Pubmed InjuryORkn Set
Pubmed InjuryORkn Set
Pubmed InjuryORkn Set
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20171204
LR - 20181113
IS - 1528-1132 (Electronic)
IS - 0009-921X (Print)
IS - 0009-921X (Linking)
VI - 475
IP - 10
DP - 2017 Oct
TI - Does the FIFA 11+ Injury Prevention Program Reduce the Incidence of ACL
Injury in
Male Soccer Players?
PG - 2447-2455
LID - 10.1007/s11999-017-5342-5 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: The FIFA 11+ injury prevention program has been shown to decrease
the
risk of soccer injuries in men and women. The program has also been shown to
decrease time loss resulting from injury. However, previous studies have not
specifically investigated how the program might impact the rate of anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) injury in male soccer players. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES:
The
purpose of this study was to examine if the FIFA 11+ injury prevention
program
can (1) reduce the overall number of ACL injuries in men who play competitive
college soccer and whether any potential reduction in rate of ACL injuries
differed based on (2) game versus practice setting; (3) player position; (4)
level of play (Division I or II); or (5) field type. METHODS: This study was
a
prospective cluster randomized controlled trial, which was conducted in 61
Division I and Division II National Collegiate Athletic Association men's
soccer
teams over the course of one competitive soccer season. The FIFA 11+ is a 15-
to
20-minute on-the-field dynamic warm-up program used before training and games
and
was utilized as the intervention throughout the entire competitive season.
Sixty-five teams were randomized: 34 to the control group (850 players) and
31 to
the intervention group (675 players). Four intervention teams did not
complete
the study and did not submit their data, noting insufficient time to complete
the
program, reducing the number for per-protocol analysis to 61. Compliance to
the
FIFA 11+ program, athletic exposures, specific injuries, ACL injuries, and
time
loss resulting from injury were collected and recorded using a secure
Internet-based system. At the end of the season, the data in the injury
surveillance system were crosshatched with each individual institution's
internal
database. At that time, the certified athletic trainer signed off on the
injury
collection data to confirm their accuracy and completeness. RESULTS: A lower
proportion of athletes in the intervention group experienced knee injuries
(25%
[34 of 136]) compared with the control group (75% [102 of 136]; relative risk
[RR], 0.42; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.29-0.61; p < 0.001). When the
data
were stratified for ACL injury, fewer ACL injuries were reported in the
intervention group (16% [three of 19]) compared with the control group (84%
[16
of 19]), accounting for a 4.25-fold reduction in the likelihood of incurring
ACL
injury (RR, 0.236; 95% CI, 0.193-0.93; number needed to treat = 70;
p < 0.001).
With the numbers available, there was no difference between the ACL injury
rate
within the FIFA 11+ group and the control group with respect to game and
practice
sessions (games-intervention: 1.055% [three of 15] versus control: 1.80% [12
of
15]; RR, 0.31; 95% CI, 0.09-1.11; p = 0.073 and practices-intervention: 0%
[zero
of four] versus control: 0.60% [four of four]; RR, 0.14; 95% CI, 0.01-2.59;
p = 0.186). With the data that were available, there were no differences in
incidence rate (IR) or injury by player position for forwards (IR
control = 0.339
versus IR intervention = 0), midfielders (IR control = 0.54 versus IR
intervention = 0.227), defenders (IR control = 0.339 versus IR
intervention = 0.085), and goalkeepers (IR control = 0.0 versus IR
intervention = 0.0) (p = 0.327). There were no differences in the number of
ACL
injuries for the Division I intervention group (0.70% [two of nine]) compared
with the control group (1.05% [seven of nine]; RR, 0.30; CI, 0.06-1.45;
p = 0.136). However, there were fewer ACL injuries incurred in the Division
II
intervention group (0.35% [one of 10]) compared with the control group (1.35%
[nine of 10]; RR, 0.12; CI, 0.02-0.93; p = 0.042). There was no difference
between the number of ACL injuries in the control group versus in the
intervention group that occurred on grass versus turf (Wald chi square
[1] = 0.473, b = 0.147, SE = 0.21, p = 0.492). However, there were more ACL
injuries that occurred on artificial turf identified in the control group
(1.35%
[nine of 10]) versus the intervention group (0.35% [one of 10]; RR, 0.14; 95%
CI,
0.02-1.10; p = 0.049). CONCLUSIONS: This program, if implemented correctly,
has
the potential to decrease the rate of ACL injury in competitive soccer
players.
In addition, this may also enhance the development and dissemination of
injury
prevention protocols and may mitigate risk to athletes who utilize the
program
consistently. Further studies are necessary to analyze the cost-effectiveness
of
the program implementation and to analyze the efficacy of the FIFA 11+ in the
female collegiate soccer cohort. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level I, therapeutic
study.
FAU - Silvers-Granelli, Holly J
AU - Silvers-Granelli HJ
AD - Biomechanics and Movement Science Program, University of Delaware, Newark,
DE,
USA. hollysilverspt@gmail.com.
AD - Velocity Physical Therapy, 11611 San Vicente Boulevard, GF-1, Los Angeles,
CA,
90049, USA. hollysilverspt@gmail.com.
FAU - Bizzini, Mario
AU - Bizzini M
AD - Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), Medical Assessment
and
Research Centre (F-MARC), Schulthess Clinic, Zurich, Switzerland.
FAU - Arundale, Amelia
AU - Arundale A
AD - Biomechanics and Movement Science Program, University of Delaware, Newark,
DE,
USA.
FAU - Mandelbaum, Bert R
AU - Mandelbaum BR
AD - Santa Monica Orthopaedic Group, Santa Monica, CA, USA.
FAU - Snyder-Mackler, Lynn
AU - Snyder-Mackler L
AD - Department of Physical Therapy and Biomechanics and Movement Science Program,
University of Delaware, Newark, DE, USA.
LA - eng
GR - R01 AR048212/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Clin Orthop Relat Res
JT - Clinical orthopaedics and related research
JID - 0075674
SB - IM
CIN - Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2017 Oct;475(10):2456-2458. PMID: 28616755
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*physiopathology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
Injuries/diagnosis/epidemiology/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Chi-Square Distribution
MH - Humans
MH - Incidence
MH - Linear Models
MH - Logistic Models
MH - Male
MH - Odds Ratio
MH - Primary Prevention/*methods
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Running
MH - Sex Factors
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Time Factors
MH - *Warm-Up Exercise
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC5599387
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
OT - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury
OT - Artificial Turf
OT - National Collegiate Athletic Association
OT - Soccer Player
EDAT- 2017/04/09 06:00
MHDA- 2017/12/05 06:00
CRDT- 2017/04/09 06:00
PHST- 2017/04/09 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/12/05 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2017/04/09 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s11999-017-5342-5 [pii]
AID - 5342 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s11999-017-5342-5 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2017 Oct;475(10):2447-2455. doi:
10.1007/s11999-017-5342-5.
PMID- 20660401
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100805
LR - 20221207
IS - 1533-4406 (Electronic)
IS - 0028-4793 (Linking)
VI - 363
IP - 4
DP - 2010 Jul 22
TI - A randomized trial of treatment for acute anterior cruciate ligament tears.
PG - 331-42
LID - 10.1056/NEJMoa0907797 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: The optimal management of a torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
of
the knee is unknown. METHODS: We conducted a randomized, controlled trial
involving 121 young, active adults with acute ACL injury in which we compared
two
strategies: structured rehabilitation plus early ACL reconstruction and
structured rehabilitation with the option of later ACL reconstruction if
needed.
The primary outcome was the change from baseline to 2 years in the average
score
on four subscales of the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score
(KOOS)--pain, symptoms, function in sports and recreation, and knee-related
quality of life (KOOS(4); range of scores, 0 [worst] to 100 [best]).
Secondary
outcomes included results on all five KOOS subscales, the Medical Outcomes
Study
36-Item Short-Form Health Survey, and the score on the Tegner Activity Scale.
RESULTS: Of 62 subjects assigned to rehabilitation plus early ACL
reconstruction,
1 did not undergo surgery. Of 59 assigned to rehabilitation plus optional
delayed
ACL reconstruction, 23 underwent delayed ACL reconstruction; the other 36
underwent rehabilitation alone. The absolute change in the mean KOOS(4) score
from baseline to 2 years was 39.2 points for those assigned to rehabilitation
plus early ACL reconstruction and 39.4 for those assigned to rehabilitation
plus
optional delayed reconstruction (absolute between-group difference, 0.2
points;
95% confidence interval, -6.5 to 6.8; P=0.96 after adjustment for the
baseline
score). There were no significant differences between the two treatment
groups
with respect to secondary outcomes. Adverse events were common in both
groups.
The results were similar when the data were analyzed according to the
treatment
actually received. CONCLUSIONS: In young, active adults with acute ACL tears,
a
strategy of rehabilitation plus early ACL reconstruction was not superior to
a
strategy of rehabilitation plus optional delayed ACL reconstruction. The
latter
strategy substantially reduced the frequency of surgical reconstructions.
(Funded
by the Swedish Research Council and the Medical Faculty of Lund University
and
others; Current Controlled Trials number, ISRCTN84752559.)
CI - 2010 Massachusetts Medical Society
FAU - Frobell, Richard B
AU - Frobell RB
AD - Department of Orthopedics, Clinical Sciences Lund, Lund University, Lund,
Sweden.
richard.frobell@med.lu.se
FAU - Roos, Ewa M
AU - Roos EM
FAU - Roos, Harald P
AU - Roos HP
FAU - Ranstam, Jonas
AU - Ranstam J
FAU - Lohmander, L Stefan
AU - Lohmander LS
LA - eng
SI - ISRCTN/ISRCTN84752559
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - N Engl J Med
JT - The New England journal of medicine
JID - 0255562
SB - IM
EIN - N Engl J Med. 2010 Aug 26;363(9):893
CIN - N Engl J Med. 2010 Jul 22;363(4):386-8. PMID: 20660407
CIN - N Engl J Med. 2010 Nov 4;363(19):1871-2; author reply 1872-3. PMID: 21047244
CIN - N Engl J Med. 2010 Nov 4;363(19):1871; author reply 1872-3. PMID: 21047245
CIN - Clin J Sport Med. 2011 Jan;21(1):73-4. PMID: 21200177
CIN - J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2011 Feb 16;93(4):395. PMID: 21325592
CIN - Natl Med J India. 2011 Mar-Apr;24(2):90-1. PMID: 21668053
CIN - Praxis (Bern 1994). 2011 Sep 21;100(19):1187. PMID: 21938713
CIN - Praxis (Bern 1994). 2011 Sep 21;100(19):1197-8. PMID: 21938716
CIN - N Engl J Med. 2012 Jul 19;367(3):279. PMID: 22808975
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Combined Modality Therapy
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability
MH - Knee Injuries/*rehabilitation/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - *Plastic Surgery Procedures
MH - Rupture/rehabilitation/surgery
MH - Time Factors
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/07/28 06:00
MHDA- 2010/08/06 06:00
CRDT- 2010/07/28 06:00
PHST- 2010/07/28 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/07/28 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/08/06 06:00 [medline]
AID - 363/4/331 [pii]
AID - 10.1056/NEJMoa0907797 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - N Engl J Med. 2010 Jul 22;363(4):331-42. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa0907797.
PMID- 33381989
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20210215
LR - 20210215
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 49
IP - 1
DP - 2021 Jan
TI - Core Strength Training Can Alter Neuromuscular and Biomechanical Risk Factors
for
Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury.
PG - 183-192
LID - 10.1177/0363546520972990 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Core stability is influential in the incidence of lower extremity
injuries, including anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries, but the
effects of
core strength training on the risk for ACL injury remain unclear. HYPOTHESIS:
Core muscle strength training increases the knee flexion angle, hamstring to
quadriceps (H:Q) coactivation ratio, and vastus medialis to vastus lateralis
(VM:VL) muscle activation ratio, as well as decreases the hip adduction, knee
valgus, and tibial internal rotation angles. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled
laboratory
study. METHODS: A total of 48 male participants were recruited and randomly
assigned to either the intervention group (n = 32) or the control group (n =
16).
Three-dimensional trunk, hip, knee, and ankle kinematic data and muscle
activations of selected trunk and lower extremity muscles were obtained while
the
participants performed side-step cutting. The core endurance scores were
measured
before and after training. Two-way analyses of variance were conducted for
each
dependent variable to determine the effects of 10 weeks of core strength
training. RESULTS: The trunk endurance scores in the intervention group
significantly increased after training (P < .05 for all comparisons). The
intervention group showed decreased knee valgus (P = .038) and hip adduction
angles (P = .032) but increased trunk flexion angle (P = .018), rectus
abdominis
to erector spinae coactivation ratio (P = .047), H:Q coactivation ratio (P =
.021), and VM:VL activation ratio (P = .016). In addition, the knee valgus
angle
at initial contact was negatively correlated with the VM:VL activation ratio
in
the precontact phase (R(2) = 0.188; P < .001) but was positively correlated
with
the hip adduction angle (R(2) = 0.120; P < .005). No statistically
significant
differences were observed in the trunk endurance scores, kinematics, and
muscle
activations for the control group. CONCLUSION: Core strength training altered
the
motor control strategies and joint kinematics for the trunk and the lower
extremity by increasing the trunk flexion angle, VM:VL activation ratio, and
H:Q
activation ratio and reducing the knee valgus and hip adduction angles.
CLINICAL
RELEVANCE: Training core muscles can modify the biomechanics associated with
ACL
injuries in a side-step cutting task; thus, core strength training might be
considered in ACL injury prevention programs to alter the lower extremity
alignment in the frontal plane and muscle activations during sports-related
tasks.
FAU - Jeong, Jiyoung
AU - Jeong J
AD - Department of Mechanical Engineering, Sogang University, Mapo-gu, Seoul,
Republic
of Korea.
FAU - Choi, Dai-Hyuk
AU - Choi DH
AD - Department of Physical Education, Graduate School of Education, Sogang
University, Mapo-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
FAU - Shin, Choongsoo S
AU - Shin CS
AD - Department of Mechanical Engineering, Sogang University, Mapo-gu, Seoul,
Republic
of Korea.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Abdominal Muscles/*physiology
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control/*therapy
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - *Resistance Training
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Torso/*physiology
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - core stability
OT - injury prevention
OT - kinematics
OT - lower extremity
OT - muscle activation
OT - trunk
EDAT- 2021/01/01 06:00
MHDA- 2021/02/16 06:00
CRDT- 2020/12/31 08:36
PHST- 2020/12/31 08:36 [entrez]
PHST- 2021/01/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/02/16 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1177/0363546520972990 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2021 Jan;49(1):183-192. doi: 10.1177/0363546520972990.
PMID- 26259551
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180305
LR - 20220408
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 25
IP - 8
DP - 2017 Aug
TI - Motor learning strategies in basketball players and its implications for ACL
injury prevention: a randomized controlled trial.
PG - 2365-2376
LID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3727-0 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: Adding external focus of attention (EF, focus on the movement
effect)
may optimize current anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury prevention
programmes. The purpose of the current study was to investigate the effects
of an
EF, by a visual stimulus and an internal focus, by a verbal stimulus during
unexpected sidestep cutting in female and male athletes and how these effects
remained over time. METHODS: Ninety experienced basketball athletes performed
sidestep cutting manoeuvres in three sessions (S1, S2 and S3). In this
randomized
controlled trial, athletes were allocated to three groups: visual (VIS),
verbal
(VER) and control (CTRL). Kinematics and kinetics were collected at the time
of
peak knee frontal plane moment. RESULTS: Males in the VIS group showed a
larger
vertical ground reaction force (S1: 25.4 ± 3.1 N/kg, S2: 25.8 ± 2.9 N/kg, S3:
25.2 ± 3.2 N/kg) and knee flexion moments (S1: -3.8 ± 0.9 Nm/kg, S2: -
4.0 ± 1.2
Nm/kg, S3: -3.9 ± 1.3 Nm/kg) compared to the males in the VER and CTRL groups
and
to the females in the VIS group (p < 0.05). Additionally, the males in the
VIS
group reduced knee valgus moment and the females in the VER group reduced
knee
varus moment over time (n.s.). CONCLUSION: Male subjects clearly benefit from
visual feedback. Females may need different feedback modes to learn a correct
movement pattern. Sex-specific learning preferences may have to be
acknowledged
in day by day practice. Adding video instruction or feedback to regular
training
regimens when teaching athletes safe movement patterns and providing
individual
feedback might target suboptimal long-term results and optimize ACL injury
prevention programmes. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: I.
FAU - Benjaminse, Anne
AU - Benjaminse A
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands. a.benjaminse@umcg.nl.
AD - School of Sport Studies, Hanze University Groningen, Zernikeplein 17, 9747
AS,
Groningen, The Netherlands. a.benjaminse@umcg.nl.
FAU - Otten, Bert
AU - Otten B
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands.
FAU - Gokeler, Alli
AU - Gokeler A
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands.
FAU - Diercks, Ron L
AU - Diercks RL
AD - Center for Sports Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, University
of
Groningen, Postbus 30.001, 9700 RB, Groningen, The Netherlands.
FAU - Lemmink, Koen A P M
AU - Lemmink KAPM
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20150811
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Athletes/psychology
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control/psychology
MH - Attention
MH - Basketball/*injuries/psychology
MH - Biofeedback, Psychology
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Exercise Movement Techniques/methods/*psychology
MH - Feedback, Sensory
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/physiology
MH - Learning
MH - Male
MH - *Psychomotor Performance
MH - Sex Factors
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC5522510
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Attentional focus
OT - Injury prevention
OT - Motor learning
COIS- All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in
accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national
research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later
amendments or comparable ethical standards. CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors
have no conflicts of interest that are directly relevant to the content of
this
article.
EDAT- 2015/08/12 06:00
MHDA- 2018/03/06 06:00
CRDT- 2015/08/12 06:00
PHST- 2015/02/23 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2015/07/17 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2015/08/12 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/03/06 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2015/08/12 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3727-0 [pii]
AID - 3727 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3727-0 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2017 Aug;25(8):2365-2376. doi:
10.1007/s00167-015-3727-0. Epub 2015 Aug 11.
PMID- 26400955
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20161020
LR - 20220408
IS - 1473-0480 (Electronic)
IS - 0306-3674 (Linking)
VI - 50
IP - 9
DP - 2016 May
TI - Effects of evidence-based prevention training on neuromuscular and
biomechanical
risk factors for ACL injury in adolescent female athletes: a randomised
controlled trial.
PG - 552-7
LID - 10.1136/bjsports-2015-094776 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Adolescent female football and handball players are among the
athletes with the highest risk of sustaining anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
injuries. AIM: This study evaluated the effects of evidence-based lower
extremity
injury prevention training on neuromuscular and biomechanical risk factors
for
non-contact ACL injury. METHODS: 40 adolescent female football and handball
players (15-16 years) were randomly allocated to a control group (CON, n=20)
or
neuromuscular training group (NMT, n=20). The NMT group performed an injury
prevention programme as a warm-up before their usual training 3 times weekly
for
12 weeks. The CON group completed their regular warm-up exercise programme
before
training. Players were tested while performing a side cutting movement at
baseline and 12-week follow-up, using surface electromyography (EMG) and
three-dimensional movement analysis. We calculated: (1) EMG amplitude from
vastus
lateralis (VL), semitendinosus (ST) and biceps femoris 10 ms prior to initial
contact (IC) normalised to peak EMG amplitude recorded during maximal
voluntary
isometric contraction and (2) VL-ST EMG preactivity difference during the 10
ms
prior to foot contact (primary outcome). We measured maximal knee joint
valgus
moment and knee valgus angle at IC. RESULTS: There was a difference between
groups at follow-up in VL-ST preactivity (43% between-group difference; 95%
CI
32% to 55%). No between-group differences were observed for kinematic and
kinetic
variables. CONCLUSIONS: A 12-week injury prevention programme in addition to
training and match play in adolescent females altered the pattern of
agonist-antagonist muscle preactivity during side cutting. This may represent
a
more ACL-protective motor strategy.
CI - Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where
not
already granted under a licence) please go to
http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/
FAU - Zebis, Mette K
AU - Zebis MK
AD - Department of Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Health and
Technology, Metropolitan University College, Copenhagen, Denmark Gait
Analysis
Laboratory, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Physical Therapy,
Copenhagen
University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark.
FAU - Andersen, Lars L
AU - Andersen LL
AD - National Research Centre for the Working Environment, Copenhagen, Denmark
Human
Performance group, SMI, Department of Health Science and Technology, Aalborg
University, Aalborg, Denmark.
FAU - Brandt, Mikkel
AU - Brandt M
AD - National Research Centre for the Working Environment, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Myklebust, Grethe
AU - Myklebust G
AD - Oslo Sport Trauma Research Centre, Norwegian School of Sports Sciences,
Norway
Physical Activity, Oslo, Norway.
FAU - Bencke, Jesper
AU - Bencke J
AD - Gait Analysis Laboratory, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Physical
Therapy,
Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark.
FAU - Lauridsen, Hanne Bloch
AU - Lauridsen HB
AD - Gait Analysis Laboratory, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Physical
Therapy,
Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark.
FAU - Bandholm, Thomas
AU - Bandholm T
AD - Clinical Research Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre,
Denmark Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Physical Therapy, Physical
Medicine
& Rehabilitation Research-Copenhagen (PMR-C), Copenhagen University Hospital,
Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark.
FAU - Thorborg, Kristian
AU - Thorborg K
AD - Sports Orthopaedic Research Centre-Copenhagen (SORC-C), Arthroscopic Centre
Amager, Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark.
FAU - Hölmich, Per
AU - Hölmich P
AD - Sports Orthopaedic Research Centre-Copenhagen (SORC-C), Arthroscopic Centre
Amager, Copenhagen University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Denmark.
FAU - Aagaard, Per
AU - Aagaard P
AD - Institute of Sports Sciences and Clinical Biomechanics, University of
Southern
Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20150923
PL - England
TA - Br J Sports Med
JT - British journal of sports medicine
JID - 0432520
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletes
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Electromyography
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/physiology
MH - Movement
MH - Muscle Strength
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiology
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Soccer
MH - *Warm-Up Exercise
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Adolescent
OT - Athlete
OT - Biomechanics
OT - Training
EDAT- 2015/09/25 06:00
MHDA- 2016/10/21 06:00
CRDT- 2015/09/25 06:00
PHST- 2015/09/06 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2015/09/25 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/09/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/10/21 06:00 [medline]
AID - bjsports-2015-094776 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bjsports-2015-094776 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Br J Sports Med. 2016 May;50(9):552-7. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2015-094776.
Epub
2015 Sep 23.
PMID- 32955839
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20201027
LR - 20201027
IS - 1827-1928 (Electronic)
IS - 0022-4707 (Linking)
VI - 60
IP - 8
DP - 2020 Aug
TI - Effects of pelvic and core strength training on biomechanical risk factors
for
anterior cruciate ligament injuries.
PG - 1128-1136
LID - 10.23736/S0022-4707.20.10552-8 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Little is known about the changes in biomechanical risk factors
for
an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury after participation in a pelvic
and
core strength training (PCST) program in female team players. METHODS: This
is a
randomized controlled trial for which a total of 29 female soccer players
were
recruited from a soccer club and split into two groups, namely, experimental
group (EG, N.=18; mean [SD] age, 17.8 [2.0 years], weight 64.0 [6.6] kg and
height 1.7 [0.0] m) and control group (control, N.=11; mean [SD] age, 16.2
[1.2]
years, weight 61.6 [7.3] kg and height 1.7 [0.0] m). The EG participated in
an
in-season 8-week PCST program (twice/week). Participants in the CG performed
their normal training without additional pelvic and core strengthening. Pre-
and
postintervention knee frontal plane projection angle (FPPA), hip, knee and
ankle
peak flexion angles and jump height were collected during bilateral and
unilateral drop jumps. RESULTS: PCST significantly reduced FPPA at dynamic
landing, in both dominant (-7.1º) and non-dominant lower extremities (-8º).
Further, this training significantly increased the peak hip (24.4º) and knee
flexion angles (14.94º), but not the peak ankle dorsiflexion angle (P>0.05)
which, significantly decreased in the CG (-3.5º). Following the intervention,
EG
significantly increased measures obtained for both bilateral (2.84 cm) and
unilateral jumps (1.33 cm for the dominant leg and 1.22 cm for the non-
dominant
leg) (P<0.05), not so for CG (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: PCST resulted in
improvements
on ACL injury risk factors and vertical drop jump performance, suggesting
that
strengthening this body part warrants not only injury prevention, but
increases
jumping performance.
FAU - Ferri-Caruana, Ana
AU - Ferri-Caruana A
AD - Department of Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Science of Physical
Activity and Sport, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain -
ana.maria.ferri@uv.es.
FAU - Prades-Insa, Beatriz
AU - Prades-Insa B
AD - Department of Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Science of Physical
Activity and Sport, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
FAU - Serra-AÑÓ, Pilar
AU - Serra-AÑÓ P
AD - UBIC Research Group, Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Physiotherapy,
University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - Italy
TA - J Sports Med Phys Fitness
JT - The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness
JID - 0376337
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Ankle/physiology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Hip/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Infant
MH - Knee/physiology
MH - Muscle Strength/*physiology
MH - Pelvis/*physiology
MH - Resistance Training/*methods
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Soccer/*injuries/*physiology
EDAT- 2020/09/22 06:00
MHDA- 2020/10/28 06:00
CRDT- 2020/09/21 16:49
PHST- 2020/09/21 16:49 [entrez]
PHST- 2020/09/22 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2020/10/28 06:00 [medline]
AID - S0022-4707.20.10552-8 [pii]
AID - 10.23736/S0022-4707.20.10552-8 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 2020 Aug;60(8):1128-1136. doi:
10.23736/S0022-4707.20.10552-8.
PMID- 36328403
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230110
LR - 20230126
IS - 1473-0480 (Electronic)
IS - 0306-3674 (Print)
IS - 0306-3674 (Linking)
VI - 57
IP - 2
DP - 2023 Jan
TI - Evidence of ACL healing on MRI following ACL rupture treated with
rehabilitation
alone may be associated with better patient-reported outcomes: a secondary
analysis from the KANON trial.
PG - 91-98
LID - 10.1136/bjsports-2022-105473 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: Evaluate the natural course of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
healing on MRI within 5 years of acute ACL rupture and compare 2-year and 5-
year
outcomes based on healing status and treatment group. METHODS: Secondary
analysis
of 120 Knee Anterior Cruciate Ligament Nonsurgical vs Surgical Treatment
(KANON)
trial participants randomised to rehabilitation and optional delayed ACL
reconstruction (ACLR) or early ACLR and rehabilitation. ACL continuity on MRI
(Anterior Cruciate Ligament OsteoArthritis Score 0-2) was considered evidence
of
ACL healing. Outcomes included Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score
(KOOS), KOOS patient acceptable symptomatic state (PASS) and treatment
failure
criteria. Linear mixed models were used to estimate adjusted mean differences
(95% CIs) in patient-reported sport and recreational function
(KOOS-Sport/Rec)
and quality of life (KOOS-QOL) at 2 and 5 years, between participants with
MRI
evidence of ACL healing and those who had (1) no evidence of ACL healing, (2)
delayed ACLR or (3) early ACLR. RESULTS: MRI evidence of ACL healing at 2-
year
follow-up was observed in 16 of 54 (30%, 95% CI 19 to 43%) participants
randomised to optional delayed ACLR. Excluding participants who had delayed
ACLR,
16 of 30 (53%, 36-70%) participants managed with rehabilitation-alone
displayed
MRI evidence of ACL healing. Two-year outcomes were better in the healed ACL
group (n=16) compared with the non-healed (n=14) (mean difference (95% CI)
KOOS-Sport/Rec: 25.1 (8.6-41.5); KOOS-QOL: 27.5 (13.2-41.8)), delayed ACLR
(n=24)
(KOOS-Sport/Rec: 24.9 (10.2-39.6); KOOS-QOL: 18.1 (5.4-30.8)) and early ACLR
(n=62) (KOOS-Sport/Rec: 17.4 (4.1-30.7); KOOS-QOL: 11.4 (0.0-22.9)) groups.
Five-year KOOS-QOL was better in the healed versus non-healed group (25.3
(9.4-41.2)). Of participants with MRI evidence of ACL healing, 63-94% met the
PASS criteria for each KOOS subscale, compared with 29-61% in the non-healed
or
reconstructed groups. CONCLUSIONS: MRI appearance of ACL healing after ACL
rupture occurred in one in three adults randomised to initial rehabilitation
and
one in two who did not cross-over to delayed ACLR and was associated with
favourable outcomes. The potential for spontaneous healing of the ACL to
facilitate better clinical outcomes may be greater than previously
considered.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN84752559.
