8
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: found
      Is Open Access

      Anterior cruciate ligament injuries in female athletes: risk factors and strategies for prevention

      research-article

      Read this article at

      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are among the most common and debilitating knee injuries in professional athletes with an incidence in females up to eight-times higher than their male counterparts. ACL injuries can be career-threatening and are associated with increased risk of developing knee osteoarthritis in future life. The increased risk of ACL injury in females has been attributed to various anatomical, developmental, neuromuscular, and hormonal factors. Anatomical and hormonal factors have been identified and investigated as significant contributors including osseous anatomy, ligament laxity, and hamstring muscular recruitment. Postural stability and impact absorption are associated with the stabilizing effort and stress on the ACL during sport activity, increasing the risk of noncontact pivot injury. Female patients have smaller diameter hamstring autografts than males, which may predispose to increased risk of re-rupture following ACL reconstruction and to an increased risk of chondral and meniscal injuries. The addition of an extra-articular tenodesis can reduce the risk of failure; therefore, it should routinely be considered in young elite athletes. Prevention programs target key aspects of training including plyometrics, strengthening, balance, endurance and stability, and neuromuscular training, reducing the risk of ACL injuries in female athletes by up to 90%. Sex disparities in access to training facilities may also play an important role in the risk of ACL injuries between males and females. Similarly, football boots, pitches quality, and football size and weight should be considered and tailored around females’ characteristics. Finally, high levels of personal and sport-related stress have been shown to increase the risk of ACL injury which may be related to alterations in attention and coordination, together with increased muscular tension, and compromise the return to sport after ACL injury. Further investigations are still necessary to better understand and address the risk factors involved in ACL injuries in female athletes.

          Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2024;5(2):94–100.

          Related collections

          Most cited references94

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: not found

          Biomechanical measures of neuromuscular control and valgus loading of the knee predict anterior cruciate ligament injury risk in female athletes: a prospective study.

          Female athletes participating in high-risk sports suffer anterior cruciate ligament injury at a 4- to 6-fold greater rate than do male athletes. Prescreened female athletes with subsequent anterior cruciate ligament injury will demonstrate decreased neuromuscular control and increased valgus joint loading, predicting anterior cruciate ligament injury risk. Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2. There were 205 female athletes in the high-risk sports of soccer, basketball, and volleyball prospectively measured for neuromuscular control using 3-dimensional kinematics (joint angles) and joint loads using kinetics (joint moments) during a jump-landing task. Analysis of variance as well as linear and logistic regression were used to isolate predictors of risk in athletes who subsequently ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament. Nine athletes had a confirmed anterior cruciate ligament rupture; these 9 had significantly different knee posture and loading compared to the 196 who did not have anterior cruciate ligament rupture. Knee abduction angle (P<.05) at landing was 8 degrees greater in anterior cruciate ligament-injured than in uninjured athletes. Anterior cruciate ligament-injured athletes had a 2.5 times greater knee abduction moment (P<.001) and 20% higher ground reaction force (P<.05), whereas stance time was 16% shorter; hence, increased motion, force, and moments occurred more quickly. Knee abduction moment predicted anterior cruciate ligament injury status with 73% specificity and 78% sensitivity; dynamic valgus measures showed a predictive r2 of 0.88. Knee motion and knee loading during a landing task are predictors of anterior cruciate ligament injury risk in female athletes. Female athletes with increased dynamic valgus and high abduction loads are at increased risk of anterior cruciate ligament injury. The methods developed may be used to monitor neuromuscular control of the knee joint and may help develop simpler measures of neuromuscular control that can be used to direct female athletes to more effective, targeted interventions.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Risk of Secondary Injury in Younger Athletes After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

            Injury to the ipsilateral graft used for reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) or a new injury to the contralateral ACL are disastrous outcomes after successful ACL reconstruction (ACLR), rehabilitation, and return to activity. Studies reporting ACL reinjury rates in younger active populations are emerging in the literature, but these data have not yet been comprehensively synthesized.
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: not found

              Mechanisms of anterior cruciate ligament injury in basketball: video analysis of 39 cases.

