+91 94965 02248 contact@actymed.in Thodupuzha: Open 24/7
Book

Athlete Movement Assessment

Duration: 60-90 minute assessment + written report · Ayurvedic Sports Medicine, Physiotherapy and Rehab

Overview

An athlete movement assessment is a structured, head-to-toe analysis of how you actually move under load: joint ranges, strength and side-to-side symmetry, movement patterns in squatting, hopping, landing and sport-specific actions, plus a review of your training load, footwear and injury history. The output is a written profile of your modifiable risk factors and a prioritised plan to address them.

We are careful about the science here: research is clear that no screening test can predict exactly who will get injured (Bahr, British Journal of Sports Medicine, 2016). What assessment genuinely does — and what we use it for — is find the correctable deficits behind existing pain, recurring injuries and performance plateaus, and give your training a measurable baseline to progress from. Re-testing then shows in numbers whether the plan is working.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is measured?

Joint range of motion, muscle strength with side-to-side comparison, single-leg control and balance, hop and landing mechanics, movement quality in fundamental patterns, and sport-specific demands. Plus a structured interview on training load, recovery, previous injuries and goals.

Can this predict my injuries before they happen?

Honestly, no — and be wary of anyone claiming otherwise, because the research says screening cannot predict individual injuries. What it does reliably: uncover deficits worth correcting (a 25% weaker left hamstring, a stiff ankle changing your landing), which are worth correcting whether or not any single test predicts fate.

Who should get assessed?

Athletes with recurring injuries or a niggle that keeps returning, anyone starting a serious training programme or returning after a long break, young athletes entering higher training loads, and athletes who have plateaued and want to find the limiting factor.

What do I receive afterwards?

A written report — your measured profile, the priority deficits, and a corrective/strength programme with re-test dates. If treatment is indicated, findings flow directly into your rehabilitation plan.

How long does it take, and how should I come prepared?

60–90 minutes. Come rested (not straight after a hard session), in training kit with your usual sports footwear, and bring details of your typical training week.

Key Benefits

  • Objective baseline of strength, range and movement quality
  • Identifies correctable deficits behind pain and recurring injury
  • Prioritised corrective and strength plan, not generic drills
  • Re-testing shows progress in hard numbers
  • Honest framing — assessment guides training, it doesn't tell fortunes

When This Treatment Is Used

  • Recurring injuries or persistent niggles
  • Return to sport after long layoff
  • Performance plateaus with unclear cause
  • Young athletes entering higher training loads
  • Pre-season baselining for serious athletes

When It Is Avoided

  • Acute, unassessed injuries are examined clinically first — assessment of full movement waits until it is safe to load

Your clinician will always screen you before treatment — share your full medical history at your consultation.

Scientific Evidence

  • Screening tests cannot predict individual injuries (Bahr, BJSM 2016) — ACTYMED uses assessment to find modifiable deficits, not to predict fate
  • Strength asymmetries and specific deficits (e.g. hamstring strength, ankle dorsiflexion) are established, correctable factors associated with particular injuries
  • Criteria-based testing is the accepted foundation of return-to-sport decision-making (BJSM consensus statements)

Conditions This Treatment Helps With

More Assessment & Performance

Doctors Who Perform This Treatment

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Ayurvedic Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine

Profile