
Indexado en
Licencia y uso

Análisis de autorías institucional
Garcia Sanchez, CarlosAutor o CoautorNieto-Acevedo RAutor o CoautorMontalvo-Pérez A.Autor o CoautorValdés-álvarez AAutor o CoautorGarcia-Sanchez CAutor o CoautorShould We Use the Men Load-Velocity Profile for Women in Deadlift and Hip Thrust?
Publicado en:International Journal Of Environmental Research And Public Health. 20 (6): 4888- - 2023-01-01 20(6), DOI: 10.3390/ijerph20064888
Autores: Nieto-Acevedo R; Romero-Moraleda B; Montalvo-Pérez A; Valdés-Álvarez A; García-Sánchez C; Mon-López D
Afiliaciones
Resumen
Injuries are common in team sports and can impact both team and individual performance. In particular, hamstring strain injuries are some of the most common injuries. Furthermore, hamstring injury ratios, in number of injuries and total absence days, have doubled in the last 21 seasons in professional soccer. Weakness in hip extensor strength has been identified as a risk factor in elite-level sprinters. In addition, strength imbalances of the hamstring muscle group seem to be a common cause of hamstring strain injuries. In this regard, velocity-based training has been proposed to analyze deficits in the force-velocity profile. Previous studies have shown differences between men and women, since there are biomechanical and neuromuscular differences in the lower limbs between sexes. Therefore, the aim of this study was to compare the load-velocity profile between males and females during two of the most important hip extension exercises: the hip thrust and the deadlift. Sixteen men and sixteen women were measured in an incremental loading test following standard procedures for the hip thrust and deadlift exercises. Pearson's correlation (r) was used to measure the strength of the correlation between movement velocity and load (%1RM). The differences in the load-velocity relationship between the men and the women were assessed using a 2 (sex) × 15 (load) repeated-measures ANOVA. The main findings revealed that: (I) the load-velocity relationship was always strong and linear in both exercises (R2 range: 0.88-0.94), (II) men showed higher velocities for light loads (30-50%1RM; effect size: 0.9-0.96) than women for the deadlift, but no significant differences were found for the hip thrust. Based on the results of this study, the load-velocity equations seem to be sex-specific. Therefore, we suggest that using sex-specific equations to analyze deficits in the force-velocity profile would be more effective to control intensity in the deadlift exercise.
Palabras clave
Indicios de calidad
Impacto bibliométrico. Análisis de la aportación y canal de difusión
El trabajo ha sido publicado en la revista International Journal Of Environmental Research And Public Health debido a la progresión y el buen impacto que ha alcanzado en los últimos años, según la agencia Scopus (SJR), se ha convertido en una referencia en su campo. En el año de publicación del trabajo, 2023, se encontraba en la posición , consiguiendo con ello situarse como revista Q2 (Segundo Cuartil), en la categoría Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health.
Desde una perspectiva relativa, y atendiendo al indicador del impacto normalizado calculado a partir del Field Citation Ratio (FCR) de la fuente Dimensions, arroja un valor de: 7.09, lo que indica que, de manera comparada con trabajos en la misma disciplina y en el mismo año de publicación, lo ubica como trabajo citado por encima de la media. (fuente consultada: Dimensions Jun 2025)
De manera concreta y atendiendo a las diferentes agencias de indexación, el trabajo ha acumulado, hasta la fecha 2025-06-02, el siguiente número de citas:
- Scopus: 6
- Europe PMC: 2
Impacto y visibilidad social
Análisis de liderazgo de los autores institucionales
Existe un liderazgo significativo ya que algunos de los autores pertenecientes a la institución aparecen como primer o último firmante, se puede apreciar en el detalle: Primer Autor (NIETO ACEVEDO, RAUL) y Último Autor (Mon-López D).
el autor responsable de establecer las labores de correspondencia ha sido Mon-López D.