Effectiveness of pelvic stabilization exercises on knee valgus, muscle activity, and strength in individuals with dynamic knee valgus
Mira Ambrus, Gabriella Wolf, Dóra Molnár, Badis Soussi, Tamás Horváth, Mónika Horváth, Zsombor Lacza

TL;DR
A six-week pelvic stabilization exercise program significantly reduced knee valgus and improved muscle strength, potentially lowering the risk of ACL injuries.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that pelvic stabilization exercises can effectively reduce dynamic knee valgus and improve neuromuscular function.
Findings
Dynamic knee valgus decreased significantly after six weeks of pelvic stabilization training.
Maximal isometric force and EMG amplitudes increased in key pelvic and thigh muscles.
The program offers a simple, effective countermeasure to reduce ACL injury risk.
Abstract
Pelvic instability is often associated with angular deviations of lower limb and often causes valgus shift of the knee joint under load. In addition, non-contact ACL tears during sport activity are often caused by muscle weakness around the pelvis. Therefore, reinforcing the pelvic stabilizing muscles may counterbalance dynamic knee valgus (DKV). The aim of this research is to increase the activity of the pelvic stabilizing muscles through a specific exercise program and to investigate its effect of DKV after six-week pelvic stabilization training. Twenty-two subjects (male/female: 15/7) participated in the study. They performed pelvic stabilization program for six-weeks. Before and after the training, DKV was determined on both sides by performing ten single leg squats using a Kinect camera, the Gluteus maximus, medius and vastus medialis muscles activity and strength were measured by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques · Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies · Total Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes
