Int J Sports Med
DOI: 10.1055/a-2804-6786
Orthopedics & Biomechanics

Ankle Laxity Fluctuation and Sex Hormones in Women with/without Recurrent Sprains

Authors

  • Mako Fukano

    1   College of Engineering, Shibaura Institute of Technology, Saitamashi, Japan (Ringgold ID: RIN47745)
  • Namie Takahashi

    2   Faculty of Health Sciences, Tokyo Ariake Iryo Daigaku, Koto, Japan (Ringgold ID: RIN146277)
  • Takakuni Sakurai

    2   Faculty of Health Sciences, Tokyo Ariake Iryo Daigaku, Koto, Japan (Ringgold ID: RIN146277)

This work was supported by the JSPS KAKENHI (grant number: 19K11497).

Abstract

The incidence of ankle sprains and chronic ankle instability is higher in women than in men. One sex-specific factor may be the greater ligamentous laxity in women compared with men, potentially influenced by estrogen and relaxin activity. This study aimed to investigate changes in ankle joint laxity and its association with hormone levels in women with and without recurrent ankle sprains. Eleven female college students with recurrent ankle sprains and seven students with no or a single prior sprain participated. Ankle joint laxity was assessed using an ankle arthrometer with a 125-N load for anterior–posterior displacement and with a 4000 N-mm for inversion–eversion rotation. Serum estradiol and relaxin-2 levels were measured. Ankle laxity assessments and blood sampling were performed in the follicular, ovulation, and luteal phases of the participant’s individual menstrual cycle. A significant group×phase interaction was found for inversion–eversion ankle joint laxity; however, post hoc analyses adjusted for Bonferroni multiple comparisons were not significant, implying a lack of clinical interest or potential sampling fluctuations. A positive correlation was found between serum relaxin-2 level and anterior–posterior ankle joint laxity during the luteal phase (r=0.557 and p=0.048). This association should be interpreted as an observational finding that may help generate hypotheses regarding potential hormone-related factors in ankle sprains in women.



Publication History

Received: 13 August 2025

Accepted after revision: 03 February 2026

Accepted Manuscript online:
04 February 2026

Article published online:
20 February 2026

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