu ball training was more effective in reducing the injury potential during drop landing in people with CAI.