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  1. Article ; Online: [No title information]

    Jose J. Castañeda-Camarena / Tomas J. Martínez-Cervantes / Miguel E. Navarrete-Juárez / Jorge A. Cantú-Hernández / Oscar Salas-Fraire / Antonino Aguiar-Barrera / José A. Garza-Cantú / Karina Salas-Longoria / José A. Olivarez-Castañeda / Luis F. Sandoval-Arellano

    Medicina Universitaria, Vol 25, Iss

    2023  Volume 2

    Abstract: Objectives: This study aimed to review the evidence available regarding body composition and maximal isometric handgrip strength values and establish average values and relationships between these variables in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu athletes. Methods: ... ...

    Abstract Objectives: This study aimed to review the evidence available regarding body composition and maximal isometric handgrip strength values and establish average values and relationships between these variables in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu athletes. Methods: MEDLINE through PubMed; base plate; Web of Science; Scopus; Pedro; CDSR; CCRCT; LILACS; Educational Resources; EBSCO; and ADOLEC databases were explored to identify articles that met selection criteria. Observational or comparative studies evaluating the body composition and maximal isometric handgrip strength of BJJ athletes through dynamometry. Results: Only ten papers (n = 394 athletes) met selection criteria. The methodological quality of the studies assessed with the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale was rated fair to good, and the methodological quality of the studies assessed with the appraisal tool for cross-sectional studies was rated low to moderate. The population studied was predominantly male (n = 364), with two studies including females (n = 30). Two reported maximal isometric handgrip strength, four reported right- or left-hand grip strength, and five reported handgrip strength differentiating between dominant and non-dominant hands. All selected studies reported weight, height, and body fat percentages, six reported body mass index, three reported fat-free mass or muscle mass percentages, and two reported lean body mass or somatotype. Conclusions: We could not establish average values or relationships between the variables studied due to lack of concordance in the reporting of these variables in the studies reviewed. It is necessary to standardize the variables reported in studies regarding this sport to establish comparisons between scientific evidence.
    Keywords Hand strength. Anthropometry. Somatotypes. Martial arts. Sports. Sports medicine ; Medicine (General) ; R5-920
    Subject code 796
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-04-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Permanyer
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article ; Online: Body composition and handgrip strength in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu athletes

    Jose J. Castañeda-Camarena / Tomas J. Martínez-Cervantes / Miguel E. Navarrete-Juárez / Jorge A. Cantú-Hernández / Oscar Salas-Fraire / Antonino Aguiar-Barrera / José A. Garza-Cantú / Karina Salas-Longoria / José A. Olivarez-Castañeda / Luis F. Sandoval-Arellano

    Medicina Universitaria, Vol 25, Iss

    a systematic review

    2023  Volume 2

    Abstract: Objectives: This study aimed to review the evidence available regarding body composition and maximal isometric handgrip strength values and establish average values and relationships between these variables in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu athletes. Methods: ... ...

    Abstract Objectives: This study aimed to review the evidence available regarding body composition and maximal isometric handgrip strength values and establish average values and relationships between these variables in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu athletes. Methods: MEDLINE through PubMed; base plate; Web of Science; Scopus; Pedro; CDSR; CCRCT; LILACS; Educational Resources; EBSCO; and ADOLEC databases were explored to identify articles that met selection criteria. Observational or comparative studies evaluating the body composition and maximal isometric handgrip strength of BJJ athletes through dynamometry. Results: Only ten papers (n = 394 athletes) met selection criteria. The methodological quality of the studies assessed with the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale was rated fair to good, and the methodological quality of the studies assessed with the appraisal tool for cross-sectional studies was rated low to moderate. The population studied was predominantly male (n = 364), with two studies including females (n = 30). Two reported maximal isometric handgrip strength, four reported right- or left-hand grip strength, and five reported handgrip strength differentiating between dominant and non-dominant hands. All selected studies reported weight, height, and body fat percentages, six reported body mass index, three reported fat-free mass or muscle mass percentages, and two reported lean body mass or somatotype. Conclusions: We could not establish average values or relationships between the variables studied due to lack of concordance in the reporting of these variables in the studies reviewed. It is necessary to standardize the variables reported in studies regarding this sport to establish comparisons between scientific evidence.
    Keywords Hand strength. Anthropometry. Somatotypes. Martial arts. Sports. Sports medicine ; Medicine (General) ; R5-920
    Subject code 796
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-04-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Permanyer
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

    More links

    Kategorien

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