Persistent cognitive deficits in ACL-injured athletes despite of rehabilitation: an observational longitudinal study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Jiménez-Martínez, Jesús; Alarcón-López, Francisco; Chirosa-Ríos, Luis Javier; Gutiérrez-Capote, Alejandro; Cárdenas-Vélez, DavidEditorial
Frontiers Research Foundation
Materia
ACL injury Cognitive inhibition Rehabilitation Cognitive deficit Executive functions
Fecha
2025-07-15Referencia bibliográfica
Jiménez-Martínez J, Alarcón-López F, Chirosa-Ríos LJ, Gutiérrez-Capote A and Cárdenas-Vélez D (2025) Persistent cognitive deficits in ACL-injured athletes despite of rehabilitation: an observational longitudinal study. Front. Sports Act. Living 7:1601744. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2025.1601744
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Universities Science, Innovation and Universities (PID2023-150795NB-C21); Spanish Ministry of Universities (FPU20/02022); Universidad de Granada / CBUAResumen
Background: Rehabilitation programs following an anterior cruciate ligament
(ACL) injury tend to focus on improving conditional aspects such as
biomechanics. Recently, some studies have analyzed the relationship between
cognition and ACL injury, but how cognitive performance evolves throughout
the rehabilitation process has not yet been explored. This study assessed how
cognitive performance evolves at three points in the ACL injury recovery
process: preoperatively, postoperatively, and at the end of the rehabilitation
process. It also aims to compare cognitive performance at the end of the
rehabilitation process with athletes without a history of ACL injury.
Methods: 30 open-skill sports athletes who had recently sustained an ACL injury
and 30 open-skill sports athletes with no history of ACL injury were recruited. For
the group of ACL-injured athletes, three experimental sessions were conducted
at three different points in the ACL injury recovery process. For the control group
a single experimental session was conducted. During the experimental sessions
participants performed Flanker Task and Multiple Object Tracking to evaluate
their cognitive performance.
Results: For both Flanker and MOT task, ACL injury athletes show better
cognitive performance postoperatively compared to the preoperative phase.
For example, a higher mean reaction time in the Flanker task (BF₁₀ = 4.14) and
lower accuracy in 3-ball tracking at 28.8 deg/s (BF₁₀ = 2.45). Nevertheless, no
improvement was observed between the postoperative and follow-up phases.
Finally, ACL injury athletes did not reach a cognitive performance comparable
to healthy athletes, for example on mean reaction time in the Flanker Task
(BF₁₀ = 60.64) and the 3-ball tracking at speeds of 19.9 and 28.8 deg/s
(BF₁₀ = 16.30, BF₁₀ = 12.12, respectively).
Conclusions: ACL injury athletes show improvements in cognitive performance
post-surgery, but it stabilizes at the end of the rehabilitation and remains lower
than that of athletes who did not suffer an ACL injury. Therefore, ACL
rehabilitation programs fail to improve cognitive performance, increasing the
risk of suffering a new ACL injury compared to those without a history of
ACL injury.