CI - © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No
commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
FAU - Filbay, Stephanie Rose
AU - Filbay SR
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9624-0791
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Medicine Dentistry and Health
Sciences,
The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
stephanie.filbay@unimelb.edu.au.
FAU - Roemer, Frank W
AU - Roemer FW
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9238-7350
AD - Radiology, Universitatsklinikum Erlangen, Erlangen, Germany.
AD - Radiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
FAU - Lohmander, L Stefan
AU - Lohmander LS
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-5424-9448
AD - Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Orthopaedics, Lunds Universitet, Lund,
Sweden.
FAU - Turkiewicz, Aleksandra
AU - Turkiewicz A
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-1460-2275
AD - Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Orthopedics, Clinical Epidemiology
Unit,
Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
FAU - Roos, Ewa M
AU - Roos EM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5425-2199
AD - Department of Sports and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern
Denmark,
Odense, Syddanmark, Denmark.
FAU - Frobell, Richard
AU - Frobell R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-0639-1191
AD - Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Orthopaedics, Lunds Universitet, Lund,
Sweden.
FAU - Englund, Martin
AU - Englund M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-3320-2437
AD - Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Orthopedics, Clinical Epidemiology
Unit,
Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20221103
PL - England
TA - Br J Sports Med
JT - British journal of sports medicine
JID - 0432520
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Humans
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/diagnostic imaging/surgery
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - *Osteoarthritis
MH - Patient Reported Outcome Measures
MH - Quality of Life
PMC - PMC9872245
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - osteoarthritis
OT - quality of life
OT - rehabilitation
COIS- Competing interests: EMR is deputy editor of Osteoarthritis and Cartilage,
the
developer of Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score and co-founder of
the
Good Life with Osteoarthritis in Denmark (GLA:D) initiative to implement
clinical
guidelines in primary care; FWR is a shareholder of Boston Imaging Core Lab,
and
Consultant to Calibr and Grünenthal outside the submitted work.
EDAT- 2022/11/04 06:00
MHDA- 2023/01/07 06:00
CRDT- 2022/11/03 21:03
PHST- 2022/10/17 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/11/04 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/01/07 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/11/03 21:03 [entrez]
AID - bjsports-2022-105473 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bjsports-2022-105473 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Br J Sports Med. 2023 Jan;57(2):91-98. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2022-105473.
Epub
2022 Nov 3.
PMID- 22556050
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120626
LR - 20220411
IS - 1756-1833 (Electronic)
IS - 0959-8138 (Print)
IS - 0959-8138 (Linking)
VI - 344
DP - 2012 May 3
TI - Prevention of acute knee injuries in adolescent female football players:
cluster
randomised controlled trial.
PG - e3042
LID - bmj.e3042 [pii]
LID - 10.1136/bmj.e3042 [doi]
LID - e3042
AB - OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness of neuromuscular training in
reducing
the rate of acute knee injury in adolescent female football players. DESIGN:
Stratified cluster randomised controlled trial with clubs as the unit of
randomisation. SETTING: 230 Swedish football clubs (121 in the intervention
group, 109 in the control group) were followed for one season (2009, seven
months). PARTICIPANTS: 4564 players aged 12-17 years (2479 in the
intervention
group, 2085 in the control group) completed the study. INTERVENTION: 15
minute
neuromuscular warm-up programme (targeting core stability, balance, and
proper
knee alignment) to be carried out twice a week throughout the season. MAIN
OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome was rate of anterior cruciate ligament
injury; secondary outcomes were rates of severe knee injury (>4 weeks'
absence)
and any acute knee injury. RESULTS: Seven players (0.28%) in the intervention
group, and 14 (0.67%) in the control group had an anterior cruciate ligament
injury. By Cox regression analysis according to intention to treat, a 64%
reduction in the rate of anterior cruciate ligament injury was seen in the
intervention group (rate ratio 0.36, 95% confidence interval 0.15 to 0.85).
The
absolute rate difference was -0.07 (95% confidence interval -0.13 to 0.001)
per
1000 playing hours in favour of the intervention group. No significant rate
reductions were seen for secondary outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: A neuromuscular
warm-up
programme significantly reduced the rate of anterior cruciate ligament injury
in
adolescent female football players. However, the absolute rate difference did
not
reach statistical significance, possibly owing to the small number of events.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinical trials NCT00894595.
FAU - Waldén, Markus
AU - Waldén M
AD - Division of Community Medicine, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping University, 581 83 Linköping, Sweden. markus.walden@telia.com
FAU - Atroshi, Isam
AU - Atroshi I
FAU - Magnusson, Henrik
AU - Magnusson H
FAU - Wagner, Philippe
AU - Wagner P
FAU - Hägglund, Martin
AU - Hägglund M
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT00894595
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20120503
PL - England
TA - BMJ
JT - BMJ (Clinical research ed.)
JID - 8900488
SB - IM
CIN - J Pediatr. 2012 Nov;161(5):970-1. PMID: 23095699
CIN - Clin J Sport Med. 2013 Sep;23(5):407-8. PMID: 23989384
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Child
MH - Cluster Analysis
MH - Exercise/physiology
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Intention to Treat Analysis
MH - Knee Injuries/epidemiology/*prevention & control
MH - Outcome Assessment, Health Care/*statistics & numerical data
MH - Regression Analysis
MH - Sex Characteristics
MH - Sex Distribution
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Sweden/epidemiology
PMC - PMC3342926
COIS- Competing interests: All authors have completed the Unified Competing
Interest
form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the
corresponding author) and declare: MW, HM, and MH had financial support from
the
Swedish Football Association and the Folksam Insurance Company; MW and MH
received research grants from the Swedish National Centre for Research in
Sports
and IA received a grant from the Hässleholm Hospital for the submitted work;
MW
and MH have been paid by the Swedish Football Association for constituting
the
medical staff of the Swedish male under 19 national team; no other
relationships
or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.
EDAT- 2012/05/05 06:00
MHDA- 2012/06/27 06:00
CRDT- 2012/05/05 06:00
PHST- 2012/05/05 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/05/05 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/06/27 06:00 [medline]
AID - bmj.e3042 [pii]
AID - walm001156 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bmj.e3042 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - BMJ. 2012 May 3;344:e3042. doi: 10.1136/bmj.e3042.
PMID- 26704794
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20161012
LR - 20220321
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 3
DP - 2016 Mar
TI - Risk factors for acute knee injury in female youth football.
PG - 737-46
LID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3922-z [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: To prospectively evaluate risk factors for acute time-loss knee
injury,
in particular ACL injury, in female youth football players. METHODS: Risk
factors
were studied in 4556 players aged 12-17 years from a randomised controlled
trial
during the 2009 season. Covariates were both intrinsic (body mass index, age,
relative age effect, onset of menarche, previous acute knee injury or ACL
injury,
current knee complaints, and familial disposition of ACL injury) and
extrinsic
(no. of training sessions/week, no. of matches/week, match exposure ratio,
match
play with other teams, and artificial turf exposure). Hazard ratios (HRs) and
95%
confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated from individual variable and
multiple
Cox regression analyses. RESULTS: Ninety-six acute knee injuries were
recorded,
21 of them ACL injuries. Multiple Cox regression showed a fourfold higher ACL
injury rate for players with familial disposition of ACL injury (HR 3.57; 95%
CI
1.48-8.62). Significant predictor variables for acute knee injury were age
>14
years (HR 1.97; 95% CI 1.30-2.97), knee complaints at the start of the season
(HR
1.98; 95% CI 1.30-3.02), and familial disposition of ACL injury (HR 1.96; 95%
CI
1.22-3.16). No differences in injury rates were seen when playing on
artificial
turf compared with natural grass. CONCLUSION: Female youth football players
with
a familial disposition of ACL injury had an increased risk of ACL injury and
acute knee injury. Older players and those with knee complaints at pre-season
were more at risk of acute knee injury. Although the predictive values were
low,
these factors could be used in athlete screening to target preventive
interventions. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II.
FAU - Hägglund, Martin
AU - Hägglund M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6883-1471
AD - Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping
University, 58183, Linköping, Sweden. martin.hagglund@liu.se.
AD - Football Research Group, Linköping, Sweden. martin.hagglund@liu.se.
FAU - Waldén, Markus
AU - Waldén M
AD - Football Research Group, Linköping, Sweden.
AD - Division of Community Medicine, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping University, 58183, Linköping, Sweden.
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Hässleholm-Kristianstad-Ystad Hospitals,
Hässleholm,
Sweden.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20151224
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Age Factors
MH - Child
MH - Female
MH - Genetic Predisposition to Disease
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*epidemiology/etiology
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Soccer/*injuries
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Epidemiology
OT - Female athlete
OT - Knee
OT - Prevention
OT - Soccer
EDAT- 2015/12/26 06:00
MHDA- 2016/10/13 06:00
CRDT- 2015/12/26 06:00
PHST- 2015/09/17 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2015/11/30 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2015/12/26 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/12/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/10/13 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3922-z [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3922-z [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2016 Mar;24(3):737-46. doi:
10.1007/s00167-015-3922-z. Epub 2015 Dec 24.
PMID- 35465002
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220426
LR - 20230707
IS - 1748-6718 (Electronic)
IS - 1748-670X (Print)
IS - 1748-670X (Linking)
VI - 2022
DP - 2022
TI - Effect of Nursing in Operating Room Combined with Intraoperative Heat
Preservation Intervention on Prevention of Incision Infection and Improvement
of
Hemodynamics in Patients with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury and
Reconstruction under Knee Arthroscopy.
PG - 2915157
LID - 10.1155/2022/2915157 [doi]
LID - 2915157
AB - OBJECTIVE: To explore the effect of nursing in operating room combined with
intraoperative heat preservation intervention on preventing incision
infection
and improving hemodynamics in patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
injury and reconstruction under knee arthroscopy. METHODS: About 200 patients
with knee arthroscopic ACL reconstruction in our hospital from January 2019
to
July 2021 were enrolled. The patients were randomly assigned into two groups:
the
control group and the study group. The former group received nursing care in
the
operating room operating room and the latter group received nursing care in
operating room combined with intraoperative heat preservation intervention.
Nursing satisfaction, incidence of incision infection, knee joint VAS score,
knee
joint range of motion, knee joint Lysholm score, and hemodynamic indexes were
compared. RESULTS: First of all, we compared the nursing satisfaction, the
study
group was very satisfied in 78 cases, satisfactory in 20 cases, and general
in 2
cases, and the satisfaction rate was 100.00%, while in the control group, 445
cases were very satisfied, 20 cases were satisfied, 15 cases were general,
and 8
cases were dissatisfied. The satisfaction rate was 82.00%. The nursing
satisfaction of the study group was higher compared to the control group (P <
0.05). Secondly, we compared the incidence of incision infection. The
incidence
of incision infection in the study group was lower compared to the control
group
(P < 0.05). With regard to the knee joint VAS score, the knee joint VAS score
of
the study group was lower compared to the control group at 2 weeks, 4 weeks,
8
weeks, and 12 weeks after operation (P < 0.05). In terms of the range of
motion
of the knee joint, the range of motion of the knee joint in the study group
was
higher compared to the control group at 2 weeks, 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 12
weeks
after operation (P < 0.05). Regarding the knee joint Lysholm score, the knee
joint Lysholm score of the study group was higher compared to the control
group
at 2 weeks, 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 12 weeks after operation (P < 0.05).
Finally,
we compared the hemodynamic indexes. Before nursing, there exhibited no
significant difference (P > 0.05). During and after nursing, the indexes of
HR
and MAP in the study group fluctuated little (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: During
the
perioperative period of patients with ACL injury and reconstruction under
knee
arthroscopy, standardized and necessary operating room combined with
intraoperative thermal insulation intervention measures should be given,
attention should be paid to the management of operating room, and
intraoperative
thermal insulation intervention should be strengthened. It includes
preoperative
visit, psychological nursing of patients, strict application of antibiotics
before operation, monitoring of air quality in operating room, disinfection
and
sterilization of surgical instruments, shortening operation time, maintaining
body temperature during operation, and paying attention to hand hygiene of
medical staff. It plays a supervisory role in promoting the attention of
medical
staff to the prevention of wound infection, which is beneficial to the
healing of
surgical wounds of patients. It plays a positive role in enhancing
hemodynamic
indexes. Comprehensive nursing intervention on the risk factors of each link
can
effectively prevent postoperative wound infection and strengthen the
prognosis
and quality of life of patients.
CI - Copyright © 2022 Jiao Dai and Yanan Li.
FAU - Dai, Jiao
AU - Dai J
AD - Department of Operation, Wuhan Fourth Hospital (Puai Hospital Affiliated to
Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology),
Wuhan,
Hubei, China 430000.
FAU - Li, Yanan
AU - Li Y
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-4360-1987
AD - Department of Sport Medicine, Wuhan Fourth Hospital (Puai Hospital Affiliated
to
Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology),
Wuhan,
Hubei, China 430000.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Retracted Publication
DEP - 20220415
PL - United States
TA - Comput Math Methods Med
JT - Computational and mathematical methods in medicine
JID - 101277751
SB - IM
RIN - Comput Math Methods Med. 2023 Jun 28;2023:9864849. PMID: 37416119
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Arthroscopy
MH - Hemodynamics
MH - Hot Temperature
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - Operating Rooms
MH - Quality of Life
MH - Surgical Wound Infection
MH - Treatment Outcome
PMC - PMC9033368
COIS- The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
EDAT- 2022/04/26 06:00
MHDA- 2022/04/27 06:00
CRDT- 2022/04/25 05:41
PHST- 2022/02/24 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/03/01 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2022/03/08 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/04/25 05:41 [entrez]
PHST- 2022/04/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/04/27 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1155/2022/2915157 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Comput Math Methods Med. 2022 Apr 15;2022:2915157. doi: 10.1155/2022/2915157.
eCollection 2022.
PMID- 29671383
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180823
LR - 20180823
IS - 1466-447X (Electronic)
IS - 0264-0414 (Linking)
VI - 36
IP - 21
DP - 2018 Nov
TI - Sport-specific biomechanical responses to an ACL injury prevention programme:
A
randomised controlled trial.
PG - 2492-2501
LID - 10.1080/02640414.2018.1465723 [doi]
AB - Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury prevention programmes have not been
as
successful at reducing injury rates in women's basketball as in soccer. This
randomised controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov #NCT02530333) compared
biomechanical adaptations in basketball and soccer players during jump-
landing
activities after an ACL injury prevention programme. Eighty-seven athletes
were
cluster randomised into intervention (6-week programme) and control groups.
Three-dimensional biomechanical analyses of drop vertical jump (DVJ), double-
(SAG-DL) and single-leg (SAG-SL) sagittal, and double- (FRONT-DL) and single-
leg
(FRONT-SL) frontal plane jump landing tasks were tested before and after the
intervention. Peak angles, excursions, and joint moments were analysed using
two-way MANCOVAs of post-test scores while controlling for pre-test scores.
During SAG-SL the basketball intervention group exhibited increased peak knee
abduction angles (p = .004) and excursions (p = .003) compared to the
basketball
control group (p = .01) and soccer intervention group (p = .01). During
FRONT-SL,
the basketball intervention group exhibited greater knee flexion excursion
after
training than the control group (p = .01), but not the soccer intervention
group
(p = .11). Although women's soccer players exhibit greater improvements in
knee
abduction kinematics than basketball players, these athletes largely exhibit
similar biomechanical adaptations to ACL injury prevention programmes.
FAU - Taylor, Jeffrey B
AU - Taylor JB
AD - a Department of Physical Therapy , High Point University , High Point , NC ,
USA.
AD - b Department of Kinesiology , University of North Carolina at Greensboro ,
Greensboro , NC , USA.
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
AD - a Department of Physical Therapy , High Point University , High Point , NC ,
USA.
FAU - Schmitz, Randy J
AU - Schmitz RJ
AD - b Department of Kinesiology , University of North Carolina at Greensboro ,
Greensboro , NC , USA.
FAU - Ross, Scott E
AU - Ross SE
AD - b Department of Kinesiology , University of North Carolina at Greensboro ,
Greensboro , NC , USA.
FAU - Ackerman, Terry A
AU - Ackerman TA
AD - c American College Testing (ACT) , Iowa City , IA , USA.
FAU - Shultz, Sandra J
AU - Shultz SJ
AD - b Department of Kinesiology , University of North Carolina at Greensboro ,
Greensboro , NC , USA.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT02530333
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20180419
PL - England
TA - J Sports Sci
JT - Journal of sports sciences
JID - 8405364
SB - IM
MH - Adaptation, Physiological
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Basketball/*injuries/physiology
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Humans
MH - Knee/*physiology
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods
MH - *Plyometric Exercise
MH - Soccer/*injuries/physiology
MH - Task Performance and Analysis
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - basketball
OT - biomechanics
OT - injury prevention
OT - soccer
EDAT- 2018/04/20 06:00
MHDA- 2018/08/24 06:00
CRDT- 2018/04/20 06:00
PHST- 2018/04/20 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/08/24 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/04/20 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1080/02640414.2018.1465723 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sports Sci. 2018 Nov;36(21):2492-2501. doi: 10.1080/02640414.2018.1465723.
Epub
2018 Apr 19.
PMID- 33837592
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20210719
LR - 20210719
IS - 1600-0838 (Electronic)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 31
IP - 8
DP - 2021 Aug
TI - Functional and molecular adaptations of quadriceps and hamstring muscles to
blood
flow restricted training in patients with ACL rupture.
PG - 1636-1646
LID - 10.1111/sms.13968 [doi]
AB - Effects of low-load blood flow restricted (LL-BFR) training remain unexplored
in
patients with ACL rupture. Our hypothesis was that LL-BFR training triggers
augmented gains in knee muscle strength and size, which are paralleled with
transcriptional responses of hypoxia-regulated genes and myokines. Eighteen
volunteers (age 37.5 ± 9 years) planned for ACL reconstruction, participated
in
the study. Twelve were divided between BFR group, performing 9 sessions of
LL-BFR
exercise, and SHAM-BFR group performing equal training with sham vascular
occlusion. Six subjects served as a control for muscle biopsy analysis.
Cross-sectional area (CSA) and isokinetic strength of knee muscles were
assessed
before and after the training. Change in CSA(quad) was significantly
(p < 0.01)
larger in BFR (4.9%) compared with SHAM-BFR (1.3%). Similarly, change in peak
torque of knee extensors was significantly (p < 0.05) larger in BFR (14%)
compared with SHAM-BFR (-1%). The decrease in fatigue index of knee extensors
(6%) was larger (p < 0.01) in BFR than in SHAM-BFR (2%). mRNA expression of
HIF-1α in the vastus lateralis was reduced (p < 0.05) in SHAM-BFR, while
VEGF-A
mRNA tended to be higher in BFR. The mRNA expression of myostatin and its
receptor were reduced (p < 0.05) in the semitendinosus after both types of
training. Expression of IL-6, its receptors IL-6Rα and gp130, as well as
musclin
were similar in control and training groups. In conclusion, our results show
augmented strength and endurance of knee extensors but less of the flexors.
LL-BFR training is especially effective for conditioning of knee extensors in
this population.
CI - © 2021 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
FAU - Kacin, Alan
AU - Kacin A
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8241-2997
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of
Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
AD - Institute of Pathophysiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
FAU - Drobnič, Matej
AU - Drobnič M
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University Medical Centre Ljubljana,
Ljubljana,
Slovenia.
AD - Chair of Orthopedics, Medical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana,
Slovenia.
FAU - Marš, Tomaž
AU - Marš T
AD - Institute of Pathophysiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
FAU - Miš, Katarina
AU - Miš K
AD - Institute of Pathophysiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
FAU - Petrič, Maja
AU - Petrič M
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of
Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
FAU - Weber, Daša
AU - Weber D
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of
Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
FAU - Tomc Žargi, Tina
AU - Tomc Žargi T
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of
Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
FAU - Martinčič, David
AU - Martinčič D
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University Medical Centre Ljubljana,
Ljubljana,
Slovenia.
AD - Chair of Orthopedics, Medical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana,
Slovenia.
FAU - Pirkmajer, Sergej
AU - Pirkmajer S
AD - Institute of Pathophysiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana,
Ljubljana, Slovenia.
LA - eng
GR - J7-8276/Slovenian Research Agency/
GR - L3-5509/Slovenian Research Agency/
GR - P3-0043/Slovenian Research Agency/
GR - 20170143/University Medical Centre Ljubljana/
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210426
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Adaptation, Physiological
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*physiopathology/*rehabilitation/surgery
MH - Constriction
MH - Female
MH - Hamstring Muscles/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Muscle Strength/*physiology
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/*physiology
MH - Regional Blood Flow/*physiology
MH - Resistance Training/*methods
MH - Single-Blind Method
MH - Tourniquets
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL rupture
OT - HIF-1α
OT - blood flow restricted exercise
OT - clinical trial
OT - hamstring muscles
OT - muscle ischemia and hypoxia
OT - myokines
OT - quadriceps muscle
EDAT- 2021/04/11 06:00
MHDA- 2021/07/20 06:00
CRDT- 2021/04/10 06:07
PHST- 2021/03/01 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2021/03/26 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/04/11 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/07/20 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/04/10 06:07 [entrez]
AID - 10.1111/sms.13968 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2021 Aug;31(8):1636-1646. doi: 10.1111/sms.13968.
Epub
2021 Apr 26.
PMID- 29058022
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20181015
LR - 20181113
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 26
IP - 7
DP - 2018 Jul
TI - Neuromuscular exercises prevent severe knee injury in adolescent team
handball
players.
PG - 1901-1908
LID - 10.1007/s00167-017-4758-5 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: Team handball is associated with a high risk of severe knee injury
that
needs to be reduced, particularly at the youth level. The purpose of this
study
was to show how an injury-prevention programme effectively reduces severe
knee
injury in adolescent team handball players. METHODS: Of 23 adolescent
handball
teams of both sexes, 13 were randomly allocated into the intervention group
(168
players) and 10 into the control group (111 players). Players of the
intervention
group regularly participated in an injury-prevention programme for one
season.
Handball exposure and sustained injuries were documented for both groups on a
monthly basis. The primary outcome parameter of the injury-prevention
programme
was the incidence of severe knee injury. RESULTS: Of the 279 included
players, 68
(24%) sustained 82 injuries yielding an overall incidence of 1.85 injuries
per
1000 h handball exposure (intervention group: 50 injuries/incidence:
1.90/1000 h;
control group: 32 injuries/incidence: 1.78/1000 h). Knee injury was the
second
most frequent injury in adolescent team handball. The primary outcome
parameter,
severe knee injury occurred significantly more often in the control group
[mean
age (SD) 15.1 (1.0), injury incidence 0.33/1000 h] than in the intervention
group
[mean age (SD) 14.9 (0.9), injury incidence 0.04/1000 h]. The odds ratio was
0.11
(95% CI 0.01-0.90), p = 0.019. Other injuries to the lower extremities showed
no
significant difference between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Frequent
neuromuscular exercises prevent severe knee injury in adolescent team
handball
players and should thus be included in the practical routine as well as in
the
education of team coaches.
FAU - Achenbach, Leonard
AU - Achenbach L
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9053-0624
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg,
Franz-Josef-Strauss Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg, Germany.
leonard.achenbach@ukr.de.
FAU - Krutsch, Volker
AU - Krutsch V
AD - Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Paracelsus Medical
University, General Hospital Nuremberg, Nuremberg, Germany.
FAU - Weber, Johannes
AU - Weber J
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg,
Franz-Josef-Strauss Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg, Germany.
FAU - Nerlich, Michael
AU - Nerlich M
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg,
Franz-Josef-Strauss Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg, Germany.
FAU - Luig, Patrick
AU - Luig P
AD - Department of Sports Injury Prevention, VBG, German Statutory Accident
Insurance
for the Administrative Sector, Hamburg, Germany.
FAU - Loose, Oliver
AU - Loose O
AD - Clinic of Paediatric Surgery, Clinic St. Hedwig, Regensburg, Germany.
FAU - Angele, Peter
AU - Angele P
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg,
Franz-Josef-Strauss Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg, Germany.
FAU - Krutsch, Werner
AU - Krutsch W
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg,
Franz-Josef-Strauss Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg, Germany.
LA - eng
GR - 300,00€/Bayerischer Handball Verband / Bavarian Handball Federation/
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20171020
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/epidemiology/*prevention & control
MH - *Exercise
MH - Exercise Therapy
MH - Female
MH - Germany/epidemiology
MH - Humans
MH - Incidence
MH - Knee Injuries/epidemiology/*prevention & control
MH - Lower Extremity
MH - Male
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Sports
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Adolescent
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - Handball
OT - Injury
OT - Knee
OT - Prevention
OT - Team handball
EDAT- 2017/10/24 06:00
MHDA- 2018/10/16 06:00
CRDT- 2017/10/24 06:00
PHST- 2017/05/02 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/10/11 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/10/24 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/10/16 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2017/10/24 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-017-4758-5 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-017-4758-5 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2018 Jul;26(7):1901-1908. doi:
10.1007/s00167-017-4758-5. Epub 2017 Oct 20.
PMID- 28245853
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180305
LR - 20181113
IS - 1745-6215 (Electronic)
IS - 1745-6215 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 1
DP - 2017 Feb 28
TI - A neuromuscular exercise programme versus standard care for patients with
traumatic anterior shoulder instability: study protocol for a randomised
controlled trial (the SINEX study).
PG - 90
LID - 10.1186/s13063-017-1830-x [doi]
LID - 90
AB - BACKGROUND: Anterior shoulder dislocation is a common injury and may have
considerable impact on shoulder-related quality of life (QoL). If not
warranted
for initial stabilising surgery, patients are mostly left with little to no
post-traumatic rehabilitation. This may be due to lack of evidence-based
exercise
programmes. In similar, high-impact injuries (e.g. anterior cruciate ligament
tears in the knee) neuromuscular exercise has shown large success in
improving
physical function and QoL. Thus, the objective of this trial is to compare a
nonoperative neuromuscular exercise shoulder programme with standard care in
patients with traumatic anterior shoulder dislocations (TASD).
METHODS/DESIGN:
Randomised, assessor-blinded, controlled, multicentre trial. Eighty patients
with
a TASD will be recruited from three orthopaedic departments in Denmark.
Patients
with primary or recurrent anterior shoulder dislocations due to at least one
traumatic event will be randomised to 12 weeks of either a standardised,
individualised or physiotherapist-supervised neuromuscular shoulder exercise
programme or standard care (self-managed shoulder exercise programme).
Patients
will be stratified according to injury status (primary or recurrent). Primary
outcome will be change from baseline to 12 weeks in the patient-reported QoL
outcome questionnaire, the Western Ontario Shoulder Instability Index (WOSI).
DISCUSSION: This trial will be the first study to compare the efficacy and
safety
of two different nonoperative exercise treatment strategies for patients with
TASD. Moreover, this is also the first study to investigate nonoperative
treatment effects in patients with recurrent shoulder dislocations. Lastly,
this
study will add knowledge to the shared decision-making process of treatment
strategies for clinical practice. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov,
identifier: NCT02371928 . Registered on 9 February 2015 at the National
Institutes of Health Clinical Trials Protocol Registration System.
FAU - Eshoj, Henrik
AU - Eshoj H
AD - Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of
Southern
Denmark, Odense, Denmark. heshoj@health.sdu.dk.
AD - Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of
Southern
Denmark, Campusvej 55, 5230, Odense M, Denmark. heshoj@health.sdu.dk.
AD - Odense Quality of Life Research Center, Department of Haematology, Odense
University Hospital, Odense, Denmark. heshoj@health.sdu.dk.
FAU - Rasmussen, Sten
AU - Rasmussen S
AD - Department of Clinical Medicine, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark.
AD - Orthopaedic Surgery Research Unit, Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg,
Denmark.
FAU - Frich, Lars Henrik
AU - Frich LH
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Odense University Hospital,
Odense,
Denmark.
FAU - Hvass, Inge
AU - Hvass I
AD - Shoulder Sector, Orthopedic Department, South-West Jutland Hospital, Esbjerg,
Denmark.