              The mechanisms of anterior cruciate ligament injury in basketball are not well defined. To describe the mechanisms of anterior cruciate ligament injury in basketball based on videos of injury situations. Case series; Level of evidence, 4. Six international experts performed visual inspection analyses of 39 videos (17 male and 22 female players) of anterior cruciate ligament injury situations from high school, college, and professional basketball games. Two predefined time points were analyzed: initial ground contact and 50 milliseconds later. The analysts were asked to assess the playing situation, player behavior, and joint kinematics. There was contact at the assumed time of injury in 11 of the 39 cases (5 male and 6 female players). Four of these cases were direct blows to the knee, all in men. Eleven of the 22 female cases were collisions, or the player was pushed by an opponent before the time of injury. The estimated time of injury, based on the group median, ranged from 17 to 50 milliseconds after initial ground contact. The mean knee flexion angle was higher in female than in male players, both at initial contact (15 degrees vs 9 degrees , P = .034) and at 50 milliseconds later (27 degrees vs 19 degrees , P = .042). Valgus knee collapse occurred more frequently in female players than in male players (relative risk, 5.3; P = .002). Female players landed with significantly more knee and hip flexion and had a 5.3 times higher relative risk of sustaining a valgus collapse than did male players. Movement patterns were frequently perturbed by opponents. Preventive programs to enhance knee control should focus on avoiding valgus motion and include distractions resembling those seen in match situations.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Senior Clinical Fellow Orthopaedic Surgery
                Role: Senior Clinical Fellow Orthopaedic Surgery
                Role: Senior Clinical Fellow Orthopaedic Surgery
                Role: PhD student, Junior Fellow
                Role: Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon
                Role: Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, Editor in Chief
                Journal
                Bone Jt Open
                Bone Jt Open
                BJO
                Bone & Joint Open
                The British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery (London )
                2633-1462
                5 February 2024
                February 2024
                : 5
                : 2
                : 94-100
                Affiliations
                [1 ] org-divisionDepartment of Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery , org-divisionUniversity College London Hospitals, The Princess Grace Hospital , London, UK
                Author notes
                Correspondence should be sent to Fabio Mancino. E-mail: fabio_mancino@ 123456yahoo.com

                A. Fontalis declares a Freemasons’ Royal Arch Fellowship, with support of the Arthritis Research Trust, under Onassis Foundation – Scholarship ID: F ZR 065-1/2021-2022. F. S. Haddad reports research grants from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, Corin, the International Olympic Committee, and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR); royalties or licenses from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, Corin, and MatOrtho; consulting fees from Stryker; payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, Zimmer Biomet, and AO Recon; support for attending meetings and/or travel from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, AO Recon, and The Bone and Joint Journal; and having a leadership or fiduciary role on The Bone and Joint Journal editorial board, being a trustee for the British Orthopaedic Association, and being on the BOSTAA executive committee.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3080-0052
                Article
                BJO-2023-0166
                10.1302/2633-1462.52.BJO-2023-0166
                10838619
                38310925
                b7efd854-4575-4c35-9793-60681b95420e
                © 2024 Mancino et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence, which permits the copying and redistribution of the work only, and provided the original author and source are credited. See https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

                History
                Categories
                Instructional Review
                bj17439, Trauma
                bj11388, Orthopaedic diseases
                bj11416, Orthopaedic treatments
                bj731, Anatomy
                bj1763, Basic science
                bj940, Anterior cruciate ligament injuries
                bj6590, Hamstring
                bj6601, Hamstring tendon autograft
                bj946, Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
                bj8305, Knee injuries
                bj13762, Re-rupture
                bj9835, Meniscal injury
                bj8851, Ligament laxity
                bj8330, Knee osteoarthritis
                bj5425, Extra-articular tenodesis
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                $2.00
                University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
                Instructional Review
                A. Fontalis declares a Freemasons’ Royal Arch Fellowship, with support of the Arthritis Research Trust, under Onassis Foundation – Scholarship ID: F ZR 065-1/2021-2022. F. S. Haddad reports research grants from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, Corin, the International Olympic Committee, and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR); royalties or licenses from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, Corin, and MatOrtho; consulting fees from Stryker; payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, Zimmer Biomet, and AO Recon; support for attending meetings and/or travel from Stryker, Smith & Nephew, AO Recon, and The Bone and Joint Journal; and having a leadership or fiduciary role on The Bone and Joint Journal editorial board, being a trustee for the British Orthopaedic Association, and being on the BOSTAA executive committee.

                female athletes,acl injury,acl reconstruction,return to sport,lateral extrarticular tenodesis,knee,osteoarthritis,anterior cruciate ligament (acl) injuries,hamstring muscles,hamstring autografts,knee injuries,re-rupture,meniscal injuries,ligamentous laxity,knee osteoarthritis,extra-articular tenodesis

                Comments

                Comment on this article