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. 2015 Jul;49(14):935-42.
doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2014-094228. Epub 2015 Feb 18.

A systematic review of the effects of upper body warm-up on performance and injury

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Free article

A systematic review of the effects of upper body warm-up on performance and injury

J Matt McCrary et al. Br J Sports Med. 2015 Jul.
Free article

Abstract

Purpose: This systematic review was conducted to identify the impact of upper body warm-up on performance and injury prevention outcomes.

Methods: Web of Science, MEDLINE, SPORTDiscus, PsycINFO and Cochrane databases were searched using terms related to upper extremity warm-up. Inclusion criteria were English language randomised controlled trials from peer-reviewed journals in which investigation of upper body warm-up on performance and injury prevention outcomes was a primary aim. Included studies were assessed for methodological quality using the PEDro scale. A wide variety of warm-up modes and outcomes precluded meta-analysis except for one group of studies. The majority of warm-ups were assessed as having 'positive', 'neutral', 'negative' or 'specific' effects on outcomes.

Results: Thirty-one studies met the inclusion criteria with 21 rated as having 'good' methodological quality. The studies investigated a total of 25 warm-up modes and 43 outcome factors that could be grouped into eight mode and performance outcome categories. No studies of upper body warm-up effects on injury prevention were discovered.

Conclusions: Strong research-based evidence was found for the following: high-load dynamic warm-ups enhance power and strength performance; warm-up swings with a standard weight baseball bat are most effective for enhancing bat speed; short-duration static stretching warm-up has no effect on power outcomes; and passive heating/cooling is a largely ineffective warm-up mode. A clear knowledge gap in upper body warm-up literature is the lack of investigation of injury prevention outcomes.

Keywords: Prevention; Review; Sports & exercise medicine; Upper extremity.

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