FAU - Christensen, Robin
AU - Christensen R
AD - Musculoskeletal Statistics Unit, The Parker Institute, Bispebjerg and
Frederiksberg Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Jensen, Steen Lund
AU - Jensen SL
AD - Shoulder Sector, Orthopaedic Department, Aalborg University Hospital, Farsoe,
Denmark.
FAU - Søndergaard, Jens
AU - Søndergaard J
AD - Research Unit of General Practice, Institute of Public Health, University of
Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
FAU - Søgaard, Karen
AU - Søgaard K
AD - Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of
Southern
Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
FAU - Juul-Kristensen, Birgit
AU - Juul-Kristensen B
AD - Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of
Southern
Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
AD - Institute of Occupational Therapy, Physiotherapy and Radiography, Department
of
Health Sciences, Bergen University College, Bergen, Norway.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT02371928
PT - Journal Article
PT - Multicenter Study
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20170228
PL - England
TA - Trials
JT - Trials
JID - 101263253
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Clinical Decision-Making
MH - Clinical Protocols
MH - Denmark
MH - Disability Evaluation
MH - Exercise Therapy/adverse effects/*methods
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/diagnosis/physiopathology/*therapy
MH - Quality of Life
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Recurrence
MH - Research Design
MH - Shoulder Dislocation/diagnosis/physiopathology/*therapy
MH - Shoulder Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Surveys and Questionnaires
MH - Time Factors
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC5331774
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Dislocation
OT - Instability
OT - Neuromuscular exercise
OT - Nonoperative treatment
OT - Physiotherapy
OT - Shoulder
EDAT- 2017/03/02 06:00
MHDA- 2018/03/06 06:00
CRDT- 2017/03/02 06:00
PHST- 2016/10/31 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/02/08 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/03/02 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2017/03/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/03/06 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1186/s13063-017-1830-x [pii]
AID - 1830 [pii]
AID - 10.1186/s13063-017-1830-x [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Trials. 2017 Feb 28;18(1):90. doi: 10.1186/s13063-017-1830-x.
PMID- 36104145
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230525
LR - 20230525
IS - 2044-6055 (Electronic)
IS - 2044-6055 (Linking)
VI - 12
IP - 9
DP - 2022 Sep 14
TI - Evaluation of an injury prevention programme (Prep-to-Play) in women and
girls
playing Australian Football: design of a pragmatic, type III, hybrid
implementation-effectiveness, stepped-wedge, cluster randomised controlled
trial.
PG - e062483
LID - 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062483 [doi]
LID - e062483
AB - INTRODUCTION: Due to the increase in participation and risk of anterior
cruciate
ligament (ACL) injuries and concussion in women's Australian Football, an
injury
prevention programme (Prep-to-Play) was codesigned with consumers (eg,
coaches,
players) and stakeholders (eg, the Australian Football League). The impact of
supported and unsupported interventions on the use of Prep-to-Play (primary
aim)
and injury rates (secondary aim) will be evaluated in women and girls playing
community Australian Football. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This stepped-wedge,
cluster
randomised controlled trial will include ≥140 teams from U16, U18 or senior
women's competitions. All 10 geographically separated clusters (each
containing
≥14 teams) will start in the control (unsupported) phase and be randomised to
one
of five dates (or 'wedges') during the 2021 or 2022 season to sequentially
transition to the intervention (supported Prep-to-Play), until all teams
receive
the intervention. Prep-to-Play includes four elements: a neuromuscular
training
warm-up, contact-focussed football skills (eg, tackling), strength exercises
and
education (eg, technique cues). When transitioning to supported
interventions,
study physiotherapists will deliver a workshop to coaches and player leaders
on
how to use Prep-to-Play, attend team training at least two times and provide
ongoing support. In the unsupported phase, team will continue usual routines
and
may freely access available Prep-to-Play resources online (eg, posters and
videos
about the four elements), but without additional face-to-face support.
Outcomes
will be evaluated throughout the 2021 and 2022 seasons (~14 weeks per
season).
PRIMARY OUTCOME: use of Prep-to-Play will be reported via a team designate
(weekly) and an independent observer (five visits over the two seasons) and
defined as the team completing 75% of the programme, two-thirds (67%) of the
time. SECONDARY OUTCOMES: injuries will be reported by the team sports
trainer
and/or players. Injury definition: any injury occurring during a football
match
or training that results in: (1) being unable to return to the field of play
for
that match or (2) missing ≥ one match. Outcomes in the supported and
unsupported
phases will be compared using a generalised linear mixed model adjusting for
clustering and time. Due to the type III hybrid implementation-effectiveness
design, the study is powered to detect a improvement in use of Prep-to-Play
and a
reduction in ACL injuries. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: La Trobe University
Ethics
Committee (HREC 20488) approved. Coaches provided informed consent to receive
the
supported intervention and players provided consent to be contacted if they
sustained a head or knee injury. Results will be disseminated through partner
organisations, peer-reviewed publications and scientific conferences. TRIAL
REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04856241.
CI - © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No
commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
FAU - Patterson, Brooke E
AU - Patterson BE
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6570-5429
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia B.Patterson@latrobe.edu.au.
FAU - Donaldson, Alex
AU - Donaldson A
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-4764-2361
AD - Centre for Sport and Social Impact, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria,
Australia.
FAU - Cowan, Sallie M
AU - Cowan SM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-3545-5094
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - King, Matthew G
AU - King MG
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-0470-5924
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Barton, Christian G
AU - Barton CG
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-3545-5094
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - McPhail, Steven M
AU - McPhail SM
AD - Australian Centre for Health Service Innovation, Queensland University of
Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
AD - Digital Health and Informatics, Metro South Hospital and Health Service,
Woolloongabba, Queensland, Australia.
FAU - Hagglund, Martin
AU - Hagglund M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6883-1471
AD - Unit of Physiotherapy, Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences,
Linkopings Universitet, Linkoping, Östergötland, Sweden.
FAU - White, Nicole M
AU - White NM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9292-0773
AD - Australian Centre for Health Service Innovation, Queensland University of
Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
FAU - Lannin, Natasha A
AU - Lannin NA
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-2066-8345
AD - Department of Neuroscience, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Ackerman, Ilana N
AU - Ackerman IN
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6028-1612
AD - School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Clayton,
Victoria, Australia.
AD - Monash-Cabrini Department of Musculoskeletal Health and Clinical
Epidemiology,
Cabrini Health, Malvern, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Dowsey, Michelle M
AU - Dowsey MM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9708-5308
AD - Department of Surgery, St.Vincent's Hospital, University of Melbourne,
Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Hemming, Karla
AU - Hemming K
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-2226-6550
AD - Institute of Applied Health Research, University of Birmingham, Birmingham,
UK.
FAU - Makdissi, Michael
AU - Makdissi M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-0334-7133
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Culvenor, Adam G
AU - Culvenor AG
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9491-0264
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Mosler, Andrea B
AU - Mosler AB
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-7353-2583
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Bruder, Andrea M
AU - Bruder AM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5422-5756
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Choong, Jessica
AU - Choong J
AD - Medibank Better Health Foundation, Medibank Private, Melbourne, Victoria,
Australia.
FAU - Livingstone, Nicole
AU - Livingstone N
AD - Australian Football League, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Elliott, Rachel K
AU - Elliott RK
AD - Australian Football League, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Nikolic, Anja
AU - Nikolic A
AD - Australian Physiotherapy Association, Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Fitzpatrick, Jane
AU - Fitzpatrick J
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9578-026X
AD - Faculty of Medicine Dentistry and Health Sciences, University of Melbourne,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
AD - Australasian College of Sport and Exercise Physicians, Melbourne, Victoria,
Australia.
FAU - Crain, Jamie
AU - Crain J
AD - Sports Medicine Australia, Albert Park, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Haberfield, Melissa J
AU - Haberfield MJ
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6366-0896
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Roughead, Eliza A
AU - Roughead EA
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Birch, Elizabeth
AU - Birch E
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Lampard, Sarah J
AU - Lampard SJ
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Bonello, Christian
AU - Bonello C
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Chilman, Karina L
AU - Chilman KL
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Crossley, Kay M
AU - Crossley KM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5892-129X
AD - Australian IOC Research Centre, La Trobe University Sport and Exercise
Medicine
Research Centre, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT04856241
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20220914
PL - England
TA - BMJ Open
JT - BMJ open
JID - 101552874
SB - IM
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - *Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Australia
MH - *Knee Injuries
MH - *Team Sports
PMC - PMC9476120
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - knee
OT - musculoskeletal disorders
OT - orthopaedic sports trauma
OT - sports medicine
COIS- Competing interests: MM is employed by the AFL as Chief Medical Officer. The
partner organisations assisted with the intervention design (AFL) and
participant
recruitment (AFL, AFL Victoria, Medibank, APA) but will not be involved in
collecting, managing, analysing the data or deciding to submit for
publication.
EDAT- 2022/09/15 06:00
MHDA- 2022/09/17 06:00
CRDT- 2022/09/14 21:13
PHST- 2022/09/14 21:13 [entrez]
PHST- 2022/09/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/09/17 06:00 [medline]
AID - bmjopen-2022-062483 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062483 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - BMJ Open. 2022 Sep 14;12(9):e062483. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062483.
PMID- 36011685
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220829
LR - 20220909
IS - 1660-4601 (Electronic)
IS - 1661-7827 (Print)
IS - 1660-4601 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 16
DP - 2022 Aug 15
TI - Comparing the Effects of Differential Learning, Self-Controlled Feedback, and
External Focus of Attention Training on Biomechanical Risk Factors of
Anterior
Cruciate Ligament (ACL) in Athletes: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
LID - 10.3390/ijerph191610052 [doi]
LID - 10052
AB - The current study aimed to compare the possible effects of differential
learning
strategy, self-controlled feedback, and external focus of attention on
kinetic
and kinematic risk factors of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury in
athletes. Forty-eight male athletes from three sports of handball, volleyball
and
basketball were selected for this study and were randomly divided into four
groups: differential learning (n = 12), self-control feedback (n = 12),
external
focus (n = 12), and control (n = 12) group. All groups followed the
intervention
for eight weeks with three sessions per week. Data were analyzed by means of
4 ×
2 repeated measures ANOVA followed by post hoc comparison (Bonferroni) at the
significance level of p ≤ 0.05. A significant group × time interaction and
the
main effect of time was found for most kinetic and kinematic variables. The
main
effect of the group was significant only at the knee abduction angle.
Differential learning and external focus of attention methods positively
reduced
the kinetic and kinematic variables that are considered risk factors for ACL
injury. However, the effect sizes (Cohen's d) for the changes in most of the
variables were larger for the differential learning group. Tailoring the
boundary
conditions that are based on the manipulations created in the exercise
through
variability and variety of movements associated with differential learning
methods rather than repeating movements could reduce the risk of ACL injury.
FAU - Ghanati, Hadi Abbaszadeh
AU - Ghanati HA
AD - Department of Biomechanics and Sport Injury, Faculty of Physical Education
and
Sports Sciences, Kharazmi University, Tehran 1571914911, Iran.
FAU - Letafatkar, Amir
AU - Letafatkar A
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-5612-8340
AD - Department of Biomechanics and Sport Injury, Faculty of Physical Education
and
Sports Sciences, Kharazmi University, Tehran 1571914911, Iran.
FAU - Shojaedin, Sadredin
AU - Shojaedin S
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9428-685X
AD - Department of Biomechanics and Sport Injury, Faculty of Physical Education
and
Sports Sciences, Kharazmi University, Tehran 1571914911, Iran.
FAU - Hadadnezhad, Malihe
AU - Hadadnezhad M
AD - Department of Biomechanics and Sport Injury, Faculty of Physical Education
and
Sports Sciences, Kharazmi University, Tehran 1571914911, Iran.
FAU - Schöllhorn, Wolfgang I
AU - Schöllhorn WI
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-4558-1991
AD - Department for Training and Movement Science, Johannes Gutenberg-University
Mainz, 55122 Mainz, Germany.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220815
PL - Switzerland
TA - Int J Environ Res Public Health
JT - International journal of environmental research and public health
JID - 101238455
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletes
MH - Attention
MH - *Basketball
MH - Feedback
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Male
MH - Risk Factors
MH - *Self-Control
PMC - PMC9408147
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament injury
OT - biomechanics
OT - motor learning strategy
OT - variability
COIS- The authors declare that have no conflict of interest relevant to the content
of
this study.
EDAT- 2022/08/27 06:00
MHDA- 2022/08/30 06:00
CRDT- 2022/08/26 01:18
PHST- 2022/07/14 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/08/08 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2022/08/12 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/08/26 01:18 [entrez]
PHST- 2022/08/27 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/08/30 06:00 [medline]
AID - ijerph191610052 [pii]
AID - ijerph-19-10052 [pii]
AID - 10.3390/ijerph191610052 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Aug 15;19(16):10052. doi:
10.3390/ijerph191610052.
PMID- 35162447
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220228
LR - 20220531
IS - 1660-4601 (Electronic)
IS - 1661-7827 (Print)
IS - 1660-4601 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 3
DP - 2022 Jan 27
TI - Acute Effects of Tissue Flossing Coupled with Functional Movements on Knee
Range
of Motion, Static Balance, in Single-Leg Hop Distance, and Landing
Stabilization
Performance in Female College Students.
LID - 10.3390/ijerph19031427 [doi]
LID - 1427
AB - Flexibility, specifically that in the amplitude of sagittal-plane range of
motion
(ROM), can improve jump landing patterns and reduce the potential for sports
injury. The use of floss bands (FLOSS) reportedly increases joint range of
motion
(ROM) in the shoulder, ankle, and elbow joints. However, little research on
the
effectiveness of FLOSS on the knee joint has been conducted. This study
investigated the effects of FLOSS on knee ROM, static balance, single-leg-hop
distance, and landing stabilization performance in women. This study had a
crossover design. Twenty active female college students without
musculoskeletal
disorders were randomly assigned to receive a FLOSS intervention or elastic
bandage (ELA) control on their dominant knees. The participants underwent
FLOSS
and ELA activities on two occasions with 48 h of rest between both sets of
activities. The outcomes were flexibility of the quadriceps and hamstrings,
how
long one could maintain a single-leg stance (with and without eyes closed),
distance on a single-leg triple hop, and score on the Landing Error Scoring
System (LESS); these outcomes were evaluated at preintervention and
postintervention (immediately following band removal and 20 min later). After
the
FLOSS intervention, the participants' hamstring flexibility improved
significantly (immediately after: p = 0.001; 20 min later: p = 0.002), but
their
quadricep flexibility did not. In addition, FLOSS use did not result in worse
single-leg stance timing, single-leg triple-hop distance, or landing
stabilization performance relative to ELA use. Compared with the ELA control,
the
FLOSS intervention yielded significantly better LESS at 20 min
postintervention
(p = 0.032), suggesting that tissue flossing can improve landing stability.
In
conclusion, the application of FLOSS to the knee improves hamstring
flexibility
without impeding static balance, and improves single-leg hop distance and
landing
stabilization performance in women for up to 20 min. Our findings elucidate
the
effects of tissue flossing on the knee joint and may serve as a reference for
physiotherapists or athletic professionals in athletic practice settings.
FAU - Wu, Szu-Ying
AU - Wu SY
AD - Department of Chinese Medicine, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital,
Kaohsiung
833, Taiwan.
AD - School of Chinese Medicine for Post-Baccalaureate, I-Shou University,
Kaohsiung
824, Taiwan.
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung 807,
Taiwan.
FAU - Tsai, Yi-Hsun
AU - Tsai YH
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7408-824X
AD - Department of Chinese Medicine, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital,
Kaohsiung
833, Taiwan.
FAU - Wang, Yu-Ting
AU - Wang YT
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8313-4204
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung 807,
Taiwan.
FAU - Chang, Wen-Dien
AU - Chang WD
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5546-5874
AD - Department of Sport Performance, National Taiwan University of Sport,
Taichung
404, Taiwan.
FAU - Lee, Chia-Lun
AU - Lee CL
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6544-2999
AD - Center for Physical and Health Education, National Sun Yat-Sen University,
Kaohsiung 804, Taiwan.
FAU - Kuo, Chun-En Aurea
AU - Kuo CA
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-1563-8651
AD - Department of Chinese Medicine, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital,
Kaohsiung
833, Taiwan.
AD - School of Chinese Medicine for Post-Baccalaureate, I-Shou University,
Kaohsiung
824, Taiwan.
FAU - Chang, Nai-Jen
AU - Chang NJ
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8408-8334
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University, Kaohsiung 807,
Taiwan.
AD - Ph.D. Program in Biomedical Engineering, College of Medicine, Kaohsiung
Medical
University, Kaohsiung 807, Taiwan.
AD - Department of Medical Research, Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital,
Kaohsiung
807, Taiwan.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20220127
PL - Switzerland
TA - Int J Environ Res Public Health
JT - International journal of environmental research and public health
JID - 101238455
SB - IM
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Cross-Over Studies
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee
MH - Knee Joint
MH - *Leg
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Students
PMC - PMC8835546
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - exercise
OT - flexibility
OT - injury prevention
OT - myofascial release
OT - sports performance
COIS- The authors declare no conflict of interest.
EDAT- 2022/02/16 06:00
MHDA- 2022/03/01 06:00
CRDT- 2022/02/15 01:14
PHST- 2021/11/29 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/01/15 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2022/01/24 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/02/15 01:14 [entrez]
PHST- 2022/02/16 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/03/01 06:00 [medline]
AID - ijerph19031427 [pii]
AID - ijerph-19-01427 [pii]
AID - 10.3390/ijerph19031427 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Jan 27;19(3):1427. doi:
10.3390/ijerph19031427.
PMID- 31626021
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20200403
LR - 20200403
IS - 1537-7385 (Electronic)
IS - 0894-9115 (Print)
IS - 0894-9115 (Linking)
VI - 98
IP - 11
DP - 2019 Nov
TI - Electromyography Evaluation of Bodyweight Exercise Progression in a Validated
Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Rehabilitation Program: A Cross-Sectional
Study.
PG - 998-1004
LID - 10.1097/PHM.0000000000001232 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: Regaining muscle strength is essential for successful outcome
after
anterior cruciate ligament injury, why progression of exercise intensity in
anterior cruciate ligament injury rehabilitation is important. Thus, this
study
evaluated hamstring and quadriceps muscle activity progression during
bodyweight
exercises used in a validated anterior cruciate ligament injury
rehabilitation
program. DESIGN: The study design involved single-occasion repeated measures
in a
randomized manner. Twenty healthy athletes (nine females) performed nine
bodyweight exercises (three exercises per rehabilitation phase). Surface
electromyography signals were recorded for hamstring (semitendinosus, biceps
femoris) and quadriceps (vastus medialis, vastus lateralis) muscles and
normalized to isometric peak electromyography. RESULTS: Hamstring muscle
activity
did not increase from one rehabilitation phase to the next, ranging between
8%
and 45% normalized electromyography for semitendinosus and 11% and 54%
normalized
electromyography for biceps femoris. Only one exercise (Cook hip lift)
exhibited
hamstring muscle activities more than 60% normalized electromyography. By
contrast, quadriceps muscle activity increased, and late-phase exercises
displayed high normalized electromyography (vastus lateralis >60% and vastus
medialis >90% normalized electromyography). CONCLUSIONS: The examined
bodyweight
exercises did not progress for hamstring muscle activity but successfully
progressed for quadriceps muscles activity. This study highlights the need
for
consensus on exercise selection when targeting the hamstring muscles in the
rehabilitation after anterior cruciate ligament injury.
FAU - Zebis, Mette Kreutzfeldt
AU - Zebis MK
AD - From the Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health and Technology,
University College Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark (MKZ, MHS, CHA, JBC, PJ,
AHK);
Team Danmark, The Elite Sport Organization of Denmark, Brøndby, Denmark
(HBL);
Human Movement Analysis Laboratory, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
Copenhagen
University Hospital, Amager-Hvidovre, Hvidovre, Denmark (JB); National
Research
Centre for the Working Environment, Copenhagen, Denmark (LLA); and Sport
Sciences, Department of Health Science and Technology, Aalborg University,
Aalborg, Denmark (LLA).
FAU - Sørensen, Mads Hjorth
AU - Sørensen MH
FAU - Lauridsen, Hanne Bloch
AU - Lauridsen HB
FAU - Bencke, Jesper
AU - Bencke J
FAU - Andersen, Christoffer Højnicke
AU - Andersen CH
FAU - Carlsbæk, Jacob B
AU - Carlsbæk JB
FAU - Jespersen, Patrick
AU - Jespersen P
FAU - Kallehauge, Anders H
AU - Kallehauge AH
FAU - Andersen, Lars Louis
AU - Andersen LL
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Am J Phys Med Rehabil
JT - American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation
JID - 8803677
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*physiopathology/*rehabilitation
MH - *Body Weight
MH - Cross-Sectional Studies
MH - Denmark
MH - Electromyography/*methods
MH - Exercise/physiology
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Hamstring Muscles/physiopathology
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Strength/physiology
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/physiopathology
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC6824507
EDAT- 2019/10/19 06:00
MHDA- 2020/04/04 06:00
CRDT- 2019/10/19 06:00
PHST- 2019/10/19 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2019/10/19 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2020/04/04 06:00 [medline]
AID - 00002060-201911000-00009 [pii]
AID - PHM50890 [pii]
AID - 10.1097/PHM.0000000000001232 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2019 Nov;98(11):998-1004. doi:
10.1097/PHM.0000000000001232.
PMID- 28173788
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180221
LR - 20181113
IS - 1471-2474 (Electronic)
IS - 1471-2474 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 1
DP - 2017 Feb 7
TI - Real-time optimized biofeedback utilizing sport techniques (ROBUST): a study
protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
PG - 71
LID - 10.1186/s12891-017-1436-1 [doi]
LID - 71
AB - BACKGROUND: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in female athletes lead
to
a variety of short- and long-term physical, financial, and psychosocial
ramifications. While dedicated injury prevention training programs have shown
promise, ACL injury rates remain high as implementation has not become
widespread. Conventional prevention programs use a combination of resistance,
plyometric, balance and agility training to improve high-risk biomechanics
and
reduce the risk of injury. While many of these programs focus on reducing
knee
abduction load and posture during dynamic activity, targeting hip extensor
strength and utilization may be more efficacious, as it is theorized to be an
underlying mechanism of injury in adolescent female athletes. Biofeedback
training may complement traditional preventive training, but has not been
widely
studied in connection with ACL injuries. We hypothesize that biofeedback may
be
needed to maximize the effectiveness of neuromuscular prophylactic
interventions,
and that hip-focused biofeedback will improve lower extremity biomechanics to
a
larger extent than knee-focused biofeedback during dynamic sport-specific
tasks
and long-term movement strategies. METHODS: This is an assessor-blind,
randomized
control trial of 150 adolescent competitive female (9-19 years) soccer
players.
Each participant receives 3x/week neuromuscular preventive training and
1x/week
biofeedback, the mode depending on their randomization to one of 3
biofeedback
groups (hip-focused, knee-focused, sham). The primary aim is to assess the
impact
of biofeedback training on knee abduction moments (the primary biomechanical
predictor of future ACL injury) during double-leg landings, single-leg
landings,
and unplanned cutting. Testing will occur immediately before the training
intervention, immediately after the training intervention, and 6 months after
the
training intervention to assess the long-term retention of modified
biomechanics.
Secondary aims will assess performance changes, including hip and core
strength,
power, and agility, and the extent to which maturation effects biofeedback
efficacy. DISCUSSION: The results of the Real-time Optimized Biofeedback
Utilizing Sport Techniques (ROBUST) trial will help complement current
preventive
training and may lead to clinician-friendly methods of biofeedback to
incorporate
into widespread training practices. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Date of publication
in
ClinicalTrials.gov: 20/04/2016. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02754700 .
FAU - Taylor, Jeffrey B
AU - Taylor JB
AD - Department of Physical Therapy, Congdon School of Health Sciences, High Point
University, High Point, NC, 27268, USA. jtaylor@highpoint.edu.
FAU - Nguyen, Anh-Dung
AU - Nguyen AD
AD - Department of Athletic Training, Congdon School of Health Sciences, High
Point
University, High Point, NC, USA.
FAU - Paterno, Mark V
AU - Paterno MV
AD - Division of Occupational Therapy and Physical Therapy, Division of Sports
Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical
Center, University of Cincinnati School of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
FAU - Huang, Bin
AU - Huang B
AD - Division of Biostatistics and Epidemiology; Department of Pediatrics,
Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati School of
Medicine,
Cincinnati, OH, USA.
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
AD - Department of Physical Therapy, Congdon School of Health Sciences, High Point
University, High Point, NC, 27268, USA.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT02754700
GR - R21 AR069873/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
DEP - 20170207
PL - England
TA - BMC Musculoskelet Disord
JT - BMC musculoskeletal disorders
JID - 100968565
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/diagnosis/etiology/*rehabilitation
MH - Biofeedback, Psychology/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena/physiology
MH - Child
MH - *Computer Systems
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Single-Blind Method
MH - Soccer/*injuries/physiology
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC5297146
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - Biofeedback
OT - Hip extensor
OT - Injury prevention
OT - Knee abduction
EDAT- 2017/02/09 06:00
MHDA- 2018/02/22 06:00
CRDT- 2017/02/09 06:00
PHST- 2017/01/06 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/01/27 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/02/09 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2017/02/09 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/02/22 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1186/s12891-017-1436-1 [pii]
AID - 1436 [pii]
AID - 10.1186/s12891-017-1436-1 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2017 Feb 7;18(1):71. doi: 10.1186/s12891-017-1436-
1.
PMID- 18658019
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20081021
LR - 20220411
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 36
IP - 8
DP - 2008 Aug
TI - A randomized controlled trial to prevent noncontact anterior cruciate
ligament
injury in female collegiate soccer players.
PG - 1476-83
LID - 10.1177/0363546508318188 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Neuromuscular and proprioceptive training programs can decrease
noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries; however, they may be
difficult to
implement within an entire team or the community at large. HYPOTHESIS: A
simple
on-field alternative warm-up program can reduce noncontact ACL injuries.
STUDY
DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial (clustered); Level of evidence, 1.
METHODS:
Participating National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I women's
soccer
teams were assigned randomly to intervention or control groups. Intervention
teams were asked to perform the program 3 times per week during the fall 2002
season. All teams reported athletes' participation in games and practices and
any
knee injuries. Injury rates were calculated based on athlete exposures,
expressed
as rate per 1000 athlete exposures. A z statistic was used for rate ratio
comparisons. RESULTS: Sixty-one teams with 1435 athletes completed the study
(852
control athletes; 583 intervention). The overall anterior cruciate ligament
injury rate among intervention athletes was 1.7 times less than in control
athletes (0.199 vs 0.340; P = .198; 41% decrease). Noncontact anterior
cruciate
ligament injury rate among intervention athletes was 3.3 times less than in
control athletes (0.057 vs 0.189; P = .066; 70% decrease). No anterior
cruciate
ligament injuries occurred among intervention athletes during practice versus
6
among control athletes (P = .014). Game-related noncontact anterior cruciate
ligament injury rates in intervention athletes were reduced by more than half
(0.233 vs 0.564; P = .218). Intervention athletes with a history of anterior
cruciate ligament injury were significantly less likely to suffer another
anterior cruciate ligament injury compared with control athletes with a
similar
history (P = .046 for noncontact injuries). CONCLUSION: This program, which
focuses on neuromuscular control, appears to reduce the risk of anterior
cruciate
ligament injuries in collegiate female soccer players, especially those with
a
history of anterior cruciate ligament injury.
FAU - Gilchrist, Julie
AU - Gilchrist J
AD - Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention, National Center for Injury
Prevention & Control, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, Atlanta, GA
30341, USA. jrg7@cdc.gov
FAU - Mandelbaum, Bert R
AU - Mandelbaum BR
FAU - Melancon, Heidi
AU - Melancon H
FAU - Ryan, George W
AU - Ryan GW
FAU - Silvers, Holly J
AU - Silvers HJ
FAU - Griffin, Letha Y
AU - Griffin LY
FAU - Watanabe, Diane S
AU - Watanabe DS
FAU - Dick, Randall W
AU - Dick RW
FAU - Dvorak, Jiri
AU - Dvorak J
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PT - Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2009 Apr;37(4):e1; author reply e1-2. PMID: 19336616
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Case-Control Studies
MH - *Exercise Therapy
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Outcome Assessment, Health Care
MH - Soccer/*injuries
EDAT- 2008/07/29 09:00
MHDA- 2008/10/22 09:00
CRDT- 2008/07/29 09:00
PHST- 2008/07/29 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/10/22 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/07/29 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 36/8/1476 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546508318188 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2008 Aug;36(8):1476-83. doi: 10.1177/0363546508318188.
