Frontal and sagittal plane landing biomechanics differ between sexes but reported values don’t account for simultaneous segment or joint motion necessary for a coordinated landing. Frontal and sagittal plane coordination patterns, angles, and moments were compared between 28 males and 28 females throughout the landing phase of a drop vertical jump. Females landed with less isolated thigh abduction (p = 0.018), more in-phase motion (p < 0.001), and more isolated shank adduction (p = 0.028) between the thigh and shank in the frontal plane compared with males. Females landed with less in-phase (p = 0.012) and more anti-phase motion (p = 0.019) between the thigh and shank in the sagittal plane compared with males. Females landed with less isolated knee flexion (p = 0.001) and more anti-phase motion (p < 0.001) between the sagittal and frontal plane knee coupling compared with males. Waveform and discrete metric analyses revealed females land with less thigh abduction from 20 % to 100 % and more shank abduction from 0 to 100 % of landing, smaller knee adduction at initial contact (p = 0.002), greater peak knee abduction angles (p = 0.015), smaller knee flexion angles at initial contact (p = 0.035) and peak (p = 0.034), greater peak knee abduction moments (p = 0.024), greater knee abduction angles from 0 to 13 % and 19 to 30 %, greater knee abduction moments from 19 to 25 %, and smaller knee flexion moments from 3 to 5 % of landing compared with males. Females utilize greater frontal plane motion compared with males, which may be due to different inter-segmental joint coordination and smaller sagittal plane angles. Larger knee abduction angles and greater knee adduction motion in females are due to aberrant shank abduction rather than thigh adduction.
Keywords:
Kinematics; Kinetics; Biomechanics; Knee abduction; Drop vertical jump