PMID- 27977300
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170306
LR - 20181202
IS - 1938-162X (Electronic)
IS - 1062-6050 (Print)
IS - 1062-6050 (Linking)
VI - 52
IP - 1
DP - 2017 Jan
TI - Preventive Neuromuscular Training for Young Female Athletes: Comparison of
Coach
and Athlete Compliance Rates.
PG - 58-64
LID - 10.4085/1062-6050-51.12.20 [doi]
AB - CONTEXT: Fewer athletic injuries and lower anterior cruciate ligament
injury
incidence rates were noted in studies of neuromuscular-training (NMT)
interventions that had high compliance rates. However, several groups have
demonstrated that preventive NMT interventions were limited by low compliance
rates. OBJECTIVE: To descriptively analyze coach and athlete compliance
with
preventive NMT and compare the compliance between study arms as well as among
school levels and sports. DESIGN: Randomized, controlled clinical trial.
SETTING: Middle and high school athletic programs. Participants or Other
Participants: A total of 52 teams, comprising 547 female athletes, were
randomly
assigned to the experimental or control group and followed for 1 athletic
season.
INTERVENTION(S): The experimental group (n = 30 teams [301 athletes]: 12
basketball teams [125 athletes], 6 soccer teams [74 athletes], and 12
volleyball
teams [102 athletes]) participated in an NMT program aimed at reducing
traumatic
knee injuries through a trunk-stabilization and hip-strengthening program.
The
control group (n = 22 teams [246 athletes]: 11 basketball teams [116
athletes], 5
soccer teams [68 athletes], and 6 volleyball teams [62 athletes]) performed a
resistive rubber-band running program. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Compliance
with
the assigned intervention protocols (3 times per week during the preseason
[mean
= 3.4 weeks] and 2 times per week in-season [mean = 11.9 weeks] of coaches
[coach
compliance] and athletes [athlete compliance]) was measured descriptively.
Using
an independent t test, we compared coach and athlete compliance between the
study
arms. A 2-way analysis of variance was calculated to compare differences
between
coach and athlete compliance by school level (middle and high schools) and
sport
(basketball, soccer, and volleyball). RESULTS: The protocols were completed
at a
mean rate of 1.3 ± 1.1 times per week during the preseason and 1.2 ± 0.5
times
per week in-season. A total of 88.4% of athletes completed 2/3 of the
intervention sessions. Coach compliance was greater in the experimental group
than in the control group (P = .014). Coach compliance did not differ by
sport
but was greater at the high school than the middle school (P = .001) level.
Athlete compliance did not differ by study arm, sport, or school level.
CONCLUSIONS: Athletes received instruction in about 50% of each protocol.
Nearly
90% of athletes performed more than 2/3 of the assigned NMT interventions.
The
assigned intervention was performed more often in the experimental arm
compared
with the control arm. Coaches at the high school level complied with the
given
protocol more than middle school coaches did. Athletes complied well with the
protocol, but coaches did not, especially at the middle school level.
FAU - Sugimoto, Dai
AU - Sugimoto D
AD - The Micheli Center for Sports Injury Prevention, Waltham, MA.
AD - Division of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopedics, Boston Children's
Hospital, MA.
FAU - Mattacola, Carl G
AU - Mattacola CG
AD - Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Health Sciences, University
of
Kentucky, Lexington.
FAU - Bush, Heather M
AU - Bush HM
AD - Department of Biostatistics, College of Public Health, University of
Kentucky,
Lexington.
FAU - Thomas, Staci M
AU - Thomas SM
AD - The SPORT Center, Division of Sports Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Medical Center, OH.
FAU - Foss, Kim D Barber
AU - Foss KD
AD - The SPORT Center, Division of Sports Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Medical Center, OH.
FAU - Myer, Gregory D
AU - Myer GD
AD - The Micheli Center for Sports Injury Prevention, Waltham, MA.
AD - The SPORT Center, Division of Sports Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Medical Center, OH.
AD - Departments of Pediatrics and Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Cincinnati,
OH.
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
FAU - Hewett, Timothy E
AU - Hewett TE
AD - Mayo Clinic Biomechanics Laboratories and Sports Medicine Center, Departments
of
Orthopedics, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Physiology & Biomedical
Engineering, Mayo Clinic, Rochester and Minneapolis, MN.
LA - eng
GR - R01 AR055563/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01 AR056259/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R21 AR065068/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - U01 AR067997/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Multicenter Study
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20161215
PL - United States
TA - J Athl Train
JT - Journal of athletic training
JID - 9301647
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletes/statistics & numerical data
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Basketball/injuries
MH - Child
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Patient Compliance
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - School Health Services
MH - Schools/statistics & numerical data
MH - Soccer/injuries
MH - Sports Medicine/statistics & numerical data
MH - Volleyball/injuries
PMC - PMC5293519
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - athletic injuries
OT - high school
OT - knee
OT - middle school
EDAT- 2016/12/16 06:00
MHDA- 2017/03/07 06:00
CRDT- 2016/12/16 06:00
PHST- 2016/12/16 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/03/07 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2016/12/16 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.4085/1062-6050-51.12.20 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Athl Train. 2017 Jan;52(1):58-64. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-51.12.20. Epub
2016
Dec 15.
PMID- 16282579
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20060721
LR - 20220408
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 34
IP - 3
DP - 2006 Mar
TI - The effects of plyometric versus dynamic stabilization and balance training
on
lower extremity biomechanics.
PG - 445-55
AB - BACKGROUND: Neuromuscular training that includes both plyometric and dynamic
stabilization/balance exercises alters movement biomechanics and reduces ACL
injury risk in female athletes. The biomechanical effects of plyometric and
balance training utilized separately are unknown. HYPOTHESIS: A protocol that
includes balance training without plyometric training will decrease coronal
plane
hip, knee, and ankle motions during landing, and plyometric training will not
affect coronal plane measures. The corollary hypothesis was that plyometric
and
balance training effects on knee flexion are dependent on the movement task
tested. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: Eighteen high
school
female athletes participated in 18 training sessions during a 7-week period.
The
plyometric group (n = 8) performed maximum-effort jumping and cutting
exercises,
and the balance group (n = 10) used dynamic stabilization/ balance exercises
during training. Lower extremity kinematics were measured during the drop
vertical jump and the medial drop landing before and after training using 3D
motion analysis techniques. RESULTS: During the drop vertical jump, both
plyometric and balance training reduced initial contact (P = .002), maximum
hip
adduction angle (P = .015), and maximum ankle eversion angle (P = .020).
During
the medial drop landing, both groups decreased initial contact (P = .002) and
maximum knee abduction angle (P = .038). Plyometric training increased
initial
contact knee flexion (P = .047) and maximum knee flexion (P = .031) during
the
drop vertical jump, whereas the balance training increased maximum knee
flexion
(P = .005) during the medial drop landing. CONCLUSION: Both plyometric and
balance training can reduce lower extremity valgus measures. Plyometric
training
affects sagittal plane kinematics primarily during a drop vertical jump,
whereas
balance training affects sagittal plane kinematics during single-legged drop
landing. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Both plyometric and dynamic
stabilization/balance
exercises should be included in injury-prevention protocols.
FAU - Myer, Gregory D
AU - Myer GD
AD - Cincinnati Children's Hospital, 3333 Burnet Avenue, MLC 10001, Cincinnati, OH
45229, USA. greg.myer@chmcc.org
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
FAU - McLean, Scott G
AU - McLean SG
FAU - Hewett, Timothy E
AU - Hewett TE
LA - eng
GR - R01-AR049735-01A1/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
DEP - 20051110
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - *Joint Instability
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Ohio
MH - Physical Fitness/physiology
MH - *Postural Balance
MH - Wounds and Injuries/prevention & control
EDAT- 2005/11/12 09:00
MHDA- 2006/07/22 09:00
CRDT- 2005/11/12 09:00
PHST- 2005/11/12 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/07/22 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/11/12 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546505281241 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546505281241 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2006 Mar;34(3):445-55. doi: 10.1177/0363546505281241. Epub
2005
Nov 10.
PMID- 33729214
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20211011
LR - 20230814
IS - 1528-1132 (Electronic)
IS - 0009-921X (Print)
IS - 0009-921X (Linking)
VI - 479
IP - 8
DP - 2021 Aug 1
TI - Is There a Disadvantage to Early Physical Therapy After Multiligament Surgery
for
Knee Dislocation? A Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial.
PG - 1725-1736
LID - 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001729 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Multiligament knee injuries, though rare, can be profoundly
disabling. Surgeons disagree about when to initiate rehabilitation after
surgical
reconstruction due to the conflicting priorities of postoperative stability
and
motion. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Does early or late initiation of physical
therapy
after multiligament knee surgery result in fewer postoperative manipulations?
(2)
Does early versus late physical therapy compromise stability postoperatively?
(3)
Does early initiation of physical therapy result in improved patient-reported
outcomes, as measured by the Multi-ligament Quality of Life (ML-QOL) score?
METHODS: Between 2011 and 2016, 36 adults undergoing multiligament repair or
reconstruction were prospectively enrolled in a randomized controlled trial
and
randomized 1:1 to either early rehabilitation or late rehabilitation after
surgery. Eligibility included those with an injury to the posterior cruciate
ligament (PCL) and at least one other ligament, as well as the ability to
participate in early rehabilitation. Patients who were obtunded or unable to
adhere to the protocols for other reasons were excluded. Early rehabilitation
consisted of initiating a standardized physical therapy protocol on
postoperative
day 1 involving removal of the extension splint for quadriceps activation and
ROM
exercises. Late rehabilitation consisted of full-time immobilization in an
extension splint for 3 weeks. Following this 3-week period, both groups
engaged
in the same standardized physical therapy protocol. All surgical
reconstructions
were performed at a single center by one of two fellowship-trained sports
orthopaedic surgeons, and all involved allograft Achilles tendon PCL
reconstruction. When possible, hamstring autograft was used for ACL and
medial
collateral ligament reconstructions, whereas lateral collateral ligament and
posterolateral reconstruction was performed primarily with allograft. The
primary
outcome was the number of patients undergoing manipulation during the first 6
months. Additional outcomes added after trial registration were patient-
reported
quality of life scores (ML-QOL) at 1 year and an objective assessment of
laxity
through a physical examination and stress radiographs at 1 year. One patient
from
each group was not assessed for laxity or ROM at 1 year, and one patient from
each group did not complete the ML-QOL questionnaires. No patient crossover
was
observed. RESULTS: With the numbers available, there was no difference in the
use
of knee manipulation during the first 6 months between the rehabilitation
groups:
1 of 18 patients in the early group and 4 of 18 patients in the late group (p
=
0.34). Similarly, there were no differences in knee ROM, stability, or
patient-reported quality of life (ML-QOL) between the groups at 1 year.
CONCLUSION: With the numbers available in this study, we were unable to
demonstrate a difference between early and late knee rehabilitation with
regard
to knee stiffness, laxity, or patient-reported quality of life outcomes. The
results of this small, randomized pilot study suggest a potential role for
early
rehabilitation after multiligament reconstruction for knee dislocation, which
should be further explored in larger multi-institutional studies. LEVEL OF
EVIDENCE: Level II, therapeutic study.
CI - Copyright © 2021 by the Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons.
FAU - Hoit, Graeme
AU - Hoit G
AD - Department of Surgery, Division of Orthopaedics, University of Toronto,
Toronto,
ON, Canada.
FAU - Rubacha, Matthew
AU - Rubacha M
AD - University Hospital and Clinics, Lafayette, LA, USA.
FAU - Chahal, Jaskarndip
AU - Chahal J
AD - Department of Surgery, Division of Orthopaedics, University of Toronto,
Toronto,
ON, Canada.
AD - Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, ON,
Canada.
FAU - Khan, Ryan
AU - Khan R
AD - Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto,
ON,
Canada.
FAU - Ravi, Bheeshma
AU - Ravi B
AD - Department of Surgery, Division of Orthopaedics, University of Toronto,
Toronto,
ON, Canada.
FAU - Whelan, Daniel B
AU - Whelan DB
AD - Department of Surgery, Division of Orthopaedics, University of Toronto,
Toronto,
ON, Canada.
AD - Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, St. Michael's Hospital, Unity Health,
Toronto
ON, Canada.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT01296750
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Clin Orthop Relat Res
JT - Clinical orthopaedics and related research
JID - 0075674
SB - IM
CIN - Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2021 Aug 1;479(8):1737-1739. PMID: 33944810
MH - Adult
MH - Arthroplasty/methods/*rehabilitation
MH - Combined Modality Therapy
MH - Exercise Therapy
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Dislocation/physiopathology/*rehabilitation/surgery
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology/surgery
MH - Ligaments, Articular/injuries/surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Patient Reported Outcome Measures
MH - *Physical Therapy Modalities
MH - Pilot Projects
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/injuries/surgery
MH - Postoperative Care/*methods
MH - Quality of Life
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - *Time Factors
MH - Treatment Outcome
PMC - PMC8277250
COIS- Each author certifies that neither he nor she, nor any member of his or her
immediate family, has funding or commercial associations (consultancies,
stock
ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangements, etc.) that might
pose
a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted article. All ICMJE
Conflict of Interest Forms for authors and Clinical Orthopaedics and Related
Research® editors and board members are on file with the publication and can
be
viewed on request.
EDAT- 2021/03/18 06:00
MHDA- 2021/10/12 06:00
CRDT- 2021/03/17 12:28
PHST- 2020/11/17 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/02/15 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/03/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/10/12 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/03/17 12:28 [entrez]
AID - 00003086-202108000-00016 [pii]
AID - CORR-D-20-01943 [pii]
AID - 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001729 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2021 Aug 1;479(8):1725-1736. doi:
10.1097/CORR.0000000000001729.
PMID- 34952186
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220608
LR - 20220830
IS - 1526-3231 (Electronic)
IS - 0749-8063 (Linking)
VI - 38
IP - 6
DP - 2022 Jun
TI - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Patellar Tendon Autograft Fixation at 0° Versus
30°
Results in Improved Activity Scores and a Greater Proportion of Patients
Achieving the Minimal Clinical Important Difference For Knee Injury and
Osteoarthritis Outcome Score Pain: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
PG - 1969-1977
LID - S0749-8063(21)01109-9 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.arthro.2021.12.018 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The aim of the current study was to determine the effect of the knee
flexion angle (KFA) during tibial anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) graft
fixation
on patient-reported outcomes, graft stability, extension loss, and
reoperation
after anatomic single-bundle ACL reconstruction. METHODS: All 169 included
patients (mean age 28.5 years, 65% male) were treated with anatomic single-
bundle
ACL reconstruction using patellar tendon autograft and were randomized to
tibial
fixation of the ACL graft at either 0° (n = 85) or 30° (n = 84). The primary
outcome was the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) 2 years
after
surgery. Secondary outcomes were the Marx Activity Scale (MAS), the rate of
reoperation, and physical examination findings at 1 year, including KT-1000
and
side-to-side differences in knee extension. RESULTS: The follow-up rate was
82%
(n = 139) for the primary outcome. Graft failure rate at 2 years was 1% (n =
2, 1
per group). ACL tibial graft fixation at 0° or 30° did not have a significant
effect on KOOS scores at 2 years after ACLR. Patients whose graft was fixed
at a
knee flexion angle of 0° had greater scores on the MAS (mean 9.6 95%
confidence
interval [CI] 8.5 to 10.6, versus 8.0, 95% CI 6.9 to 9.1; P = .04), and a
greater
proportion achieved the minimal clinical important difference (MCID) for the
KOOS
pain subdomain (94% versus 81%; P = .04). There was no significant difference
in
knee extension loss, KT-1000 measurements, or reoperation between the 2
groups.
CONCLUSION: In the setting of anatomic single-bundle ACLR using patellar
tendon
autograft and anteromedial portal femoral drilling, there was no difference
in
KOOS scores between patients fixed at 0° and 30°. Patient fixed in full
extension
did demonstrate higher activity scores at 2 years after surgery and a greater
likelihood of achieving the MCID for KOOS pain. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II,
prospective randomized trial.
CI - Copyright © 2021 Arthroscopy Association of North America. Published by
Elsevier
Inc. All rights reserved.
FAU - Chahal, Jaskarndip
AU - Chahal J
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address:
jchahal@utosm.com.
FAU - Whelan, Daniel B
AU - Whelan DB
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Hoit, Graeme
AU - Hoit G
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Theodoropoulos, John
AU - Theodoropoulos J
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Ajrawat, Prabjit
AU - Ajrawat P
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Betsch, Marcel
AU - Betsch M
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Docter, Shgufta
AU - Docter S
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Dwyer, Tim
AU - Dwyer T
AD - University of Toronto Orthopaedics Sports Medicine, Woman's College Hospital,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT03875807
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20211222
PL - United States
TA - Arthroscopy
JT - Arthroscopy : the journal of arthroscopic & related surgery : official
publication of the Arthroscopy Association of North America and the
International
Arthroscopy Association
JID - 8506498
SB - IM
CIN - Arthroscopy. 2022 Jun;38(6):1978-1979. PMID: 35660189
CIN - J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2022 Aug 17;104(16):1505. PMID: 35700077
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Autografts
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - Male
MH - *Osteoarthritis
MH - Pain
MH - *Patellar Ligament/transplantation
MH - Prospective Studies
EDAT- 2021/12/25 06:00
MHDA- 2022/06/09 06:00
CRDT- 2021/12/24 20:11
PHST- 2021/04/16 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/12/06 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2021/12/12 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/12/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/06/09 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/12/24 20:11 [entrez]
AID - S0749-8063(21)01109-9 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.arthro.2021.12.018 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Arthroscopy. 2022 Jun;38(6):1969-1977. doi: 10.1016/j.arthro.2021.12.018.
Epub
2021 Dec 22.
PMID- 35685654
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220613
LR -20220716
IS -1555-4317 (Electronic)
IS -1555-4309 (Print)
IS -1555-4309 (Linking)
VI -2022
DP -2022
TI -Computed Tomography Imaging under Artificial Intelligence Reconstruction
Algorithm Used in Recovery of Sports Injury of the Knee Anterior Cruciate
Ligament.
PG - 1199841
LID - 10.1155/2022/1199841 [doi]
LID - 1199841
AB - This study aimed to analyze the influence of artificial intelligence (AI)
reconstruction algorithm on computed tomography (CT) images and the
application
of CT image analysis in the recovery of knee anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
sports injuries. A total of 90 patients with knee trauma were selected for
enhanced CT scanning and randomly divided into three groups. Group A used the
filtered back projection (FBP) reconstruction algorithm, and the tube voltage
was
set to 120 kV during CT scanning. Group B used the iDose4 reconstruction
algorithm, and the tube voltage was set to 120 kV during CT scanning. In
group C,
the iDose4 reconstruction algorithm was used, and the tube voltage was set to
100 kV during CT scanning. The noise, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR),
carrier-to-noise ratio (CNR), CT dose index volume (CTDI), dose length
product
(DLP), and effective radiation dose (ED) of the three groups of CT images
were
compared. The results showed that the noise of groups B and C was smaller
than
that of group A (P < 0.05), and the SNR and CNR of groups B and C were higher
than those of group A. The images of patients in group A with the FBP
reconstruction algorithm were noisy, and the boundaries were not clear. The
noise
of the images obtained by the iDose4 reconstruction algorithm in groups B and
C
was improved, and the image resolution was also higher. The agreement between
arthroscopy and CT scan results was 96%. Therefore, the iterative
reconstruction
algorithm of iDose4 can improve the image quality. It was of important value
in
the diagnosis of knee ACL sports injury.
CI - Copyright © 2022 Heng Zhang et al.
FAU - Zhang, Heng
AU - Zhang H
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5588-063X
AD - College of Mathematics and Statistics, Southwest University, Chongqing
400715,
China.
FAU - Zheng, Haiming
AU - Zheng H
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7955-7391
AD - Department of Military Logistics, Army Logistics Academy, Chongqing 401331,
China.
FAU - Deng, Ren
AU - Deng R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-0267-4503
AD - Department of Military Logistics, Army Logistics Academy, Chongqing 401331,
China.
FAU - Luo, Kaiwen
AU - Luo K
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5497-5186
AD - Department of Military Logistics, Army Logistics Academy, Chongqing 401331,
China.
FAU - Duan, Shukai
AU - Duan S
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7582-9273
AD - College of Artificial Intelligence, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715,
China.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20220528
PL - England
TA - Contrast Media Mol Imaging
JT - Contrast media & molecular imaging
JID - 101286760
SB - IM
MH - Algorithms
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
MH - Artificial Intelligence
MH - *Athletic Injuries/diagnostic imaging
MH - Humans
MH - Radiation Dosage
MH - Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods
PMC - PMC9167137
COIS- The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
EDAT- 2022/06/11 06:00
MHDA- 2022/06/14 06:00
CRDT- 2022/06/10 02:33
PHST- 2022/02/09 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/04/23 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2022/04/26 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/06/10 02:33 [entrez]
PHST- 2022/06/11 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/06/14 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1155/2022/1199841 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Contrast Media Mol Imaging. 2022 May 28;2022:1199841. doi:
10.1155/2022/1199841.
eCollection 2022.
PMID- 26231151
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180305
LR - 20181202
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 25
IP - 8
DP - 2017 Aug
TI - The effectiveness of Pilates for partial anterior cruciate ligament injury.
PG - 2357-2364
LID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3718-1 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: This study explored the effects of Pilates on the muscle strength,
function, and instability of patients with partial anterior cruciate ligament
(ACL) injuries in situations in which a non-surgical treatment option is
preferred. METHODS: Fifty participants 20-45 years of age who were diagnosed
with
isolated ACL injuries were included in the study. The participants were
randomly
assigned to either the Pilates exercise group (n = 24) or the control group
(n = 26). The subjects in the Pilates exercise group performed basic mat
exercises that focused on the muscle strength and flexibility of the lower
limbs
and core muscles during each class session, which met three times per week
for
12 weeks. The control group did not receive any treatment or home exercise
programme. All patients were evaluated using the Lysholm Knee Scale, the
Cincinnati Knee Rating System, and isokinetic quadriceps and hamstring
strength.
Patient satisfaction regarding improvement in knee stability was assessed
using
the Global Rating of Change scale. RESULTS: The Pilates group experienced
significant improvement over the control group as measured by the difference
in
quadriceps strength at 12 weeks (p = 0.03). Both groups showed some clinical
change over time, but the Pilates group improved for all outcome measurements
at
the 12-week follow-up, and the control group only improved for functional
outcomes. Patient satisfaction with the level of knee stability based on the
Global Rating of Change scale was higher in the Pilates group than in the
control
group. CONCLUSION: Although both groups exhibited improvements in knee
strength
and functional outcomes, the results suggest that Pilates is a superior
management approach over a control treatment for increasing quadriceps
strength
in participants with partial ACL injury. Pilates may provide clinicians a
novel
option when choosing a treatment for a partial ACL injury. Further study is
needed to determine whether certain subgroups of individuals might achieve an
added benefit with this approach. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II.
FAU - Çelik, Derya
AU - Çelik D
AD - Division of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Faculty of Health Sciences,
Istanbul University, 34740, Bakırkoy, Istanbul, Turkey. ptderya@hotmail.com.
FAU - Turkel, Nilgun
AU - Turkel N
AD - Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology, Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul
University, 34093, Fatih/Çapa, Istanbul, Turkey.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20150801
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/physiopathology/*therapy
MH - *Exercise Movement Techniques
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Muscle Strength/physiology
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/physiopathology
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL rupture
OT - Conservative treatment
OT - Copers
OT - Isolated ACL rupture
EDAT- 2015/08/02 06:00
MHDA- 2018/03/06 06:00
CRDT- 2015/08/02 06:00
PHST- 2015/05/10 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2015/07/13 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2015/08/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/03/06 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2015/08/02 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3718-1 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-015-3718-1 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2017 Aug;25(8):2357-2364. doi:
10.1007/s00167-015-3718-1. Epub 2015 Aug 1.
PMID- 35488724
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230112
LR - 20230217
IS - 1554-527X (Electronic)
IS - 0736-0266 (Print)
IS - 0736-0266 (Linking)
VI - 41
IP - 2
DP - 2023 Feb
TI - Human synovial fluid interleukin-6, but not type II collagen breakdown,
positively correlated with pain after anterior cruciate ligament injury and
reconstruction.
PG - 300-306
LID - 10.1002/jor.25355 [doi]
AB - Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury initiates a biochemical cascade
thought
to contribute to the onset and progression of posttraumatic osteoarthritis
(PTOA). Interleukin-1ß (IL-1ß), IL-6, and C-telopeptide fragments of type II
collagen (CTX-II) are implicated in joint inflammation and cartilage
degradation
following ACL injury; however, their association with pain is still being
explored. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the associations between
synovial fluid concentrations of IL-1ß, IL-6, and CTX-II with pain following
ACL
injury and reconstruction. We hypothesized that greater IL-1ß, IL-6, and CTX-
II
would correlate with greater Pain Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores. This
was a
secondary analysis of 23 patients (mean age = 18.4 years, BMI = 27.4, 13
females/10 males) with acute ACL tears who participated in a pilot randomized
trial. Synovial fluid and VAS scores were collected on the day of initial
presentation, at ACL reconstruction, and 1 and 4 weeks after surgery.
Synovial
fluid concentrations of IL-1ß, IL-6, and CTX-II were assessed using enzyme-
linked
immunoabsorbent assays, and repeated measures correlations were used to
assess
the relationships between pain and synovial IL-1ß, IL-6, or CTX-II after ACL
injury and reconstruction. Pain was positively correlated with synovial fluid
IL-6 concentrations (r = 0.52, p < 0.001); however, pain was inversely
correlated
with CTX-II (r = -0.39, p = 0.002). IL-1ß had no significant correlation with
pain. Statement of clinical relevance: PTOA has been described as a "silent
killer" and these results suggest that early PTOA may have pro-inflammatory
pathways that are not primarily associated with pain but still lead to
progressive cartilage loss.
CI - © 2022 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
FAU - Sullivan, Breanna
AU - Sullivan B
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-5733-0487
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of
Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Stone, Austin V
AU - Stone AV
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9406-7884
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of
Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Conley, Caitlin E W
AU - Conley CEW
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9874-5200
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of
Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Hunt, Emily R
AU - Hunt ER
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard
Medical
School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
FAU - Lattermann, Christian
AU - Lattermann C
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-3930-9633
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard
Medical
School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
FAU - Jacobs, Cale A
AU - Jacobs CA
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9300-5550
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of
Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
LA - eng
GR - UL1 TR001998/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States
GR - UL1TR001998/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20220513
PL - United States
TA - J Orthop Res
JT - Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic
Research Society
JID - 8404726
RN - 0 (Interleukin-6)
RN - 0 (Collagen Type II)
RN - 0 (Biomarkers)
SB - IM
MH - Male
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/complications/surgery/metabolism
MH - Interleukin-6/metabolism
MH - Synovial Fluid/metabolism
MH - Collagen Type II/metabolism
MH - Biomarkers/metabolism
MH - *Osteoarthritis/metabolism
MH - Pain
PMC - PMC9617804
MID - NIHMS1803524
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - biomarker
OT - cartilage
OT - knee
OT - pain
EDAT- 2022/05/01 06:00
MHDA- 2023/01/13 06:00
PMCR- 2024/02/01
CRDT- 2022/04/30 04:52
PHST- 2022/04/25 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2021/12/20 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/04/28 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2024/02/01 00:00 [pmc-release]
PHST- 2022/05/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/01/13 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/04/30 04:52 [entrez]
AID - 10.1002/jor.25355 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Orthop Res. 2023 Feb;41(2):300-306. doi: 10.1002/jor.25355. Epub 2022 May
13.
PMID- 34009795
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220630
LR - 20220706
IS - 1536-3724 (Electronic)
IS - 1050-642X (Linking)
VI - 32
IP - 4
DP - 2022 Jul 1
TI - Coach Education Improves Adherence to Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury
Prevention Programs: A Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial.
PG - 348-354
LID - 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000936 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of an educational workshop on adherence to
neuromuscular training (NMT) among high-school coaches. DESIGN:
Cluster-randomized controlled trial. SETTING: High school. PARTICIPANTS: A
total
of 21 teams in 8 high schools (unit of randomization) were randomized to the
intervention or control group. Twelve boys' and 9 girls' teams in a variety
of
sports were enrolled. INTERVENTION: Coaches in the intervention group
participated in a 60-minute education workshop to teach effective
implementation
of a NMT program and also received print materials. Coaches in the control
group
received the same print materials. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Eight data
collectors
were trained to observe each team's practice/game 2 to 3 times a week. They
completed a study questionnaire to identify the NMT exercise and whether the
coach (1) delivered exercise instructions and (2) provided alignment cues
(both
yes/no). RESULTS: A total of 399 practices/games were observed over 2
seasons. A
greater proportion of coaches in the intervention group provided alignment
cues
to correct improper technique compared with the control group {difference =
0.04
[95% confidence interval (CI), 0.01-0.07], P = 0.006}. There was a similar
proportion of coaches in the intervention and control groups who provided
exercise instructions [difference = 0.01 (95% CI, -0.02 to 0.04), P = 0.44].
More
coaches in the intervention group completed a full NMT program [OR = 4.62
(1.22,
17.50), P = 0.02]. CONCLUSIONS: Coach education can improve adherence to a
NMT
program and delivery of alignment cues. Coaches should receive in-person
training
on NMT and how to deliver alignment cues to their athletes while performing
the
exercises.
CI - Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
FAU - Ling, Daphne I
AU - Ling DI
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York.
AD - Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medical College, New
York, New York.
FAU - Boyle, Caroline
AU - Boyle C
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York.
FAU - Schneider, Brandon
AU - Schneider B
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York.
FAU - Janosky, Joseph
AU - Janosky J
AD - Sports Safety Program, Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special
Surgery,
New York, New York; and.
FAU - Kinderknecht, James
AU - Kinderknecht J
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York.
FAU - Marx, Robert G
AU - Marx RG
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York.
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York,
New
York.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210429
PL - United States
TA - Clin J Sport Med
JT - Clinical journal of sport medicine : official journal of the Canadian Academy
of
Sport Medicine
JID - 9103300
SB - IM
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletes
MH - *Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - *Soccer/injuries
MH - *Sports
COIS- R. G. Marx reports personal fees from the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery,
personal fees from the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery Evidence Based
Orthopedics, personal fees from Springer and Demos Health, and personal fees
from
Mend, outside the submitted work. The remaining authors report no conflicts
of
interest.
EDAT- 2021/05/20 06:00
MHDA- 2022/07/01 06:00
CRDT- 2021/05/19 16:19
PHST- 2020/10/14 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/03/25 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/05/20 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/07/01 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/05/19 16:19 [entrez]
AID - 00042752-202207000-00003 [pii]
AID - 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000936 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin J Sport Med. 2022 Jul 1;32(4):348-354. doi:
10.1097/JSM.0000000000000936.
Epub 2021 Apr 29.
PMID- 24959871
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160614
LR - 20220330
IS - 1543-3072 (Electronic)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 2
DP - 2015 May 1
TI - Real-time biofeedback to target risk of anterior cruciate ligament injury: a
technical report for injury prevention and rehabilitation.
LID - 2013-0138 [pii]
LID - 10.1123/jsr.2013-0138 [doi]
AB - CONTEXT: Biofeedback training enables an athlete to alter biomechanical and
physiological function by receiving biomechanical and physiological data
concurrent with or immediately after a task. OBJECTIVE: To compare the
effects of
2 different modes of real-time biofeedback focused on reducing risk factors
related to anterior cruciate ligament injury. DESIGN: Randomized crossover
study
design. SETTING: Biomechanics laboratory and sports medicine center.
PARTICIPANTS: Female high school soccer players (age 14.8 ± 1.0 y, height
162.6 ±
6.8 cm, mass 55.9 ± 7.0 kg; n = 4). INTERVENTION: A battery of kinetic- or
kinematic-based real-time biofeedback during repetitive double-leg squats.
MAIN
OUTCOME MEASURES: Baseline and posttraining drop vertical jumps were
collected to
determine if either feedback method improved high injury risk landing
mechanics.
RESULTS: Maximum knee abduction moment and angle during the landing was
significantly decreased after kinetic-focused biofeedback (P = .04). The
reduced
knee abduction moment during the drop vertical jumps after kinematic-focused
biofeedback was not different (P = .2). Maximum knee abduction angle was
significantly decreased after kinetic biofeedback (P < .01) but only showed a
trend toward reduction after kinematic biofeedback (P = .08). CONCLUSIONS:
The
innovative biofeedback employed in the current study reduced knee abduction
load
and posture from baseline to posttraining during a drop vertical jump.
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
AD - Dept of Physical Therapy, High Point University, High Point, NC.
FAU - DiCesare, Christopher A
AU - DiCesare CA
FAU - Myer, Gregory D
AU - Myer GD
FAU - Hewett, Timothy E
AU - Hewett TE
LA - eng
GR - R01-AR049735/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01-AR05563/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01-AR056259/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R03-AR057551/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
DEP - 20150520
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiology
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biofeedback, Psychology/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Cross-Over Studies
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Kinetics
MH - Knee Injuries/etiology/physiopathology/*prevention & control/rehabilitation
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Posture
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Soccer/*injuries/physiology
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Weight-Bearing
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - biofeedback training
OT - ACL injury prevention
OT - knee abduction biomechanics
OT - female athlete
OT - valgus posture
EDAT- 2014/06/25 06:00
MHDA- 2016/06/15 06:00
CRDT- 2014/06/25 06:00
PHST- 2014/06/25 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/06/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/06/15 06:00 [medline]
AID - 2013-0138 [pii]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.2013-0138 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2015 May 20;24(2):2013-0138. doi: 10.1123/jsr.2013-0138.
Print
2015 May 1.
PMID- 20097928
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100614
LR - 20220330
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 38
IP - 3
DP - 2010 Mar
TI - No difference in knee function or prevalence of osteoarthritis after
reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament with 4-strand hamstring
autograft versus patellar tendon-bone autograft: a randomized study with 10-
year
follow-up.
PG - 448-54
LID - 10.1177/0363546509350301 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: The choice of different graft types and surgical techniques used
when
reconstructing a torn anterior cruciate ligament may influence the long-term
prevalence of osteoarthritis and functional outcomes. HYPOTHESIS: There are
no
differences in the prevalence of knee osteoarthritis or knee function in
patients
undergoing reconstruction of a torn anterior cruciate ligament with 4-strand
hamstring autograft versus patellar tendon-bone autograft. STUDY DESIGN:
Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. METHODS: Seventy-two
patients
with subacute or chronic rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament were
randomly
assigned to autograft reconstruction with 4-strand gracilis and
semitendinosus
tendon (HAM) (N = 37) or with patellar tendon-bone (PTB) (N = 35) from the
ipsilateral side. Outcome measurements were the Cincinnati knee score,
single-legged hop tests, isokinetic muscle strength tests, pain, knee joint
laxity test (KT-1000 arthrometer), and a radiologic evaluation (Kellgren and
Lawrence) at 10-year follow-up. RESULTS: At 10 years, 57 patients (79%) were
eligible for evaluation-29 in the HAM group and 28 in the PTB group. No
differences were found between the 2 graft groups with respect to the
Cincinnati
knee score, the single-legged hop tests, pain, muscle strength measurements,
or
knee joint laxity. Fifty-five percent and 64% of the patients had
osteoarthritis
corresponding to Kellgren and Lawrence grade 2 or more in the HAM and the PTB
groups, respectively (P =.27). For the uninvolved knee, the corresponding
numbers
were 28% and 22% (P = .62). CONCLUSION: At 10 years postoperatively, no
statistically significant differences in clinical outcome between the 2 graft
types were found. The prevalence of osteoarthritis was significantly higher
in
the operated leg than in the contralateral leg, but there were no significant
differences between the 2 groups. The results indicate that the choice of
graft
type after an anterior cruciate ligament injury has minimal influence on the
prevalence of osteoarthritis 10 years after surgery.
FAU - Holm, Inger
AU - Holm I
AD - Division of Rehabilitation, Oslo University Hospital, Rikshospitalet, Oslo,
Norway. inger.holm@rikshospitalet.no
FAU - Oiestad, Britt Elin
AU - Oiestad BE
FAU - Risberg, May Arna
AU - Risberg MA
FAU - Aune, Arne Kristian
AU - Aune AK
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20100123
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Bone-Patellar Tendon-Bone Grafting/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/physiopathology/surgery
MH - Knee/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Injuries/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/*epidemiology/etiology
MH - Patellar Ligament/transplantation
MH - Prevalence
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - *Recovery of Function
MH - Rupture/surgery
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/01/26 06:00
MHDA- 2010/06/15 06:00
CRDT- 2010/01/26 06:00
PHST- 2010/01/26 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/01/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/06/15 06:00 [medline]
AID - 0363546509350301 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546509350301 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2010 Mar;38(3):448-54. doi: 10.1177/0363546509350301. Epub
2010
Jan 23.
PMID- 19561174
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100104
LR - 20220317
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 37
IP - 9
DP - 2009 Sep
TI - Effects of sports injury prevention training on the biomechanical risk
factors of
anterior cruciate ligament injury in high school female basketball players.
PG - 1728-34
LID - 10.1177/0363546509334220 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Female athletes have a higher risk of anterior cruciate ligament
injury than their male counterparts who play at similar levels in sports
involving pivoting and landing. HYPOTHESIS: The competitive female basketball
players who participated in a sports injury prevention training program would
show better muscle strength and flexibility and improved biomechanical
properties
associated with anterior cruciate ligament injury than during the pretraining
period and than posttraining parameters in a control group. STUDY DESIGN:
Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: A total of 22 high school female
basketball
players were recruited and randomly divided into 2 groups (the experimental
group
and the control group, 11 participants each). The experimental group was
instructed in the 6 parts of the sports injury prevention training program
and
performed it during the first 20 minutes of team practice for the next 8
weeks,
while the control group performed their regular training program. Both groups
were tested with a rebound-jump task before and after the 8-week period. A
total
of 21 reflective markers were placed in preassigned positions. In this
controlled
laboratory study, a 2-way analysis of variance (2 x 2) experimental design
was
used for the statistical analysis (P < .05) using the experimental group and
a
testing session as within and between factors, respectively. Post hoc tests
with
Sidak correction were used when significant factor effects and/or
interactions
were observed. RESULTS: A comparison of the experimental group's pretraining
and
posttraining results identified training effects on all strength parameters
(P =
.004 to .043) and on knee flexion, which reflects increased flexibility (P =
.022). The experimental group showed higher knee flexion angles (P = .024),
greater interknee distances (P = .004), lower hamstring-quadriceps ratios (P
=
.023), and lower maximum knee extension torques (P = .043) after training. In
the
control group, no statistical differences were observed between pretraining
and
posttraining findings (P = .084 to .873). At pretraining, no significant
differences were observed between the 2 groups for any parameter (P = .067 to
.784). However, a comparison of the 2 groups after training revealed that the
experimental group had significantly higher knee flexion angles (P = .023),
greater knee distances (P = .005), lower hamstring-quadriceps ratios (P
= .021),
lower maximum knee extension torques (P = .124), and higher maximum knee
abduction torques P (= .043) than the control group. CONCLUSION: The sports
injury prevention training program improved the strength and flexibility of
the
competitive female basketball players tested and biomechanical properties
associated with anterior cruciate ligament injury as compared with
pretraining
parameters and with posttraining parameters in the control group. CLINICAL
RELEVANCE: This injury prevention program could potentially modify the
flexibility, strength, and biomechanical properties associated with ACL
injury
and lower the athlete's risk for injury.
FAU - Lim, Bee-Oh
AU - Lim BO
AD - Sports Science Institute, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.
FAU - Lee, Yong Seuk
AU - Lee YS
FAU - Kim, Jin Goo
AU - Kim JG
FAU - An, Keun Ok
AU - An KO
FAU - Yoo, Jin
AU - Yoo J
FAU - Kwon, Young Hoo
AU - Kwon YH
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20090626
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
EIN - Am J Sports Med. 2011 Mar;39(3):NP1
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Basketball/*injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Education/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Schools
EDAT- 2009/06/30 09:00
MHDA- 2010/01/05 06:00
CRDT- 2009/06/30 09:00
PHST- 2009/06/30 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/06/30 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/01/05 06:00 [medline]
AID - 0363546509334220 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546509334220 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2009 Sep;37(9):1728-34. doi: 10.1177/0363546509334220. Epub
2009
Jun 26.
PMID- 19035430
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090127
LR - 20220331
IS - 0004-3591 (Print)
IS - 0004-3591 (Linking)
VI - 59
IP - 12
DP - 2008 Dec 15
TI - Muscle strength and functional performance in patients with anterior cruciate
ligament injury treated with training and surgical reconstruction or training
only: a two to five-year followup.
PG - 1773-9
LID - 10.1002/art.24066 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To study muscle strength and functional performance in patients
with
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury with or without surgical
reconstruction 2
to 5 years after injury. Good muscle function is important in preventing
early-onset osteoarthritis (OA), but the role of reconstructive surgery in
restoring muscle function is unclear. METHODS: Of 121 patients with ACL
injury
included in a randomized controlled trial on training and surgical
reconstruction
versus training only (the Knee, Anterior cruciate ligament, NON-surgical
versus
surgical treatment [KANON] study, ISRCTN: 84752559), 54 (mean age at followup
30
years, range 20-39, 28% women) were assessed a mean +/- SD of 3 +/- 0.9 years
after injury with reliable, valid, and responsive test batteries for strength
(knee extension, knee flexion, leg press) and hop performance (vertical jump,
one-leg hop, side hop). The Limb Symmetry Index (LSI; injured leg divided by
uninjured and multiplied by 100) value and absolute values were used for
comparisons between groups (analysis of variance). An LSI >or=90% was
considered
normal. RESULTS: There were no differences between the surgical and
nonsurgical
treatment groups in muscle strength or functional performance. Between 44%
and
89% of subjects had normal muscle function in the single tests, and between
44%
and 56% had normal function in the test batteries. CONCLUSION: The lack of
differences between patients treated with training and surgical
reconstruction or
training only indicates that reconstructive surgery is not a prerequisite for
restoring muscle function. Abnormal muscle function, found in approximately
one-third or more of the patients, may be a predictor of future knee OA.
FAU - Ageberg, Eva
AU - Ageberg E
AD - Clinical Sciences Lund, Lund University, Lund, Sweden. eva.ageberg@med.lu.se
FAU - Thomeé, Roland
AU - Thomeé R
FAU - Neeter, Camille
AU - Neeter C
FAU - Silbernagel, Karin Grävare
AU - Silbernagel KG
FAU - Roos, Ewa M
AU - Roos EM
LA - eng
SI - ISRCTN/ISRCTN84752559
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Arthritis Rheum
JT - Arthritis and rheumatism
JID - 0370605
SB - IM
CIN - Arthritis Rheum. 2009 Jun 15;61(6):853; author reply 854. PMID: 19479695
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiology/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Strength/*physiology
MH - *Physical Fitness
MH - Wounds and Injuries/rehabilitation
EDAT- 2008/11/28 09:00
MHDA- 2009/01/28 09:00
CRDT- 2008/11/28 09:00
PHST- 2008/11/28 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/01/28 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/11/28 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1002/art.24066 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Arthritis Rheum. 2008 Dec 15;59(12):1773-9. doi: 10.1002/art.24066.
PMID- 23743581
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20140407
LR - 20211021
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI -21
IP -9
DP -2013 Sep
TI -Association between varus alignment and post-traumatic osteoarthritis after
anterior cruciate ligament injury.
PG - 2040-7
LID - 10.1007/s00167-013-2550-8 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: To investigate the association between varus alignment and
post-traumatic osteoarthritis (OA) after an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
injury. METHODS: One hundred subjects with an acute complete ACL tear were
followed for 15 years. Anterior-posterior radiographs of the tibiofemoral
joint
were obtained with a knee flexion of 20°, and the patellofemoral joint was
examined with skyline view at 50° knee flexion. Joint space narrowing and
osteophytes were graded in the tibiofemoral and patellofemoral joints in the
injured (ACL) and uninjured knee according to the radiographic atlas of the
Osteoarthritis Research Society International. The alignment of the
uninjured,
contralateral knee was measured at follow-up, using full-limb radiographs of
leg
with the knee in full extension. Alignment was expressed as the hip-knee-
ankle
(HKA) angle. Alignment was defined as valgus (HKA ≤178°), neutral (179°-181°)
or
varus (≥182°). RESULTS: Data from 68 subjects were included in the analysis.
Varus alignment of the uninjured knee at follow-up appeared to be associated
with
OA of the injured knee 15 years after an ACL injury (odds ratio (95%
confidence
interval) 3.9 (1.0-15.8, p = 0.052)). CONCLUSIONS: Varus alignment of the
uninjured knee at follow-up may be associated with OA of the injured knee 15
years after an ACL injury. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II.
FAU - Swärd, Per
AU - Swärd P
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Skåne University Hospital and Lund University,
221
85, Lund, Sweden. per.sward@med.lu.se
FAU - Fridén, T
AU - Fridén T
FAU - Boegård, T
AU - Boegård T
FAU - Kostogiannis, I
AU - Kostogiannis I
FAU - Neuman, P
AU - Neuman P
FAU - Roos, H
AU - Roos H
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20130607
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/diagnostic imaging/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Injuries/diagnosis/diagnostic imaging/*therapy
MH - Knee Joint/diagnostic imaging/*physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/*epidemiology/physiopathology/surgery
MH - Radiography
MH - Rupture
MH - Tibial Meniscus Injuries
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2013/06/08 06:00
MHDA- 2014/04/08 06:00
CRDT- 2013/06/08 06:00
PHST- 2013/03/20 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2013/05/27 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2013/06/08 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/06/08 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/04/08 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-013-2550-8 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2013 Sep;21(9):2040-7. doi:
10.1007/s00167-013-2550-8. Epub 2013 Jun 7.
PMID- 19558381
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20101108
LR - 20161125
IS - 1600-0838 (Electronic)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 3
DP - 2010 Jun
TI - Effects of an anterior cruciate ligament injury prevention program on
performance
in adolescent female soccer players.
PG - 394-402
LID - 10.1111/j.1600-0838.2009.00963.x [doi]
AB - Female soccer players are three times more likely to suffer a non-contact
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear compared with male soccer players.
Several
ACL injury prevention programs have been developed and are used to reduce
injury
risk. However, to date there is limited information on how such programs
affect
physical performance. The aim of this randomized controlled study was to
investigate the effects of the Prevent Injury Enhance Performance (PEP)
program
in adolescent female soccer players. Four soccer teams were randomly assigned
to
an intervention (PEP) or control (CON) group and assessed at baseline, 6
weeks,
and 12 weeks on linear sprinting, countermovement jump (CMJ), and two agility
tests. A mixed model factorial ANOVA with repeated measures was used to
assess
for treatment effects on the dependent variables. Improvements in 27.3 and
36.6 m
sprint times (<0.10 s) were evident during the first 6 weeks for PEP, but
reverted back to baseline values by 12 weeks; there were no changes for 9.1
or
18.2 m sprint times in either group. There was no change in the CMJ height
for
PEP; however, there was a decrement at 6 and 12 weeks compared with baseline
in
CON. Performance on the Illinois and pro-agility tests declined in both
groups.
Our findings demonstrate that improvements in linear sprint performance were
small and transient in adolescent female soccer players, and that there was
no
benefit of the PEP program on CMJ or agility performance. ACL injury
prevention
programs designed as a structured warm-up routine seem to lack the necessary
stimulus to enhance athletic performance.
FAU - Vescovi, J D
AU - Vescovi JD
AD - Norman Bethune College, School of Kinesiology and Health Science, York
University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. vescovij@aol.com
FAU - VanHeest, J L
AU - VanHeest JL
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20090623
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Program Evaluation
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Soccer/*injuries
EDAT- 2009/06/30 09:00
MHDA- 2010/11/09 06:00
CRDT- 2009/06/30 09:00
PHST- 2009/06/30 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/06/30 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/11/09 06:00 [medline]
AID - SMS963 [pii]
AID - 10.1111/j.1600-0838.2009.00963.x [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2010 Jun;20(3):394-402. doi:
10.1111/j.1600-0838.2009.00963.x. Epub 2009 Jun 23.
PMID- 26923543
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170920
LR - 20170920
IS - 1600-0838 (Electronic)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 27
IP - 3
DP - 2017 Mar
TI - Effects of perturbation or plyometric training on core control and knee joint
loading in women during lateral movements.
PG - 299-308
LID - 10.1111/sms.12657 [doi]
AB - Deficits in trunk control are argued to increase the risk of knee injuries.
However, no existing training program effectively addresses trunk control
during
lateral movements, such as cutting maneuvers. The purpose of this study was
to
investigate whether a combination of perturbation and plyometric training
(PPT)
would reduce trunk excursions against the new movement direction and reduce
knee
joint moments during lateral movements. Twenty-four active women participated
in
a RCT, where trunk and pelvis kinematics and knee joint moments were measured
during lateral reactive jumps (LRJ) and unanticipated cutting maneuvers
before
and after a 4-week PPT program and compared to a control group. During LRJ,
trunk
rotation away from the new movement direction was reduced (P < 0.001), while
pelvis rotation toward the new direction was increased (P = 0.006) after PPT.
Moreover, decreased knee extension moments (P = 0.028) and knee internal
rotation
moments (P < 0.001) were reported after both trainings. Additionally, PPT
reduced
trunk rotation by 7.2° during unanticipated cuttings. A 4-week PPT improved
core
control by reducing trunk rotation and reduced knee joint moments during LRJ.
During training, perturbations should be introduced to improve core control
during dynamic athletic movements, possibly reducing the risk of ACL
injuries.
CI - © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
FAU - Weltin, E
AU - Weltin E
AD - Department of Sport and Sport Science, University of Freiburg, Freiburg,
Germany.
FAU - Gollhofer, A
AU - Gollhofer A
AD - Department of Sport and Sport Science, University of Freiburg, Freiburg,
Germany.
FAU - Mornieux, G
AU - Mornieux G
AD - UFRSTAPS de Nancy, DevAH, EA3450, University of Lorraine, Villers-lès-Nancy,
France.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20160229
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Plyometric Exercise/*methods
MH - *Rotation
MH - Torso/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL injury
OT - knee joint control
OT - neuromuscular training
OT - trunk control
EDAT- 2016/03/01 06:00
MHDA- 2017/09/21 06:00
CRDT- 2016/03/01 06:00
PHST- 2016/01/19 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2016/03/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/09/21 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2016/03/01 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1111/sms.12657 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2017 Mar;27(3):299-308. doi: 10.1111/sms.12657. Epub
2016
Feb 29.
PMID- 16009987
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20051222
LR - 20161124
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 10
DP - 2005 Oct
TI - Balance in single-limb stance in patients with anterior cruciate ligament
injury:
relation to knee laxity, proprioception, muscle strength, and subjective
function.
PG - 1527-35
AB - BACKGROUND: It has been shown previously that an anterior cruciate ligament
injury may affect postural control, measured by balance in single-limb
stance. To
our knowledge, no studies have reported the influence of measures of
impairment
on postural control after such an injury. PURPOSE: To assess the influence of
knee laxity, proprioception, and muscle strength on balance in single-limb
stance
and to study the correlation between balance in single-limb stance and
subjective
estimation of extremity function. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional study; Level
of
evidence, 3. METHODS: A total of 36 patients with a unilateral, nonoperated,
nonacute anterior cruciate ligament injury were examined with regard to
anterior
knee laxity, proprioception, muscle strength, and stabilometry (amplitude and
average speed of the center of pressure movements). Subjective estimation of
extremity function was measured on a visual analog scale. RESULTS: The
multiple
regression analysis showed that high knee laxity values were associated with
high
amplitude values and low average speed. Poor proprioception and high muscle
strength values were associated with low average speed among the women only.
Low
amplitude values correlated with better subjective function. CONCLUSION:
Anterior
knee laxity, proprioception, and muscle strength seem to play a role in
maintaining balance in single-limb stance. Patients with low amplitude values
in
stabilometry were those with better subjective function.
FAU - Ageberg, Eva
AU - Ageberg E
AD - Department of Rehabilitation, Lund University, Lasarettsgatan 7, SE-221 85
Lund,
Sweden. eva.ageberg@sjukgym.lu.se
FAU - Roberts, David
AU - Roberts D
FAU - Holmström, Eva
AU - Holmström E
FAU - Fridén, Thomas
AU - Fridén T
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20050711
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Cross-Sectional Studies
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiopathology
MH - Postural Balance/*physiology
MH - Proprioception/physiology
MH - Regression Analysis
EDAT- 2005/07/13 09:00
MHDA- 2005/12/24 09:00
CRDT- 2005/07/13 09:00
PHST- 2005/07/13 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/12/24 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/07/13 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546505274934 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546505274934 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2005 Oct;33(10):1527-35. doi: 10.1177/0363546505274934. Epub
2005 Jul 11.
PMID- 32734844
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20210104
LR - 20210104
IS - 1466-447X (Electronic)
IS - 0264-0414 (Linking)
VI - 38
IP - 22
DP - 2020 Nov
TI - Field hockey sport-specific postures during unanticipated sidestepping:
Implications for anterior cruciate ligament injury prevention.
PG - 2603-2610
LID - 10.1080/02640414.2020.1794264 [doi]
AB - Much research has investigated whole-body postures and associated knee joint
loading during unanticipated sidestepping (UnSS). However, no research has
considered sport-specific postures in field hockey. The purpose of this study
was
to investigate differences in trunk and lower limb angle and lower extremity
joint moment waveforms during UnSS while holding a hockey stick in a flexed
posture (HS-UnSS) and traditional UnSS. Additionally, we aimed to determine
if
differences in posture during HS-UnSS were associated with changes in knee
joint
moments. Twelve elite female field hockey athletes underwent 3D motion
analysis
during UnSS and HS-UnSS. Athletes increased trunk (0-100% of stance phase,
hip
(0-15%), knee (12-29%; 39-59%; 78-100%) and ankle (41-57%) flexion angles,
and
increased hip flexion (19-24%; 42-45%; 75-84%) and external rotation moments
(75-80%) during HS-UnSS compared with UnSS (p < 0.05). Flexed postures
observed
during HS-UnSS did not influence knee flexion and valgus moments when
compared
with UnSS (p > 0.05), however knee external rotation moments reduced. Changes
in
trunk flexion were positively associated with peak knee internal rotation
moments
from UnSS to HS-UnSS (r = 0.779, p = 0.005). These findings indicate that
field
hockey players sidestep with significantly different techniques when holding
a
hockey stick, which should be considered in injury prevention training
protocols.
FAU - Smith, Marc
AU - Smith M
AD - School of Human Sciences, University of Western Australia , Perth, Western
Australia.
FAU - Weir, Gillian
AU - Weir G
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5147-8213
AD - School of Human Sciences, University of Western Australia , Perth, Western
Australia.
AD - Biomechanics Laboratory, University of Massachusetts Amherst , Amherst, MA,
USA.
FAU - Donnelly, Cyril J
AU - Donnelly CJ
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-4080-9627
AD - School of Human Sciences, University of Western Australia , Perth, Western
Australia.
AD - Rehabilitation Research Institute of Singapore (RRIS, Nanyang Technological
University , Singapore, Singapore.
FAU - Alderson, Jacqueline
AU - Alderson J
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-8866-0913
AD - School of Human Sciences, University of Western Australia , Perth, Western
Australia.
AD - Auckland University of Technology, Sports Performance Research Institute New
Zealand (SPRINZ) , Auckland, New Zealand.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20200731
PL - England
TA - J Sports Sci
JT - Journal of sports sciences
JID - 8405364
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Ankle Joint/physiopathology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/etiology/*physiopathology/*prevention &
control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Hip Joint/physiopathology
MH - Hockey/*injuries
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiopathology
MH - *Movement
MH - Posture/*physiology
MH - Rotation
MH - Time and Motion Studies
MH - Torso/*physiopathology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Female
OT - athletes
OT - injury assessment
OT - knee
OT - screening
EDAT- 2020/08/01 06:00
MHDA- 2021/01/05 06:00
CRDT- 2020/08/01 06:00
PHST- 2020/08/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/01/05 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2020/08/01 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1080/02640414.2020.1794264 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sports Sci. 2020 Nov;38(22):2603-2610. doi: 10.1080/02640414.2020.1794264.
Epub
2020 Jul 31.
PMID- 25825328
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170117
LR - 20170117
IS - 1532-2769 (Electronic)
IS - 1356-689X (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 5
DP - 2015 Oct
TI - Effect of repeated passive anterior loading on human knee anterior laxity.
PG - 709-14
LID - S1356-689X(15)00025-9 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.math.2015.02.007 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Increased knee anterior laxity results when the anterior cruciate
ligament is injured. This increased laxity can cause knee dysfunction. Until
recently this laxity was believed to be only diminished through surgery. But
recent findings indicate that knee anterior laxity may be decreased with
repeated
loading of the knee. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to test the
hypothesis that regular passive anterior loading of the uninjured human knee
would enhance its stiffness. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial.
METHODS:
Knee anterior laxity was tested using an arthrometer in 22 young, uninjured
females before, during and after a 3 month period during which passive
anterior
loading was applied by a trained physiotherapist over 5 sessions per week to
a
randomly assigned knee. RESULTS: Knee anterior laxity was not affected by the
passive anterior loading of the knee. CONCLUSIONS: Given that in this study
repeated passive loading of the knee did not change knee anterior laxity, it
would be easy to conclude that this training is ineffective and no further
research is required. We caution against this given the relatively short
duration
and possibly insufficient intensity of the training and the population
studied;
individuals with normal joint laxity. We recommend that future research be
performed that consists of individuals with lax joints who receive training
for
prolonged periods.
CI - Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
FAU - Vauhnik, Renata
AU - Vauhnik R
AD - University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of
Physiotherapy,
Slovenia; Arthron, Institute for Joint and Sports Injuries, Slovenia.
Electronic
address: renata.vauhnik@zf.uni-lj.si.
FAU - Perme, Maja Pohar
AU - Perme MP
AD - Institute for Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, Medical Faculty,
University
of Ljubljana, Slovenia.
FAU - Barcellona, Massimo G
AU - Barcellona MG
AD - Academic Department of Physiotherapy, School of Medicine, King's College
London,
UK.
FAU - Morrissey, Matthew C
AU - Morrissey MC
AD - Biomechanics Laboatory, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ljubljana,
Slovenia.
FAU - Sevšek, France
AU - Sevšek F
AD - Biomechanics Laboatory, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ljubljana,
Slovenia.
FAU - Rugelj, Darja
AU - Rugelj D
AD - Biomechanics Laboatory, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ljubljana,
Slovenia.
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20150302
PL - Scotland
TA - Man Ther
JT - Manual therapy
JID - 9610924
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Female
MH - Healthy Volunteers
MH - Humans
MH - *Joint Instability
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/*physiology
MH - Weight-Bearing/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - Arthrometry
OT - Force
OT - Manual therapy
EDAT- 2015/04/01 06:00
MHDA- 2017/01/18 06:00
CRDT- 2015/04/01 06:00
PHST- 2014/09/05 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2015/02/02 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2015/02/20 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2015/04/01 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/04/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/01/18 06:00 [medline]
AID - S1356-689X(15)00025-9 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.math.2015.02.007 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Man Ther. 2015 Oct;20(5):709-14. doi: 10.1016/j.math.2015.02.007. Epub 2015
Mar
2.
PMID- 36137731
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230106
LR - 20230111
IS - 1473-0480 (Electronic)
IS - 0306-3674 (Linking)
VI - 57
IP - 2
DP - 2023 Jan
TI - Meniscal procedures are not increased with delayed ACL reconstruction and
rehabilitation: results from a randomised controlled trial.
PG - 78-82
LID - 10.1136/bjsports-2021-105235 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To assess whether initial non-operative treatment of anterior
cruciate
ligament (ACL) ruptures with optional delayed ACL reconstruction leads to
more
meniscal procedures compared with early ACL reconstruction during the 2-year
follow-up. METHODS: We compared the number of meniscal procedures of 167
patients
with an ACL rupture, who either received early ACL reconstruction (n=85) or
rehabilitation therapy plus optional delayed ACL reconstruction (n=82),
participating in the Conservative vs Operative Methods for Patients with ACL
Rupture Evaluation trial. Patients were aged 18 to 65 years (mean 31.3, SD
10.5),
60% male sex (n=100). We evaluated the presence and location of meniscal
tears by
baseline MRI. We analysed and compared how many patients per randomisation
group
had a meniscal procedure during follow-up in the ACL injured knee, adjusted
for
sex, body mass index, age group and orthopaedic surgeon. RESULTS: At
baseline,
41% of the entire study population (69/167 patients) had a meniscal tear on
MRI.
During the 2-year follow-up, 25 patients randomised to early ACL
reconstruction
(29%, 25/85 patients) had a meniscal procedure, compared with 17 patients
randomised to rehabilitation plus optional delayed reconstruction (21%, 17/82
patients) (risk ratio 0.67 with 95% CI 0.40 to 1.12, p=0.12). Of these
patients
who received early ACL reconstruction (n=82) and patients that received
delayed
ACL reconstruction (n=41), 5% of the patients had an additional isolated
meniscal
procedure after ACL reconstruction. In patients who received no ACL
reconstruction (n=41), 10% (n=4) had an isolated surgical procedure for a
meniscal tear during the 2-year follow-up period. CONCLUSION: Initial
non-surgical treatment of ACL ruptures followed by optional delayed ACL
reconstruction does not lead to a higher number of meniscal procedures
compared
with early ACL reconstruction over a 2-year follow-up period. TRIAL
REGISTRATION
NUMBER: NL 2618.
CI - © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and
permissions. Published by BMJ.
FAU - van der Graaff, Sabine J A
AU - van der Graaff SJA
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8007-9983
AD - Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Erasmus MC University Medical Centre,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
FAU - Reijman, Max
AU - Reijman M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-6316-9629
AD - Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Erasmus MC University Medical Centre,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
FAU - van Es, Eline M
AU - van Es EM
AD - Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Erasmus MC University Medical Centre,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
FAU - Bierma-Zeinstra, Sita M A
AU - Bierma-Zeinstra SMA
AD - Department of General Practice, Erasmus MC University Medical Centre,
Rotterdam,
The Netherlands.
FAU - Verhaar, Jan A N
AU - Verhaar JAN
AD - Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Erasmus MC University Medical Centre,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
FAU - Meuffels, Duncan E
AU - Meuffels DE
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-5372-6003
AD - Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Erasmus MC University Medical Centre,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands d.meuffels@erasmusmc.nl.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220922
PL - England
TA - Br J Sports Med
JT - British journal of sports medicine
JID - 0432520
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Female
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - *Knee Injuries/surgery
MH - Knee Joint
MH - *Meniscus
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - *Cartilage Diseases
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
OT - Meniscus
COIS- Competing interests: None declared.
EDAT- 2022/09/23 06:00
MHDA- 2023/01/07 06:00
CRDT- 2022/09/22 21:07
PHST- 2022/08/26 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/09/23 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/01/07 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/09/22 21:07 [entrez]
AID - bjsports-2021-105235 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bjsports-2021-105235 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Br J Sports Med. 2023 Jan;57(2):78-82. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2021-105235.
Epub
2022 Sep 22.
PMID- 17472324
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070712
LR - 20161124
IS - 0065-6895 (Print)
IS - 0065-6895 (Linking)
VI - 56
DP - 2007
TI - Prevention of noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries in elite and
adolescent female team handball athletes.
PG - 407-18
AB - To assess the effect of a neuromuscular training program on the incidence of
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in female team handball athletes, a
prospective intervention study of female team handball athletes from
divisions I,
II, and III in Norway was conducted. The control season (1998-1999) included
60
teams (942 athletes), the first intervention season (1999-2000) included 58
teams
(855 athletes), and the second intervention season (2000-2001) included 52
teams
(850 athletes). For the intervention teams, a five-phase program (duration,
15
minutes) with three different balance exercises focusing on neuromuscular
control
and planting and landing skills was developed and introduced to the athletes
in
the autumn of 1999 and revised before the start of the season in 2000. Each
intervention team was instructed in the program and supplied with an
instructional video, poster, six balance mats, and six wobble boards.
Additionally, a physical therapist was assigned to each team for follow-up
during
the second intervention season. The number of ACL injuries during the three
seasons and compliance with the program were assessed. Twenty-nine ACL
injuries
occurred during the control season, 23 during the first intervention season
(odds
ratio [OR], 0.87 [0.50-1.52]; P = 0.62), and 17 during the second
intervention
season (OR, 0.64 [0.35-1.18]; P = 0.15). In the elite division, 13 injuries
occurred during the control season, 6 during the first intervention season
(OR,
0.51 [0.19-1.35]; P = 0.17), and 5 during the second intervention season (OR,
0.37 [0.13-1.05]; P = 0.06). For the entire cohort, no difference in injury
rates
was noted during the second intervention season between compliers and
noncompliers (OR, 0.52 [0.15-1.82], P = 0.31). In the elite division, the
risk of
injury was reduced among athletes who completed the ACL injury prevention
program
(OR, 0.06 [0.01-0.54], P = 0.01) compared with those who did not. The results
demonstrate that it is possible to prevent ACL injuries with specific
neuromuscular training.
FAU - Myklebust, Grethe
AU - Myklebust G
AD - Oslo Sport Trauma Research Center, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Oslo,
Norway.
FAU - Engebretsen, Lars
AU - Engebretsen L
FAU - Braekken, Ingeborg Hoff
AU - Braekken IH
FAU - Skjølberg, Arnhilo
AU - Skjølberg A
FAU - Olsen, Odd-Egil
AU - Olsen OE
FAU - Bahr, Roald
AU - Bahr R
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Instr Course Lect
JT - Instructional course lectures
JID - 7507149
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Exercise
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Menstrual Cycle
MH - Prospective Studies
EDAT- 2007/05/03 09:00
MHDA- 2007/07/13 09:00
CRDT- 2007/05/03 09:00
PHST- 2007/05/03 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/07/13 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/05/03 09:00 [entrez]
PST - ppublish
SO - Instr Course Lect. 2007;56:407-18.
PMID- 21285445
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110823
LR - 20220321
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 39
IP - 5
DP - 2011 May
TI - Effects of an age-specific anterior cruciate ligament injury prevention
program
on lower extremity biomechanics in children.
PG - 949-57
LID - 10.1177/0363546510392015 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Implementing an anterior cruciate ligament injury prevention
program
to athletes before the age at which the greatest injury risk occurs (15-17
years)
is important from a prevention standpoint. However, it is unknown whether
standard programs can modify lower extremity biomechanics in pediatric
populations or if specialized training is required. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: To
compare the effects of traditional and age-specific pediatric anterior
cruciate
ligament injury prevention programs on lower extremity biomechanics during a
cutting task in youth athletes. The authors hypothesized that the age-
specific
pediatric program would result in greater sagittal plane motion (ie, hip and
knee
flexion) and less motion in the transverse and frontal plane (ie, knee
valgus,
knee and hip rotation) as compared with the traditional program. STUDY
DESIGN:
Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. METHODS: Sixty-five youth
soccer athletes (38 boys, 27 girls) volunteered to participate. The mean age
of
participants was 10 ± 1 years. Teams (n, 7) were cluster randomized to a
pediatric injury prevention program, a traditional injury prevention program,
or
a control group. The pediatric program was modified from the traditional
program
to include more feedback, progressions, and variety. Teams performed their
programs as part of their normal warm-up routine. Three-dimensional lower
extremity biomechanics were assessed during a sidestep cutting task before
and
after completion of the 9-week intervention period. RESULTS: The pediatric
program reduced the amount of knee external rotation at initial ground
contact
during the cutting task, F ((2,62)) = 3.79, P = .03 (change: pediatric, 7.73°
±
10.71°; control, -0.35° ± 7.76°), as compared with the control group after
the
intervention period. No other changes were observed. CONCLUSION: The injury
prevention program designed for a pediatric population modified only knee
rotation during the cutting task, whereas the traditional program did not
result
in any changes in cutting biomechanics. These findings suggest limited
effectiveness of both programs for athletes younger than 12 years of age in
terms
of biomechanics during a cutting task.
FAU - DiStefano, Lindsay J
AU - DiStefano LJ
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut
06269,
USA. lindsay.distefano@uconn.edu
FAU - Blackburn, J Troy
AU - Blackburn JT
FAU - Marshall, Stephen W
AU - Marshall SW
FAU - Guskiewicz, Kevin M
AU - Guskiewicz KM
FAU - Garrett, William E
AU - Garrett WE
FAU - Padua, Darin A
AU - Padua DA
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20110201
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2011 May;39(5):923-5. PMID: 21550994
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Child
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Male
EDAT- 2011/02/03 06:00
MHDA- 2011/08/24 06:00
CRDT- 2011/02/03 06:00
PHST- 2011/02/03 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/02/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/08/24 06:00 [medline]
AID - 0363546510392015 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546510392015 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2011 May;39(5):949-57. doi: 10.1177/0363546510392015. Epub
2011
Feb 1.
PMID- 15877221
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20060228
LR - 20181113
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 13
IP - 8
DP - 2005 Nov
TI - Knee extensors kinetic chain training in anterior cruciate ligament
deficiency.
PG - 638-48
AB - Open kinetic chain (OKC) knee extensor resistance training has lost favour in
rehabilitation of patients with knee ACLD due to concerns that this exercise
is
harmful to the remaining portion of the ACL and its secondary stabilizers,
and
will be less effective in improving function. In this randomized, single-
blind
clinical trial, closed and OKC knee extensor training were compared for their
effects on knee laxity and function in patients with ACLD knees. Sixty-four
patients with a diagnosis of knee ACLD (49 M, 15 F; mean age=30 years) were
measured for knee laxity, using a ligament arthrometer, and function with the
Hughston Clinic knee self-assessment questionnaire and maximal effort single
leg
jump testing. Between the above tests and identical tests carried out 6 weeks
later, subjects trained using either open or closed kinetic chain resistance
of
their knee and hip extensors as part of formal physical therapy sessions
three
times per week for 6 weeks. The groups exhibited no statistically significant
differences (p<0.083) in outcome. These results indicate that knee extensor
OKC
training, as used in this study, can be safely applied to patients with knee
ACL
deficiency, and shows no superiority to CKC training.
FAU - Perry, Mark C
AU - Perry MC
AD - Division of Applied Biomedical Research, GKT School of Biomedical Sciences,
King's College London, Shepherd's House, Guy's Campus, London, SE1 1UL, UK.
FAU - Morrissey, Matthew C
AU - Morrissey MC
FAU - Morrissey, Dylan
AU - Morrissey D
FAU - Knight, Philippa R
AU - Knight PR
FAU - McAuliffe, Thomas B
AU - McAuliffe TB
FAU - King, John B
AU - King JB
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20050505
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiopathology
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*rehabilitation
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - *Physical Therapy Modalities
MH - Single-Blind Method
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2005/05/07 09:00
MHDA- 2006/03/01 09:00
CRDT- 2005/05/07 09:00
PHST- 2004/06/09 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2004/10/16 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2005/05/07 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/03/01 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/05/07 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-004-0603-8 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2005 Nov;13(8):638-48. doi:
10.1007/s00167-004-0603-8. Epub 2005 May 5.
PMID- 34501680
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20211027
LR - 20211027
IS - 1660-4601 (Electronic)
IS - 1661-7827 (Print)
IS - 1660-4601 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 17
DP - 2021 Aug 28
TI - The Effect of a Brief, Web-Based Animated Video for Improving Comprehension
and
Implementation Feasibility for Reducing Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury: A
Three-Arm Randomized Controlled Trial.
LID - 10.3390/ijerph18179092 [doi]
LID - 9092
AB - Neuromuscular injury prevention training (IPT) has been shown to reduce
anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) injury risk by approximately 50%, but the
implementation
rate is low. One of the most important modifiable barriers for implementation
is
coaches' comprehension of risk and intervention strategies. This study aimed
to
evaluate the effect of a brief, web-based, animated video on ACL injury
prevention comprehension and IPT implementation feasibility. Coaches in
landing
and cutting sports were recruited and randomized into three groups. (1)
Intervention: brief multimedia animated video about ACL injury and
prevention.
(2) Active control: commonly accessed, text-based web resource about ACL
injury
and prevention. (3) Placebo control: brief multimedia video about
concussions.
Overall ACL comprehension-composed of basic ACL knowledge, risk knowledge,
prevention knowledge, and severity knowledge-as well as implementation
feasibility were all measured prior to and immediately following the
interventions. Overall ACL comprehension improved the most in the animated
video
group (Cohen's d = 0.86) and, to a lesser degree, in the active control web-
based
article group (Cohen's d = 0.39). Both video and web-based article groups had
greater implementation feasibility compared to the control group (p = 0.01).
Overall, these initial results suggest that a brief, web-based, animated
video
has the potential to be a superior method for informing stakeholders in order
to
reduce traumatic injuries in sport.
FAU - Petushek, Erich J
AU - Petushek EJ
AD - Department of Cognitive and Learning Sciences, Michigan Technological
University,
Houghton, MI 49931, USA.
AD - Health Research Institute, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI
49931,
USA.
FAU - Mørtvedt, Anne Inger
AU - Mørtvedt AI
AD - Department of Cognitive and Learning Sciences, Michigan Technological
University,
Houghton, MI 49931, USA.
FAU - Nelson, Brittany L
AU - Nelson BL
AD - Department of Cognitive and Learning Sciences, Michigan Technological
University,
Houghton, MI 49931, USA.
FAU - Hamati, Mary C
AU - Hamati MC
AD - Department of Orthopedics, School of Medicine, University of Colorado,
Aurora, CO
80045, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210828
PL - Switzerland
TA - Int J Environ Res Public Health
JT - International journal of environmental research and public health
JID - 101238455
SB - IM
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - *Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Comprehension
MH - Feasibility Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Internet
MH - *Sports
PMC - PMC8431316
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - behavior change
OT - coach
OT - education
OT - information
OT - knee
OT - learning
OT - motivation
OT - multimedia
OT - sport
OT - uptake
COIS- The authors declare no conflict of interest.
EDAT- 2021/09/11 06:00
MHDA- 2021/10/28 06:00
CRDT- 2021/09/10 01:04
PHST- 2021/07/21 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/08/20 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2021/08/20 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/09/10 01:04 [entrez]
PHST- 2021/09/11 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/10/28 06:00 [medline]
AID - ijerph18179092 [pii]
AID - ijerph-18-09092 [pii]
AID - 10.3390/ijerph18179092 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Aug 28;18(17):9092. doi:
10.3390/ijerph18179092.
PMID- 30896976
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20200323
LR - 20200323
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 47
IP - 5
DP - 2019 Apr
TI - Comparison of Standard and Right/Left International Knee Documentation
Committee
Subjective Knee Form Scores.
PG - 1203-1208
LID - 10.1177/0363546519829770 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: The International Knee Documentation Committee Subjective Knee
Form
(IKDC-SKF) is a validated patient-reported outcome used in clinical research.
No
studies exist directly comparing the standard unilateral adult version (IKDC-
SKF)
with the bilateral adult version (R/L IKDC-SKF). HYPOTHESES: The first
hypothesis
is that no clinically relevant difference would be observed between standard
IKDC-SKF scores and involved R/L scores. The second hypothesis is that a
relevant
difference would be observed between involved and uninvolved scores on the
R/L
IKDC-SKF. STUDY DESIGN: Cohort study (Diagnosis); Level of evidence, 2.
METHODS:
One hundred patients were enrolled via a crossover study design. Participants
were split into 2 groups per simple randomization. One group completed the
standard IKDC-SKF first and the R/L IKDC-SKF second. The other group
completed
forms in the reverse order. A 10-minute washout period was administered
between
questionnaires. Participants reported their preferred form in a
postquestionnaire
survey. A 5-point threshold for clinical relevance was set a priori, which is
less than multiple published minimal detectable change and minimal clinically
important difference metrics of the standard IKDC-SKF, ranging from 6.3 to
20.5.
Data were analyzed with Bland-Altman plots, paired t tests, correlations, and
chi-square tests. RESULTS: Paired t tests between the standard IKDC-SKF and
the
involved R/L IKDC-SKF scores demonstrated a statistically significant mean
difference of 1.4 ( P = .008; 95% CI, 0.4-2.4). However, the 95% CI falls
under
the clinically relevant threshold of 5. Standard and involved knee scores
from
the R/L IKDC-SKF were highly correlated, with a rho of 0.95. Patients
consistently distinguished the injured knee from the uninjured knee across a
range of scores via the R/L IKDC-SKF ( P < .001). The postquestionnaire
survey
showed that 55 patients preferred the R/L IKDC-SKF, 30 preferred the standard
IKDC-SKF, and 15 had no preference. Post hoc analysis showed a significant
preference for "R/L vs standard IKDC-SKF" ( P = .014) and "R/L IKDC-SKF vs no
preference" ( P < .003). CONCLUSION: No clinically relevant difference was
observed between the standard IKDC-SKF and the involved knee score of the R/L
IKDC-SKF. Therefore, for symptomatic unilateral knee diagnosis, either form
can
be used. The R/L IKDC-SKF showed a consistent and clinically relevant
difference
between involved and uninvolved knees. Patients in this study preferred the
R/L
IKDC-SKF.
FAU - Magnuson, Justin A
AU - Magnuson JA
AD - Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Garfield Heights, Ohio, USA.
AD - College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Strnad, Greg
AU - Strnad G
AD - Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Garfield Heights, Ohio, USA.
FAU - Smith, Clair
AU - Smith C
AD - Departments of Orthopedic Surgery and Physical Therapy, University of
Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
FAU - Jones, Morgan H
AU - Jones MH
AD - Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Garfield Heights, Ohio, USA.
FAU - Saluan, Paul
AU - Saluan P
AD - Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Garfield Heights, Ohio, USA.
FAU - Irrgang, James J
AU - Irrgang JJ
AD - Departments of Orthopedic Surgery and Physical Therapy, University of
Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
FAU - Spindler, Kurt P
AU - Spindler KP
AD - Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Garfield Heights, Ohio, USA.
LA - eng
GR - R01 AR053684/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - K23 AR066133/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20190321
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Cohort Studies
MH - Cross-Over Studies
MH - Documentation
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Injuries/diagnosis/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - *Patient Reported Outcome Measures
MH - Surveys and Questionnaires
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - IKDC-SKF
OT - knee
OT - meniscus
OT - patient-reported outcome measure
EDAT- 2019/03/22 06:00
MHDA- 2020/03/24 06:00
CRDT- 2019/03/22 06:00
PHST- 2019/03/22 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2020/03/24 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2019/03/22 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1177/0363546519829770 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2019 Apr;47(5):1203-1208. doi: 10.1177/0363546519829770.
Epub
2019 Mar 21.
PMID- 19251685
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090616
LR - 20220331
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 37
IP - 3
DP - 2009 Mar
TI - Influence of age, sex, technique, and exercise program on movement patterns
after
an anterior cruciate ligament injury prevention program in youth soccer
players.
PG - 495-505
LID - 10.1177/0363546508327542 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury prevention programs show
promising results with changing movement; however, little information exists
regarding whether a program designed for an individual's movements may be
effective or how baseline movements may affect outcomes. HYPOTHESIS: A
program
designed to change specific movements would be more effective than a
"one-size-fits-all" program. Greatest improvement would be observed among
individuals with the most baseline error. Subjects of different ages and
sexes
respond similarly. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial; Level of
evidence,
1. METHODS: One hundred seventy-three youth soccer players from 27 teams were
randomly assigned to a generalized or stratified program. Subjects were
videotaped during jump-landing trials before and after the program and were
assessed using the Landing Error Scoring System (LESS), which is a valid
clinical
movement analysis tool. A high LESS score indicates more errors. Generalized
players performed the same exercises, while the stratified players performed
exercises to correct their initial movement errors. Change scores were
compared
between groups of varying baseline errors, ages, sexes, and programs.
RESULTS:
Subjects with the highest baseline LESS score improved the most (95% CI, -3.4
to
-2.0). High school subjects (95% CI, -1.7 to -0.98) improved their technique
more
than pre-high school subjects (95% CI, -1.0 to -0.4). There was no difference
between the programs or sexes. CONCLUSIONS: Players with the greatest amount
of
movement errors experienced the most improvement. A program's effectiveness
may
be enhanced if this population is targeted.
FAU - DiStefano, Lindsay J
AU - DiStefano LJ
AD - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina,
USA.
FAU - Padua, Darin A
AU - Padua DA
FAU - DiStefano, Michael J
AU - DiStefano MJ
FAU - Marshall, Stephen W
AU - Marshall SW
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Age Factors
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Child
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/etiology/*prevention & control
MH - Male
MH - *Movement
MH - Sex Factors
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Videotape Recording
EDAT- 2009/03/03 09:00
MHDA- 2009/06/17 09:00
CRDT- 2009/03/03 09:00
PHST- 2009/03/03 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/03/03 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/06/17 09:00 [medline]
AID - 37/3/495 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546508327542 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2009 Mar;37(3):495-505. doi: 10.1177/0363546508327542.
PMID- 20072067
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100505
LR - 20161125
IS - 1533-4287 (Electronic)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 2
DP - 2010 Feb
TI - Integrated injury prevention program improves balance and vertical jump
height in
children.
PG - 332-42
LID - 10.1519/JSC.0b013e3181cc2225 [doi]
AB - Implementing an injury prevention program to athletes under age 12 years may
reduce injury rates. There is limited knowledge regarding whether these young
athletes will be able to modify balance and performance measures after
completing
a traditional program that has been effective with older athletes or whether
they
require a specialized program for their age. The purpose of this study was to
compare the effects of a pediatric program, which was designed specifically
for
young athletes, and a traditional program with no program in the ability to
change balance and performance measures in youth athletes. We used a
cluster-randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effects of the programs
before and after a 9-week intervention period. Sixty-five youth soccer
athletes
(males: n = 37 mass = 34.16 +/- 5.36 kg, height = 143.07 +/- 6.27 cm, age =
10
+/- 1 yr; females: n = 28 mass = 33.82 +/- 5.37 kg, height = 141.02 +/- 6.59
cm)
volunteered to participate and attended 2 testing sessions in a research
laboratory. Teams were cluster-randomized to either a pediatric or
traditional
injury prevention program or a control group. Change scores for
anterior-posterior and medial-lateral time-to-stabilization measures and
maximum
vertical jump height and power were calculated from pretest and post-test
sessions. Contrary with our original hypotheses, the traditional program
resulted
in positive changes, whereas the pediatric program did not result in any
improvements. Anterior-posterior time-to-stabilization decreased after the
traditional program (mean change +/- SD = -0.92 +/- 0.49 s) compared with the
control group (-0.49 +/- 0.59 s) (p = 0.003). The traditional program also
increased vertical jump height (1.70 +/- 2.80 cm) compared with the control
group
(0.20 +/- 0.20 cm) (p = 0.04). There were no significant differences between
control and pediatric programs. Youth athletes can improve balance ability
and
vertical jump height after completing an injury prevention program. Training
specificity appears to affect improvements and should be considered with
future
program design.
FAU - DiStefano, Lindsay J
AU - DiStefano LJ
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut,
USA.
Lindsay.distefano@uconn.edu
FAU - Padua, Darin A
AU - Padua DA
FAU - Blackburn, J Troy
AU - Blackburn JT
FAU - Garrett, William E
AU - Garrett WE
FAU - Guskiewicz, Kevin M
AU - Guskiewicz KM
FAU - Marshall, Stephen W
AU - Marshall SW
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - *Athletes
MH - Athletic Injuries/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Child
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Male
MH - Physical Education and Training/*methods
MH - Postural Balance/*physiology
MH - Soccer/*injuries
EDAT- 2010/01/15 06:00
MHDA- 2010/05/06 06:00
CRDT- 2010/01/15 06:00
PHST- 2010/01/15 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/01/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/05/06 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1519/JSC.0b013e3181cc2225 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2010 Feb;24(2):332-42. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0b013e3181cc2225.
PMID- 27279368
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170918
LR - 20220331
IS - 1554-527X (Electronic)
IS - 0736-0266 (Linking)
VI - 35
IP - 3
DP - 2017 Mar
TI - Logistical challenges and design considerations for studies using acute
anterior
cruciate ligament injury as a potential model for early posttraumatic
osteoarthritis.
PG - 641-650
LID - 10.1002/jor.23329 [doi]
AB - Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are common and lead to
posttraumatic
osteoarthritis (PTOA) in a high percentage of patients. Research has been
ineffective in identifying successful treatment options for people suffering
from
symptomatic PTOA resulting in a shift of focus toward the young, ACL injured
patients at risk of developing PTOA. Randomized clinical trials examining the
very early phase after ACL injury are ideal to study this population;
however,
these trials face significant challenges regarding recruitment as well as
reproducibility of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and inflammatory and/or
chondrodegenerative biomarkers associated with early PTOA. The aim of this
work
was to develop an approach to allow for early recruitment into an RCT for
early
treatment following ACL injury and to analyze the variability of commonly
used
measures and biomarkers at various time points after injury. This paper
reports
the study design and data related to the first month of treatment for the
placebo
group of an ongoing 2-year clinical trial to evaluate the effect of an early
intra-articular intervention after ACL injury. The results of this study
suggest
that acute ACL injury results in early changes of both inflammatory and
chondrodegenerative biomarkers. These results also provide vital information
for
researchers to consider when developing future protocols, both related to the
logistics of early patient enrollment as well as the appropriate timing of
biomarker and patient-reported outcome collection. © 2016 Orthopaedic
Research
Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 35:641-650, 2017.
CI - © 2016 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
FAU - Lattermann, Christian
AU - Lattermann C
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, University of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky.
FAU - Jacobs, Cale A
AU - Jacobs CA
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, University of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky.
FAU - Bunnell, Mary Proffitt
AU - Bunnell MP
AD - Department of Physical Therapy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky.
FAU - Jochimsen, Kate N
AU - Jochimsen KN
AD - Division of Athletic Training, College of Health Sciences, Sports Medicine
Research Institute, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky.
FAU - Abt, John P
AU - Abt JP
AD - Division of Athletic Training, College of Health Sciences, Sports Medicine
Research Institute, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky.
FAU - Reinke, Emily K
AU - Reinke EK
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
Tennessee.
FAU - Gammon, Lee G
AU - Gammon LG
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, University of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky.
FAU - Huebner, Janet L
AU - Huebner JL
AD - Department of Medicine, Duke Molecular Physiology Institute and Division of
Rheumatology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
FAU - Kraus, Virginia B
AU - Kraus VB
AD - Department of Medicine, Duke Molecular Physiology Institute and Division of
Rheumatology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
FAU - Spindler, Kurt P
AU - Spindler KP
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
Tennessee.
AD - Orthopaedic Surgery, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Multicenter Study
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20160630
PL - United States
TA - J Orthop Res
JT - Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic
Research Society
JID - 8404726
RN - 0 (Biomarkers)
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*complications
MH - Biomarkers
MH - Clinical Protocols
MH - Humans
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/*etiology
MH - Patient Reported Outcome Measures
MH - Research Design
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - biomarker
OT - cartilage
OT - inflammation
OT - knee
OT - outcome
EDAT- 2016/06/10 06:00
MHDA- 2017/09/19 06:00
CRDT- 2016/06/10 06:00
PHST- 2016/04/02 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2016/06/05 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2016/06/10 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/09/19 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2016/06/10 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1002/jor.23329 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Orthop Res. 2017 Mar;35(3):641-650. doi: 10.1002/jor.23329. Epub 2016 Jun
30.
PMID- 36623509
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230312
LR - 20230312
IS - 1543-3072 (Electronic)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 32
IP - 3
DP - 2023 Mar 1
TI - Priming Effects of Anodal Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation on the
Effects
of Conventional Physiotherapy on Balance and Muscle Performance in Athletes
With
Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury.
PG - 315-324
LID - 10.1123/jsr.2022-0188 [doi]
AB - CONTEXT: In athletes, postural control impairment and knee muscle dysfunction
are
the most common disorders following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury.
Because of functional changes in the motor cortex following ACL injury,
physiotherapy (PT) is not enough for treatment and using neuromodulators,
such as
trans-cranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) may be necessary. The present
study focused on the effects of anodal tDCS (a-tDCS) over the primary motor
cortex (M1) concurrent with PT on postural control and muscular performance
in
the athletes with ACL injury. DESIGN: In this study, 34 athletes with ACL
injury
were randomly assigned in 2 groups of intervention group (active M1 a-tDCS
concurrent with PT, n = 16) and control group (sham M1 a-tDCS concurrent with
PT,
n = 16). METHODS: The participants of all groups received 20-minute 2 mA M1
a-tDCS with PT during 10 sessions, while tDCS was turned off after 30 seconds
in
the sham group. Before, immediately following, and 1 month after the
interventions, the center of pressure and the average of power of flexor and
extensor muscles at 2 velocities of 30°/s and 60°/s were measured by force
plate
and isokinetic devices, respectively. RESULTS: One month after treatment, the
displacement of center of pressure was decreased in the intervention group (P
<
.05), while there were no changes in the control group. Y-axis of center of
pressure decreased in the intervention group relative to the control group,
although average of power of flexor and extensor muscles increased
immediately in
both groups, but the rise in the intervention group was larger than that in
the
control group (P < .05). CONCLUSION: The findings indicated that M1 a-tDCS
can
induce the efficacy of PT, which has a lasting effect on the improvement of
the
postural control in athletes with ACL injury.
FAU - Tohidirad, Zeinab
AU - Tohidirad Z
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-1444-2398
AD - Neuromuscular Rehabilitation Research Center, Semnan University of Medical
Sciences, Semnan,Iran.
FAU - Ehsani, Fatemeh
AU - Ehsani F
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7528-973x
AD - Neuromuscular Rehabilitation Research Center, Semnan University of Medical
Sciences, Semnan,Iran.
FAU - Bagheri, Rasool
AU - Bagheri R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6156-0955
AD - Neuromuscular Rehabilitation Research Center, Semnan University of Medical
Sciences, Semnan,Iran.
FAU - Jaberzadeh, Shapour
AU - Jaberzadeh S
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-2957-4510
AD - Non-invasive Brain Stimulation & Neuroplasticity Laboratory, Department of
PT,
Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University,
Melbourne,
VIC,Australia.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20230109
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiology
MH - Physical Therapy Modalities
MH - *Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ligament injury
OT - muscle activity
OT - neuromodulator
OT - postural control
OT - primary motor cortex
EDAT- 2023/01/10 06:00
MHDA- 2023/03/08 06:00
CRDT- 2023/01/09 18:42
PHST- 2022/05/14 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/10/02 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2022/11/07 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/01/10 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/03/08 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2023/01/09 18:42 [entrez]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.2022-0188 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2023 Jan 9;32(3):315-324. doi: 10.1123/jsr.2022-0188. Print
2023
Mar 1.
PMID- 26523663
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160711
LR - 20181202
IS - 1938-162X (Electronic)
IS - 1062-6050 (Print)
IS - 1062-6050 (Linking)
VI - 50
IP - 11
DP - 2015 Nov
TI - Landing Technique and Performance in Youth Athletes After a Single
Injury-Prevention Program Session.
PG - 1149-57
LID - 10.4085/1062-6050-50.11.01 [doi]
AB - CONTEXT: Injury-prevention programs (IPPs) performed as season-long warm-ups
improve injury rates, performance outcomes, and jump-landing technique.
However,
concerns regarding program adoption exist. Identifying the acute benefits of
using an IPP compared with other warm-ups may encourage IPP adoption.
OBJECTIVE:
To examine the immediate effects of 3 warm-up protocols (IPP, static warm-up
[SWU], or dynamic warm-up [DWU]) on jump-landing technique and performance
measures in youth athletes. DESIGN: Randomized controlled clinical trial.
SETTING: Gymnasiums. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: Sixty male and 29 female
athletes (age = 13 ± 2 years, height = 162.8 ± 12.6 cm, mass = 37.1 ± 13.5
kg)
volunteered to participate in a single session. INTERVENTION(S): Participants
were stratified by age, sex, and sport and then were randomized into 1
protocol:
IPP, SWU, or DWU. The IPP consisted of dynamic flexibility, strengthening,
plyometric, and balance exercises and emphasized proper technique. The SWU
consisted of jogging and lower extremity static stretching. The DWU consisted
of
dynamic lower extremity flexibility exercises. Participants were assessed for
landing technique and performance measures immediately before (PRE) and after
(POST) completing their warm-ups. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): One rater graded
each
jump-landing trial using the Landing Error Scoring System. Participants
performed
a vertical jump, long jump, shuttle run, and jump-landing task in randomized
order. The averages of all jump-landing trials and performance variables were
used to calculate 1 composite score for each variable at PRE and POST. Change
scores were calculated (POST - PRE) for all measures. Separate 1-way (group)
analyses of variance were conducted for each dependent variable (α < .05).
RESULTS: No differences were observed among groups for any performance
measures
(P > .05). The Landing Error Scoring System scores improved after the IPP
(change
= -0.40 ± 1.24 errors) compared with the DWU (0.27 ± 1.09 errors) and SWU
(0.43 ±
1.35 errors; P = .04). CONCLUSIONS: An IPP did not impair sport performance
and
may have reduced injury risk, which supports the use of these programs before
sport activity.
FAU - Root, Hayley
AU - Root H
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs.
FAU - Trojian, Thomas
AU - Trojian T
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs.
FAU - Martinez, Jessica
AU - Martinez J
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs.
FAU - Kraemer, William
AU - Kraemer W
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs.
FAU - DiStefano, Lindsay J
AU - DiStefano LJ
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20151102
PL - United States
TA - J Athl Train
JT - Journal of athletic training
JID - 9301647
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Athletic Performance
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Sports/physiology
MH - Warm-Up Exercise/*physiology
PMC - PMC4732394
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - injury risk
OT - knee
EDAT- 2015/11/03 06:00
MHDA- 2016/07/12 06:00
CRDT- 2015/11/03 06:00
PHST- 2015/11/03 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/11/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/07/12 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.4085/1062-6050-50.11.01 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Athl Train. 2015 Nov;50(11):1149-57. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-50.11.01. Epub
2015
Nov 2.
PMID- 18270387
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20080410
LR - 20191110
IS - 1056-6716 (Print)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 17
IP - 1
DP - 2008 Feb
TI - The relationship between grading and instrumented measurements of anterior
knee
joint laxity.
PG - 60-7
AB - CONTEXT: The relationship between clinical judgments of anterior knee laxity
and
instrumented measurement of anterior tibial translation is unclear.
OBJECTIVE: To
examine the relationship between certified athletic trainers'grading of
anterior
knee laxity and instrumented measurements of anterior tibial translation.
DESIGN:
Randomized, blinded, clinical assessment. SETTING: Laboratory. PARTICIPANTS:
Model patients receiving evaluation of anterior knee laxity. INTERVENTION:
Twelve
model patients were evaluated using a MEDmetric KT1000 knee ligament
Arthrometer
to establish instrumented measurements of anterior translation values at the
tibio-femoral joint. Twenty-two certified athletic trainers were provided
with
operational definitions of potential laxity grades and examined the model
patients to make judgments of anterior knee laxity. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
Correlation between clinical judgments and instrumented measurements of
anterior
tibial translation. RESULTS: Clinical judgments and instrumented measurements
were mutually independent. CONCLUSIONS: Anterior tibial translation grading
by
certified athletic trainers should be interpreted with caution during
clinical
decision-making.
FAU - Hurley, Wendy L
AU - Hurley WL
AD - Kinesiology Department, SUNY, Cortland, USA. hurleyw@em.cortland.edu
FAU - Denegar, Craig
AU - Denegar C
FAU - Buckley, William E
AU - Buckley WE
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries
MH - Diagnostic Tests, Routine/*instrumentation
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*diagnosis
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - United States
EDAT- 2008/02/14 09:00
MHDA- 2008/04/11 09:00
CRDT- 2008/02/14 09:00
PHST- 2008/02/14 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/04/11 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/02/14 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.17.1.60 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2008 Feb;17(1):60-7. doi: 10.1123/jsr.17.1.60.
PMID- 19723992
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090922
LR - 20211020
IS - 1535-1386 (Electronic)
IS - 0021-9355 (Print)
IS - 0021-9355 (Linking)
VI - 91
IP - 9
DP - 2009 Sep
TI - Effect of femoral tunnel placement for reconstruction of the anterior
cruciate
ligament on tibial rotation.
PG - 2151-8
LID - 10.2106/JBJS.H.00940 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Rotational knee movement after reconstruction of the anterior
cruciate ligament has been difficult to quantify. The purpose of this study
was
to identify in vivo whether a more horizontal placement of the femoral tunnel
(in
the ten o'clock position rather than in the eleven o'clock position) can
restore
rotational kinematics, during highly demanding dynamic activities, in a knee
in
which a bone-patellar tendon-bone graft had been used to reconstruct the
anterior
cruciate ligament. METHODS: We evaluated ten patients in whom a bone-patellar
tendon-bone graft had been used to reconstruct the anterior cruciate ligament
with the femoral tunnel in the eleven o'clock position, ten patients who had
had
the same procedure with the femoral tunnel in the ten o'clock position, and
ten
healthy controls. Kinematic data were collected while the subjects (1)
descended
from a stairway, made foot contact, and then pivoted 90 degrees on the
landing
lower limb and (2) jumped from a platform, landed with both feet on the
ground,
and pivoted 90 degrees on the right or left lower limb. The dependent
variable
that we examined was tibial rotation during pivoting. RESULTS: The results
demonstrated that reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament with the
femoral tunnel in either the ten or the eleven o'clock position successfully
restored anterior tibial translation. However, both techniques resulted in
tibial
rotation values, during the dynamic activities evaluated, that were
significantly
larger than those in the intact contralateral lower limbs and those in the
healthy controls. Tibial rotation did not differ significantly between the
two
reconstruction groups or between the healthy controls and the intact
contralateral lower limbs. However, we noticed that positioning the tunnel at
ten
o'clock resulted in slightly decreased rotation values that may have clinical
relevance but not statistical significance. CONCLUSIONS: Regardless of which
of
the two tested positions was utilized to fix the graft to the femur,
reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament did not restore normal
tibial
rotation during dynamic activities.
FAU - Ristanis, Stavros
AU - Ristanis S
AD - Orthopaedic Sports Medicine Center, Ioannina, Greece.
FAU - Stergiou, Nicholas
AU - Stergiou N
FAU - Siarava, Eleftheria
AU - Siarava E
FAU - Ntoulia, Aikaterini
AU - Ntoulia A
FAU - Mitsionis, Grigorios
AU - Mitsionis G
FAU - Georgoulis, Anastasios D
AU - Georgoulis AD
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - J Bone Joint Surg Am
JT - The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume
JID - 0014030
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Bone Transplantation
MH - Femur/*surgery
MH - Humans
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/*methods
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Rotation
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Tibia/*physiopathology
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC2730859
EDAT- 2009/09/03 06:00
MHDA- 2009/09/23 06:00
CRDT- 2009/09/03 09:00
PHST- 2009/09/03 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/09/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/09/23 06:00 [medline]
AID - 91/9/2151 [pii]
AID - 00940 [pii]
AID - 10.2106/JBJS.H.00940 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2009 Sep;91(9):2151-8. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.H.00940.
PMID- 36005281
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20221003
LR - 20230303
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 50
IP - 12
DP - 2022 Oct
TI - Comparable Instrumented Knee Joint Laxity and Patient-Reported Outcomes After
ACL
Repair With Dynamic Intraligamentary Stabilization or ACL Reconstruction: 5-
Year
Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial.
PG - 3256-3264
LID - 10.1177/03635465221117777 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Technical innovation has led to the renaissance of anterior
cruciate
ligament (ACL) repair in the past decade. PURPOSE/HYPOTHESIS: The present
study
aimed to compare instrumented knee joint laxity and patient-reported outcomes
(PROs) after ACL repair with those after primary ACL reconstruction for acute
isolated ACL tears. It was hypothesized that ACL repair would lead to
comparable
knee joint stability and PROs at 5 years postoperatively in comparison with
ACL
reconstruction. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence,
1.
METHODS: A total of 85 patients with acute ACL tears were randomized to
undergo
either ACL repair using dynamic intraligamentary stabilization (DIS) or
primary
ACL reconstruction with a semitendinosus tendon autograft. The primary
outcome
was the side-to-side difference in anterior tibial translation (ΔATT)
assessed by
Rolimeter testing at 5 years postoperatively. Follow-up examinations were
performed at 1, 2, and 5 years. PROs were assessed using the Tegner activity
scale, the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) subjective
score,
and the Lysholm score. Furthermore, the rates of recurrent instability, other
complications, and revision surgery were recorded. A power analysis was
performed
a priori, and the Friedman test, Mann-Whitney U test, and Bonferroni
correction
were applied for statistical comparisons with significance set at P < .05.
RESULTS: The mean age at inclusion was 28.3 ± 11.5 years in the ACL repair
group
and 27.1 ± 11.5 years in the ACL reconstruction group. At 5 years
postoperatively, a total of 64 patients (ACL repair: n = 34 of 43 [79%]; ACL
reconstruction: n = 30 of 42 [71%]) were available for follow-up. At 5 years,
ΔATT was 1.7 ± 1.6 mm in the ACL repair group and 1.4 ± 1.3 mm in the ACL
reconstruction group (P = .334). Preinjury PROs were restored as soon as 1
year
after surgery and plateaued until 2 and 5 years postoperatively in both
groups.
At the 5-year follow-up, the mean Lysholm score was 97.0 ± 5.4 versus 94.5 ±
5.5
(P = .322), respectively, and the mean IKDC subjective score was 94.1 ± 9.9
versus 89.9 ± 7.8 (P = .047), respectively, in the ACL repair group versus
ACL
reconstruction group. At 5 years postoperatively, 12 patients in the ACL
repair
group (35%; age <25 years: n = 10/12; Tegner score ≥7: n = 10/12) had
recurrent
instability, of whom 10 underwent single-stage revision ACL reconstruction.
In
the ACL reconstruction group, there were 6 patients with recurrent
instability
(20%; age <25 years: n = 6/6; Tegner score ≥7: n = 5/6); however, in 5
patients,
staged revision was required. Differences between both groups regarding
recurrent
instability (P = .09) or ACL revision surgery (P = .118) were not
statistically
significant. Recurrent instability was associated with age <25 years and
Tegner
score >7 in both groups. CONCLUSION: At 5 years after ACL repair with DIS,
instrumented knee joint laxity and PROs were comparable with those after ACL
reconstruction. Although no significant difference was found between repair
and
reconstruction, a critical appraisal of the rates of recurrent instability
(35%
vs 20%, respectively) and revision surgery (38% vs 27%, respectively) is
needed.
Young age and a high preinjury activity level were the main risk factors for
recurrent instability in both groups. However, single-stage revision ACL
reconstruction was possible in each case in the ACL repair group. Although
ACL
reconstruction remains the gold standard in the treatment of ACL tears, the
present study supports the use of ACL repair with DIS as a feasible option to
treat acute ACL tears in patients aged ≥25 years with low to moderate
activity
levels (Tegner score <7). REGISTRATION: DRKS00015466 (German Clinical Trials
Register).
FAU - Glasbrenner, Johannes
AU - Glasbrenner J
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
FAU - Raschke, Michael J
AU - Raschke MJ
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
FAU - Kittl, Christoph
AU - Kittl C
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
FAU - Herbst, Elmar
AU - Herbst E
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
FAU - Peez, Christian
AU - Peez C
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
FAU - Briese, Thorben
AU - Briese T
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
FAU - Michel, Philipp A
AU - Michel PA
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
FAU - Herbort, Mirco
AU - Herbort M
AD - OCM Munich, Munich, Germany.
FAU - Kösters, Clemens
AU - Kösters C
AD - Department of Traumatology and Orthopedics, Maria-Josef-Hospital Greven,
Greven,
Germany.
FAU - Schliemann, Benedikt
AU - Schliemann B
AD - Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital
Münster, Münster, Germany.
LA - eng
SI - DRKS/DRKS00015466
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220825
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2023 Mar;51(3):NP11-NP12. PMID: 36856283
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2023 Mar;51(3):NP12-NP14. PMID: 36856284
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - *Joint Instability/surgery
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - Patient Reported Outcome Measures
MH - Treatment Outcome
PMC - PMC9527444
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL reconstruction
OT - ACL repair
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - dynamic intraligamentary stabilization
COIS- One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of
interest or source of funding: M.H. is a consultant for Medacta, Conmed
Linvatec,
Olympus, and DJO. M.H., C.K., and B.S. are consultants for Mathys Medical.
AOSSM
checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has
not
conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability
or
responsibility relating thereto.
EDAT- 2022/08/26 06:00
MHDA- 2022/10/04 06:00
CRDT- 2022/08/25 07:52
PHST- 2022/08/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/10/04 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/08/25 07:52 [entrez]
AID - 10.1177_03635465221117777 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/03635465221117777 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2022 Oct;50(12):3256-3264. doi: 10.1177/03635465221117777.
Epub
2022 Aug 25.
PMID- 36394585
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230619
LR - 20230619
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 31
IP - 7
DP - 2023 Jul
TI - Preoperative quantitative pivot shift does not correlate with in vivo
kinematics
following ACL reconstruction with or without lateral extraarticular
tenodesis.
PG - 2802-2809
LID - 10.1007/s00167-022-07232-8 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: Quantitative pivot shift (QPS) testing using PIVOT technology can
detect
high- and low-grade rotatory knee instability following anterior cruciate
ligament injury or reconstruction (ACLR). The aim of this project was to
determine if preoperative QPS correlates with postoperative knee kinematics
in
the operative and contralateral, healthy extremity following ACLR with or
without
lateral extraarticular tenodesis (LET) using a highly precise in vivo
analysis
system. A positive correlation between preoperative QPS and postoperative
tibial
translation and rotation following ACLR with or without LET in the operative
and
healthy, contralateral extremity was hypothesized. METHODS: Twenty patients
with
ACL injury and high-grade rotatory knee instability were randomized to
undergo
anatomic ACLR with or without LET as part of a prospective randomized trial.
At 6
and 12 months postoperatively, in vivo kinematic data were collected using
dynamic biplanar radiography superimposed with high-resolution computed
tomography scans of patients' knees during downhill running. Total
anterior-posterior (AP) tibial translation and internal-external tibial
rotation
were measured during the gait cycle. Spearman's rho was calculated for
preoperative QPS and postoperative kinematics. RESULTS: In the contralateral,
healthy extremity, a significant positive correlation was seen between
preoperative QPS and total AP tibial translation at 12 months postoperatively
(r(s) = 0.6, p < 0.05). There were no additional significant correlations
observed between preoperative QPS and postoperative knee kinematics at 6 and
12 months postoperatively in the operative and contralateral, healthy
extremity
for combined isolated ACLR and ACLR with LET patients as well as isolated
ACLR
patients or ACLR with LET patients analyzed separately. DISCUSSION: The main
finding of this study was that there was a significant positive correlation
between preoperative QPS and total AP tibial translation at 12 months
postoperatively in the contralateral, healthy extremity. There were no
significant correlations between preoperative QPS and postoperative in vivo
kinematics at 6 and 12 months following ACLR with or without LET. This
suggests
that QPS as measured with PIVOT technology does correlate with healthy in
vivo
knee kinematics, but QPS does not correlate with in vivo kinematics following
ACLR with or without LET.
CI - © 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to European Society of Sports
Traumatology, Knee Surgery, Arthroscopy (ESSKA).
FAU - Gibbs, Christopher M
AU - Gibbs CM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-4116-3845
AD - UPMC Freddie Fu Sports Medicine Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh, 3471 Fifth Ave #1010, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
gibbscm2@upmc.edu.
FAU - Hughes, Jonathan D
AU - Hughes JD
AD - UPMC Freddie Fu Sports Medicine Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh, 3471 Fifth Ave #1010, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
FAU - Popchak, Adam J
AU - Popchak AJ
AD - Department of Physical Therapy, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA,
USA.
FAU - Chiba, Daisuke
AU - Chiba D
AD - UPMC Freddie Fu Sports Medicine Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh, 3471 Fifth Ave #1010, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hirosaki University Graduate School of
Medicine, Hirosaki, Aomori, Japan.
FAU - Winkler, Philipp W
AU - Winkler PW
AD - UPMC Freddie Fu Sports Medicine Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh, 3471 Fifth Ave #1010, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
AD - Department for Orthopaedic Sports Medicine, Klinikum Rechts Der Isar,
Technical
University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
FAU - Lesniak, Bryson P
AU - Lesniak BP
AD - UPMC Freddie Fu Sports Medicine Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh, 3471 Fifth Ave #1010, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
FAU - Anderst, William J
AU - Anderst WJ
AD - Biodynamics Laboratory, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
FAU - Musahl, Volker
AU - Musahl V
AD - UPMC Freddie Fu Sports Medicine Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
University of Pittsburgh, 3471 Fifth Ave #1010, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20221117
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - *Tenodesis/methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - *Joint Instability/etiology/surgery
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL reconstruction
OT - Knee kinematics
OT - Lateral extra-articular tenodesis
OT - Quantitative pivot shift
EDAT- 2022/11/18 06:00
MHDA- 2023/06/19 13:08
CRDT- 2022/11/17 13:51
PHST- 2022/06/28 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/11/08 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/06/19 13:08 [medline]
PHST- 2022/11/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/11/17 13:51 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-022-07232-8 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-022-07232-8 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2023 Jul;31(7):2802-2809. doi:
10.1007/s00167-022-07232-8. Epub 2022 Nov 17.
PMID- 17261567
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20071206
LR - 20221207
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 35
IP - 4
DP - 2007 Apr
TI - A 10-year comparison of anterior cruciate ligament reconstructions with
hamstring
tendon and patellar tendon autograft: a controlled, prospective trial.
PG - 564-74
AB - BACKGROUND: There are no controlled, prospective studies comparing the 10-
year
outcomes of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction using patellar
tendon
(PT) and 4-strand hamstring tendon (HT) autografts. HYPOTHESIS: Comparable
results are possible with HT and PT autografts. STUDY DESIGN: Cohort study;
Level
of evidence, 2. METHODS: One hundred eighty ACL-deficient knees that met
inclusion criteria underwent ACL reconstruction (90 HT autograft, 90 PT
autograft) by one surgeon and were treated with an accelerated rehabilitation
program. All knees were observed in a prospective fashion with subjective,
objective, and radiographic evaluation at 2, 5, 7, and 10-year intervals.
RESULTS: At 10 years, there were no differences in graft rupture rates (7/90
PT
vs. 12/90 HT, P = .24). There were 20 contralateral ACL ruptures in the PT
group,
compared with 9 in the HT group (P = .02). In all patients, graft rupture was
associated with instrumented laxity >2 mm at 2 years (P = .001). Normal or
near-normal function of the knee was reported in 97% of patients in both
groups.
In the PT group, harvest-site symptoms (P = .001) and kneeling pain (P = .01)
were more common than in the HT group. More patients reported pain with
strenuous
activities in PT knees than in HT knees (P = .05). Radiographic
osteoarthritis
was more common in PT knees than the HT-reconstructed knees (P = .04). The
difference, however, was composed of patients with mild osteoarthritis. Other
predictors of radiographic osteoarthritis were <90% single-legged hop test at
1
year and the need for further knee surgery. An "ideal" outcome, defined as an
overall International Knee Documentation Committee grade of A or B and a
radiographic grade of A at 10 years after ACL reconstruction, was associated
with
<3 mm of instrumented laxity at 2 years, the absence of additional surgery in
the
knee, and HT grafts. CONCLUSIONS: It is possible to obtain excellent results
with
both HT and PT autografts. We recommend HT reconstructions to our patients
because of decreased harvest-site symptoms and radiographic osteoarthritis.
FAU - Pinczewski, Leo A
AU - Pinczewski LA
AD - North Sydney Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Centre, Crows Nest, Sydney, NSW,
Australia. lpinczewski@nsosmc.com.au
FAU - Lyman, Jeffrey
AU - Lyman J
FAU - Salmon, Lucy J
AU - Salmon LJ
FAU - Russell, Vivianne J
AU - Russell VJ
FAU - Roe, Justin
AU - Roe J
FAU - Linklater, James
AU - Linklater J
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20070129
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Female
MH - Health Status Indicators
MH - Humans
MH - Knee/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Osteoarthritis/surgery
MH - Patellar Ligament/*transplantation
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - *Plastic Surgery Procedures
MH - Time Factors
MH - *Transplantation, Autologous
MH - *Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2007/01/31 09:00
MHDA- 2007/12/07 09:00
CRDT- 2007/01/31 09:00
PHST- 2007/01/31 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/12/07 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/01/31 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546506296042 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546506296042 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2007 Apr;35(4):564-74. doi: 10.1177/0363546506296042. Epub
2007
Jan 29.
PMID- 35438677
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20221216
LR - 20221221
IS - 1533-4287 (Electronic)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 37
IP - 1
DP - 2023 Jan 1
TI - Four-Week Application of Kinesiotaping Improves Proprioception, Strength, and
Balance in Individuals With Complete Anterior Cruciate Ligament Rupture.
PG - 213-219
LID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000004245 [doi]
AB - Kielė, D and Solianik, R. Four-week application of kinesiotaping improves
proprioception, strength, and balance in individuals with complete anterior
cruciate ligament rupture. J Strength Cond Res 37(1): 213-219, 2023-
Kinesiotaping
(KT) is common in musculoskeletal rehabilitation, but whether it is
efficacious
for surgically untreated anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) ruptures is
unknown.
Therefore, we evaluated whether a strategy of physiotherapy plus KT would be
superior to a strategy of physiotherapy alone on subsequent proprioception
and
motor function. Men aged 28.1 ± 6.7 years with complete ACL ruptures were
randomized to either a control (physiotherapy) or an experimental group
(physiotherapy + KT) for a 4-week period. Changes in balance were assessed on
the
injured leg using a force platform. Knee angle reproduction, maximal
voluntary
contraction (MVC), and rate of force development (RFD) were measured using
dynamometry, and pain was recorded using a visual analog scale. Decreases in
knee
pain and improvements in angle reproduction were observed in both groups ( p
<
0.05), with a greater effect on angle reproduction in the experimental group
( p
< 0.05). Both groups demonstrated increased isometric knee flexor MVC and RFD
values ( p < 0.05), but an increase in RFD of the knee extensors was observed
only in the experimental group ( p < 0.05). Furthermore, the MVC of
concentric
knee flexors at 60°·s -1 increased only in the experimental group ( p <
0.05),
whereas concentric MVC at 180°·s -1 -resulting in greater hamstring-to-
quadriceps
ratios-increased in both groups ( p < 0.05). Balancing ability on the injured
leg
increased only in the experimental group ( p < 0.05). Thus, KT plus
physiotherapy
was beneficial in the treatment of proprioception, strength, and static
balance
in these individuals with an ACL rupture.
CI - Copyright © 2022 National Strength and Conditioning Association.
FAU - Kielė, Dovilė
AU - Kielė D
AD - Institute of Sport Science and Innovations, Lithuanian Sports University,
Kaunas,
Lithuania ; and.
AD - Department of Health Promotion and Rehabilitation, Lithuanian Sports
University,
Kaunas, Lithuania.
FAU - Solianik, Rima
AU - Solianik R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-6822-4519
AD - Institute of Sport Science and Innovations, Lithuanian Sports University,
Kaunas,
Lithuania ; and.
AD - Department of Health Promotion and Rehabilitation, Lithuanian Sports
University,
Kaunas, Lithuania.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT04954924
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220413
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - Male
MH - Humans
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
MH - *Athletic Tape
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Proprioception
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Pain
MH - Muscle Strength
EDAT- 2022/04/20 06:00
MHDA- 2022/12/17 06:00
CRDT- 2022/04/19 12:38
PHST- 2022/04/20 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/12/17 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/04/19 12:38 [entrez]
AID - 00124278-202301000-00030 [pii]
AID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000004245 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2023 Jan 1;37(1):213-219. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0000000000004245.
Epub 2022 Apr 13.
PMID- 22273632
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120521
LR - 20161125
IS - 1522-9653 (Electronic)
IS - 1063-4584 (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 4
DP - 2012 Apr
TI - Effects of intraarticular IL1-Ra for acute anterior cruciate ligament knee
injury: a randomized controlled pilot trial (NCT00332254).
PG - 271-8
LID - 10.1016/j.joca.2011.12.009 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinical effectiveness of intraarticular IL-1
receptor
antagonist (IL-1Ra) for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear. METHODS:
Eleven
patients with acute ACL tear confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
were
randomized to receive a single intraarticular injection of IL-1Ra (anakinra
150 mg, n = 6) or equal volume of saline placebo (1 ml, n = 5). The
double-blinded treatment was administered a mean 2 weeks after injury.
Synovial
fluid (SF) (n = 9 patients) and sera (all patients) were available at
baseline
(prior to injection) and immediately prior to surgery (mean 35 days later)
and
analyzed for SF IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-1Ra and serum hyaluronan (HA), an indicator
of
synovial inflammation. The primary outcome, standardized Knee Injury and
Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) questionnaire, was obtained at 0
(baseline),
4, and 14 days after injection. RESULTS: Compared with placebo, the IL-1Ra
group
had substantially greater improvement in key outcomes over 14 days (KOOS pain
P = 0.001; activities of daily living P = 0.0015; KOOS sports function
P = 0.0026; KOOS quality of life (QOL) P = 0.0048; and total KOOS
P < 0.0001).
There were no adverse reactions in either group. SF IL-1α (P = 0.05) and
serum HA
(P = 0.03), but not IL-1β, or IL-1Ra, decreased significantly in the IL-1Ra
but
not the placebo treated patients. Compared with placebo, IL-1α was borderline
significantly different in the IL-1Ra treated group (P = 0.06). CONCLUSIONS:
Administered within the first month following severe knee injury, IL-1Ra
reduced
knee pain and improved function over a 2-week interval. This promising proof
of
concept study provides a new paradigm for studies of acute joint injury and
suggests that a larger follow-up study is warranted.
CI - Copyright © 2012 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
FAU - Kraus, V B
AU - Kraus VB
AD - Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710,
USA.
vbk@duke.edu
FAU - Birmingham, J
AU - Birmingham J
FAU - Stabler, T V
AU - Stabler TV
FAU - Feng, S
AU - Feng S
FAU - Taylor, D C
AU - Taylor DC
FAU - Moorman, C T 3rd
AU - Moorman CT 3rd
FAU - Garrett, W E
AU - Garrett WE
FAU - Toth, A P
AU - Toth AP
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT00332254
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20120110
PL - England
TA - Osteoarthritis Cartilage
JT - Osteoarthritis and cartilage
JID - 9305697
RN - 0 (Biomarkers)
RN - 0 (Interleukin 1 Receptor Antagonist Protein)
SB - IM
MH - Activities of Daily Living
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomarkers/metabolism
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Injections, Intra-Articular
MH - Interleukin 1 Receptor Antagonist Protein/administration &
dosage/*therapeutic
use
MH - Knee Injuries/complications/diagnosis/*drug therapy/rehabilitation
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Pain/drug therapy/etiology
MH - Pilot Projects
MH - Quality of Life
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Synovial Fluid/metabolism
MH - Trauma Severity Indices
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2012/01/26 06:00
MHDA- 2012/05/23 06:00
CRDT- 2012/01/26 06:00
PHST- 2011/07/31 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2011/11/25 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2011/12/21 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2012/01/26 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/01/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/05/23 06:00 [medline]
AID - S1063-4584(12)00012-X [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.joca.2011.12.009 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2012 Apr;20(4):271-8. doi:
10.1016/j.joca.2011.12.009.
Epub 2012 Jan 10.
PMID- 36696258
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230127
LR - 20230202
IS - 1533-4287 (Electronic)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 37
IP - 2
DP - 2023 Feb 1
TI - Focus of Attention During ACL Injury Prevention Exercises Affects
Improvements in
Jump-Landing Kinematics in Soccer Players: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
PG - 337-342
LID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000004201 [doi]
AB - Dalvandpour, N, Zareei, M, Abbasi, H, Abdoli, B, Mohammadian, MA, Rommers, N,
and
Rössler, R. Focus of attention during ACL injury prevention exercises affects
improvements in jump-landing kinematics in soccer players: a randomized
controlled trial. J Strength Cond Res 37(2): 337-342, 2023-Anterior cruciate
ligament tears are severe and complex knee injuries that commonly occur in
soccer. Prevent injuries enhance performance (PEP) is an exercise-based
prevention program to effectively reduce anterior cruciate ligament injuries.
It
is, however, unclear how the delivery of the program contributes to its
effectiveness. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the effect of the focus of
attention that was emphasized during the delivery of the PEP program on
jump-landing kinematics in male, elite-level, U21 soccer players. Forty-two
players participated in this randomized controlled trial and were allocated
to
(a) the internal focus of attention (IF) group, receiving instructions
focusing
on the execution of the exercise (b), the external focus of attention (EF)
group,
receiving instructions focusing on the outcome of the exercise, or (c) the
control group. Before and after the 8-week intervention, players performed a
jump-landing task during which we measured hip and knee angles at the initial
contact, peak knee flexion, and peak vertical ground reaction force using a
3-dimensional motion analyzer. A repeated-measures analysis of variance was
used
to compare groups over time. Significant time-by-group interaction effects
with
large effect sizes were found for hip flexion at all moments (p < 0.032; η2 >
0.15) and for the knee flexion angle at initial contact and maximum knee
flexion
(p < 0.001; η2 > 0.35), all in favor of the EF group. This shows that EF
during
PEP improves hip and knee joint kinematics in the sagittal plane more than
IF.
Therefore, EF during PEP instructions is preferred to increase the
effectiveness
of this injury prevention program.
CI - Copyright © 2022 National Strength and Conditioning Association.
FAU - Dalvandpour, Nazanin
AU - Dalvandpour N
AD - Department of Sport Rehabilitation and Health, Faculty of Sport Sciences and
Health, Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Zareei, Mostafa
AU - Zareei M
AD - Department of Sport Rehabilitation and Health, Faculty of Sport Sciences and
Health, Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Abbasi, Hamed
AU - Abbasi H
AD - Department of Sport Injuries and Corrective Exercises, Sport Sciences
Research
Institute, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Abdoli, Behrouz
AU - Abdoli B
AD - Department of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences in Sport, Faculty of Sport
Sciences and Health, Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Mohammadian, Mohammad A
AU - Mohammadian MA
AD - School of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, Kharazmi University, Tehran,
Iran.
FAU - Rommers, Nikki
AU - Rommers N
AD - Department of Movement and Sport Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Brussel,
Brussels,
Belgium.
AD - Department of Clinical Research, Clinical Trial Unit, University Hospital
Basel,
Basel, Switzerland; and.
FAU - Rössler, Roland
AU - Rössler R
AD - Department of Sport, Exercise and Health, University of Basel, Basel,
Switzerland.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20211223
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - *Soccer/injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Attention
EDAT- 2023/01/26 06:00
MHDA- 2023/01/28 06:00
CRDT- 2023/01/25 12:33
PHST- 2023/01/25 12:33 [entrez]
PHST- 2023/01/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/01/28 06:00 [medline]
AID - 00124278-202302000-00011 [pii]
AID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000004201 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2023 Feb 1;37(2):337-342. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0000000000004201.
Epub 2021 Dec 23.
PMID- 36574067
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230731
LR - 20230731
IS - 1434-3916 (Electronic)
IS - 0936-8051 (Print)
IS - 0936-8051 (Linking)
VI - 143
IP - 8
DP - 2023 Aug
TI - Clinical and radiological comparison between partial and complete resection
of
the anterior cruciate ligament in patients with mucoid degeneration of the
anterior cruciate ligament: a controlled clinical trial.
PG - 5149-5155
LID - 10.1007/s00402-022-04741-6 [doi]
AB - INTRODUCTION: The pathology of a mucoid degeneration of the anterior cruciate
ligament (MDACL) has been mentioned in several publications but due to its
rare
incidence it is not a well-known pathology. Partial or complete resection of
the
ACL is the option of choice after failed non-surgical treatment. However, the
success rate of both surgical techniques and the subsequent risk of an ACL
instability is not known. The purpose of this study was to compare the
clinical
and radiological outcome between partial resection and complete resection of
the
ACL in patients with MDACL. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients with MDACL
verified
by MRI and persistent knee pain were treated by partial (Group I) or complete
resection (Group II) of the ACL and were included in a controlled clinical
trial
after unsuccessful conservative treatment for at least 6 months. Demographic,
clinical and radiological data including the thickness of ACL,
ACL/intercondylar
ratio, patient's age at the time of surgery, the presenting symptoms, range
of
motion and ligament stability assessed by the ACL ligament score (Lachman
test)
were collected. In addition, Tegner activity score and Lysholm score were
evaluated preoperatively and at final follow-up after a minimum of 12 months.
RESULTS: At final follow-up with a mean of 16.8 ± 8.8 months (range 12-41;
Group
I: 18.3 ± 9.7 vs. Group II: 15.3 ± 8.0; ns), all patients were pain free.
Postoperatively, positive Lachman tests were noted in all patients (100%) in
Group II (n = 5 patients with grade II and n = 5 patients with grade III). In
Group I, 8 patients (80%) showed a negative Lachman test (grade I) and 2
patients
(20%) a slightly elongated Lachman test with a firm stop (grade II). The mean
knee flexion at follow-up examination was 132° ± 7° (range 120°-140°; Group I:
129° ± 9° vs. Group II: 135° ± 4°; ns). In pairwise comparison, flexion angle
increased significantly in both groups (Group I: p = 0.0124 and Group II:
p < 0.001). Pairwise comparison of thickness of the ACL and ACL/intercondylar
ratio prior to and post-surgery in Group I showed non-significant
differences.
CONCLUSION: Both arthroscopic debridement and complete resection of the ACL
lead
to improvement of clinical and radiological findings in isolated MDACL.
However,
complete resection of the ACL will result in higher instability. Therefore,
partial resection might be the better treatment option, especially in young
patients with MDACL.
CI - © 2022. The Author(s).
FAU - Oehler, N
AU - Oehler N
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Hessing
Stiftung Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
FAU - Haenle, M
AU - Haenle M
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University Rostock, Rostock, Germany.
FAU - Vogt, S
AU - Vogt S
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Hessing
Stiftung Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
FAU - Blanke, F
AU - Blanke F
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-2759-565X
AD - Department of Knee-, Shoulder- and Hip-Surgery and Orthopedic Sports
Medicine,
Schön Klinik München-Harlaching, Munich, Germany. fblanke@gmx.de.
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University Rostock, Rostock, Germany.
fblanke@gmx.de.
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Hessing
Stiftung Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany. fblanke@gmx.de.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20221227
PL - Germany
TA - Arch Orthop Trauma Surg
JT - Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery
JID - 9011043
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Retrospective Studies
MH - Knee Joint/diagnostic imaging/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
PMC - PMC10374792
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Impingement
OT - MDACL
OT - Mucoid degeneration
OT - Resection
OT - Shrinking
COIS- The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
EDAT- 2022/12/28 06:00
MHDA- 2023/07/31 06:42
CRDT- 2022/12/27 11:15
PHST- 2022/10/10 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/12/15 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/07/31 06:42 [medline]
PHST- 2022/12/28 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/12/27 11:15 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00402-022-04741-6 [pii]
AID - 4741 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00402-022-04741-6 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Arch Orthop Trauma Surg. 2023 Aug;143(8):5149-5155. doi:
10.1007/s00402-022-04741-6. Epub 2022 Dec 27.
PMID- 16000666
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050901
LR - 20221207
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 8
DP - 2005 Aug
TI - Endoscopic reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament using bone-
patellar
tendon-bone grafts fixed with bioabsorbable or metal interference screws: a
prospective randomized study of the clinical outcome.
PG - 1160-5
AB - BACKGROUND: During the past decade, bioabsorbable interference screws have
become
increasingly popular in endoscopic reconstructions of the anterior cruciate
ligament. With these screws, there is no need for a second operation for
removal
and no complicating factor if later revision surgery is necessary. Several
pullout studies have found similar results between metal and bioabsorbable
interference screws; however, few studies have investigated the clinical
outcome.
HYPOTHESIS: There is no difference in the clinical outcome of bioabsorbable
interference screws compared with metal screws. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized
controlled clinical trial; Level of evidence, 1. METHODS: Forty-one patients
were
randomized for the use of either metal interference screws (20 patients) or
bioabsorbable poly-l-lactic acid screws (21 patients). The patients were
followed
with clinical examinations at 6, 12, and 24 weeks and at 1 and 2 years
postoperatively. RESULTS: Subjective knee function was better in the patients
in
the metal screw group; they had less pain at rest, a higher Tegner score, a
higher Lysholm score, and better subjective knee function at 2 years compared
to
the bioabsorbable screw group. However, there was no difference in stability
between the groups. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Because of the
inferior
results in the bioabsorbable screw group in our study, and until larger
studies
show otherwise, we do not find the advantages of using bioabsorbable screws
sufficient to warrant the routine use of poly-L-lactic acid screws in
anterior
cruciate ligament reconstructions.
FAU - Drogset, Jon Olav
AU - Drogset JO
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, University Hospital in Trondheim, N-7006
Trondheim,
Norway. Jon.O.Drogset@medisin.ntnu.no
FAU - Grøntvedt, Torbjørn
AU - Grøntvedt T
FAU - Tegnander, Agnar
AU - Tegnander A
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20050706
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
RN - 0 (Metals)
RN - 0 (Polyesters)
RN - 0 (Polymers)
RN - 33X04XA5AT (Lactic Acid)
RN - 459TN2L5F5 (poly(lactide))
SB - IM
MH - Absorbable Implants
MH - *Bone Screws
MH - Bone Transplantation
MH - Endoscopy
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*surgery
MH - Lactic Acid
MH - Male
MH - Metals
MH - Polyesters
MH - Polymers
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Plastic Surgery Procedures
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2005/07/08 09:00
MHDA- 2005/09/02 09:00
CRDT- 2005/07/08 09:00
PHST- 2005/07/08 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/09/02 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/07/08 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546504272264 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546504272264 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2005 Aug;33(8):1160-5. doi: 10.1177/0363546504272264. Epub
2005
Jul 6.
PMID- 24532596
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20141002
LR - 20220408
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 42
IP - 4
DP - 2014 Apr
TI - Effects of knee extension constraint training on knee flexion angle and peak
impact ground-reaction force.
PG - 979-86
LID - 10.1177/0363546513519323 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Low compliance with training programs is likely to be one of the
major reasons for inconsistency of the data regarding the effectiveness of
current anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury prevention programs. Training
methods that reduce training time and cost could favorably influence the
effectiveness of ACL injury prevention programs. A newly designed knee
extension
constraint training device may serve this purpose. HYPOTHESIS: (1) Knee
extension
constraint training for 4 weeks would significantly increase the knee flexion
angle at the time of peak impact posterior ground-reaction force and decrease
peak impact ground-reaction forces during landing of a stop-jump task and a
side-cutting task, and (2) the training effects would be retained 4 weeks
after
completion of the training program. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory
study.
METHODS: Twenty-four recreational athletes were randomly assigned to group A
or
B. Participants in group A played sports without wearing a knee extension
constraint device for 4 weeks and then played sports while wearing the device
for
4 weeks, while participants in group B underwent a reversed protocol. Both
groups
were tested at the beginning of week 1 and at the ends of weeks 4 and 8
without
wearing the device. Knee joint angles were obtained from 3-dimensional
videographic data, while ground-reaction forces were measured simultaneously
using force plates. Analyses of variance were performed to determine the
training
effects and the retention of training effects. RESULTS: Participants in group
A
significantly increased knee flexion angles and decreased ground-reaction
forces
at the end of week 8 (P ≤ .012). Participants in group B significantly
increased
knee flexion angles and decreased ground-reaction forces at the ends of weeks
4
and 8 (P ≤ .007). However, participants in group B decreased knee flexion
angles
and increased ground-reaction forces at the end of week 8 in comparison with
the
end of week 4 (P ≤ .009). CONCLUSION: Knee extension constraint training for
4
weeks significantly altered lower extremity movement patterns and transferred
these changes in lower extremity movement patterns to stop-jump and side-
cutting
tasks in which ACL injuries frequently occur. Training effects were retained
4
weeks after the training was completed but were diminished in magnitude.
CLINICAL
RELEVANCE: A knee extension constraint device may be a useful training tool
in
future ACL injury prevention programs to alter movement patterns without
extra
training time.
FAU - Liu, Hui
AU - Liu H
AD - Bing Yu, Center for Human Movement Science, Division of Physical Therapy, The
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Bondurant Hall, CB #7135, Chapel
Hill, NC 27599-7135, USA. byu@med.unc.edu.
FAU - Wu, Will
AU - Wu W
FAU - Yao, Wanxiang
AU - Yao W
FAU - Spang, Jeffrey T
AU - Spang JT
FAU - Creighton, R Alexander
AU - Creighton RA
FAU - Garrett, William E
AU - Garrett WE
FAU - Yu, Bing
AU - Yu B
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20140214
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - *Braces
MH - Equipment Design
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - *Physical Education and Training
MH - *Sports
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL injury
OT - biomechanics
OT - movement patterns
OT - prevention
EDAT- 2014/02/18 06:00
MHDA- 2014/10/03 06:00
CRDT- 2014/02/18 06:00
PHST- 2014/02/18 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/02/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/10/03 06:00 [medline]
AID - 0363546513519323 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546513519323 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2014 Apr;42(4):979-86. doi: 10.1177/0363546513519323. Epub
2014
Feb 14.
PMID- 26122384
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160328
LR - 20181202
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 43
IP - 9
DP - 2015 Sep
TI - Risk of anterior cruciate ligament fatigue failure is increased by limited
internal femoral rotation during in vitro repeated pivot landings.
PG - 2233-41
LID - 10.1177/0363546515589164 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: A reduced range of hip internal rotation is associated with
increased
peak anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) strain and risk for injury. It is
unknown,
however, whether limiting the available range of internal femoral rotation
increases the susceptibility of the ACL to fatigue failure. HYPOTHESIS: Risk
of
ACL failure is significantly greater in female knee specimens with a limited
range of internal femoral rotation, smaller femoral-ACL attachment angle, and
smaller tibial eminence volume during repeated in vitro simulated single-leg
pivot landings. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: A
custom-built testing apparatus was used to simulate repeated single-leg pivot
landings with a 4×-body weight impulsive load that induces knee compression,
knee
flexion, and internal tibial torque in 32 paired human knee specimens from 8
male
and 8 female donors. These test loads were applied to each pair of specimens,
in
one knee with limited internal femoral rotation and in the contralateral knee
with femoral rotation resisted by 2 springs to simulate the active hip
rotator
muscles' resistance to stretch. The landings were repeated until ACL failure
occurred or until a minimum of 100 trials were executed. The angle at which
the
ACL originates from the femur and the tibial eminence volume were measured on
magnetic resonance images. RESULTS: The final Cox regression model (P = .024)
revealed that range of internal femoral rotation and sex of donor were
significant factors in determining risk of ACL fatigue failure. The specimens
with limited range of internal femoral rotation had a failure risk 17.1 times
higher than did the specimens with free rotation (P = .016). The female knee
specimens had a risk of ACL failure 26.9 times higher than the male specimens
(P
= .055). CONCLUSION: Limiting the range of internal femoral rotation during
repetitive pivot landings increases the risk of an ACL fatigue failure in
comparison with free rotation in a cadaveric model. CLINICAL RELEVANCE:
Screening
for restricted internal rotation at the hip in ACL injury prevention programs
as
well as in individuals with ACL injuries and/or reconstructions is warranted.
CI - © 2015 The Author(s).
FAU - Beaulieu, Mélanie L
AU - Beaulieu ML
AD - School of Kinesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
mbeaulie@umich.edu.
FAU - Wojtys, Edward M
AU - Wojtys EM
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and MedSport, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, Michigan, USA.
FAU - Ashton-Miller, James A
AU - Ashton-Miller JA
AD - School of Kinesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
Michigan, USA Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan,
Ann
Arbor, Michigan, USA.
LA - eng
GR - R01 AR054821/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
DEP - 20150629
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiology
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Body Weight/physiology
MH - Cadaver
MH - Fatigue/*etiology/physiopathology
MH - Female
MH - Femur/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/physiopathology
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiology
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Rotation
MH - Tibia/physiology
MH - Torque
PMC - PMC4615705
MID - NIHMS729506
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - fatigue
OT - femoroacetabular impingement
OT - hip
OT - knee
EDAT- 2015/07/01 06:00
MHDA- 2016/03/29 06:00
CRDT- 2015/07/01 06:00
PHST- 2015/07/01 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/07/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/03/29 06:00 [medline]
AID - 0363546515589164 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546515589164 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2015 Sep;43(9):2233-41. doi: 10.1177/0363546515589164. Epub
2015
Jun 29.
PMID- 23347094
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160209
LR - 20220330
IS - 1600-0838 (Electronic)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 4
DP - 2014 Aug
TI - Real-time feedback on knee abduction moment does not improve frontal-plane
knee
mechanics during jump landings.
PG - 692-9
LID - 10.1111/sms.12051 [doi]
AB - Excessive knee abduction loading is a contributing factor to anterior
cruciate
ligament (ACL) injury risk. The purpose of this study was to determine
whether a
double-leg landing training program with real-time visual feedback improves
frontal-plane mechanics during double- and single-leg landings. Knee
abduction
angles and moments and vertical ground reaction forces (GRF) of 21
recreationally
active women were quantified for double- and single-leg landings before and
after
the training program. This program consisted of two sessions of double-leg
jump
landings with real-time visual feedback on knee abduction moments for the
experimental group and without real-time feedback for the control group. No
significant differences were found between training groups. In comparison
with
pre-training data, peak knee abduction moments decreased 12% post-training
for
both double- and single-leg landings; whereas peak vertical GRF decreased 8%
post-training for double-leg landings only, irrespective of training group.
Real-time feedback on knee abduction moments, therefore, did not
significantly
improve frontal-plane knee mechanics during landings. The effect of the
training
program on knee abduction moments, however, transferred from the double-leg
landings (simple task) to single-leg landings (more complex task).
Consequently,
ACL injury prevention efforts may not need to focus on complex tasks during
which
injury occurs.
CI - © 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
FAU - Beaulieu, M L
AU - Beaulieu ML
AD - School of Kinesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
FAU - Palmieri-Smith, R M
AU - Palmieri-Smith RM
AD - School of Kinesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20130124
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - *Feedback, Physiological
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee/*physiology
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - biomechanics
OT - knee injury
OT - physical education and training methods
OT - prevention and control
EDAT- 2013/01/26 06:00
MHDA- 2016/02/10 06:00
CRDT- 2013/01/26 06:00
PHST- 2012/11/13 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2013/01/26 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/01/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/02/10 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1111/sms.12051 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2014 Aug;24(4):692-9. doi: 10.1111/sms.12051. Epub
2013
Jan 24.
PMID- 17934715
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20080904
LR - 20220318
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 16
IP - 4
DP - 2008 Apr
TI - Arthroscopic ACL reconstruction with Delta plasty: an innovative approach
with
hamstrings' transfer and double tibial tunnel.
PG - 420-6
AB - We propose a new technique, with double bundle, double tibial tunnels with a
bridge between them, using the hamstrings as auto-grafts, retaining either
their
central or peripheral attachment. A prospective series of 41 patients
underwent
primary reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament by one surgeon,
arthroscopically and electronically assisted; 37 were men and 4 were women
with a
mean age of 24.7 years. The mean follow-up was 19.05 (12-30) months. Normal
function and joint stability was achieved. The patients returned to full
occupational activities within 3-6 months after the operation. The function
of
hamstrings was not disturbed. Two patients have sustained a new injury
without
rupture of the grafts. The Noulis-Lachman test was negative in 35 knees.
Positive
Pivot shift, post-operatively, was present in 15.45% of patients. The IKDC
score
was 84.55. In the proposed ACL reconstruction technique, the two tendons are
transferred and used as grafts, with gracillis and semitendinosus retaining
their
distal and central attachment, respectively; the former superimposed upon the
latter while entering the femoral tunnel. The tibial tunnels leave a bone
bridge
ranging between 12 and 15 mm within the footprints of ACL. The two bundles
are
tensioned, each at different angle. This configuration imitates both the
anatomy
and the function of ACL and controls not only the anterior translation, but
also
the rotatory stability. With this innovative technique, the final outcome is
improved, thus being closer to normal, as evidenced from previous experiments
and
the present prospective series.
FAU - Papachristou, George
AU - Papachristou G
AD - 2nd Department of Orthopaedics, University of Athens, Constantopoulion
Hospital,
N. Ionia, Greece. gcpapachristou@yahoo.gr
FAU - Sourlas, John
AU - Sourlas J
FAU - Plessas, Spyros
AU - Plessas S
FAU - Papachristou, Konstantinos
AU - Papachristou K
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20071013
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy/*methods
MH - Bone Screws
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/surgery
MH - Male
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Sutures
MH - Tendon Transfer/*methods
MH - Tibia/*surgery
MH - Transplantation, Autologous
EDAT- 2007/10/16 09:00
MHDA- 2008/09/05 09:00
CRDT- 2007/10/16 09:00
PHST- 2007/07/07 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2007/09/20 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2007/10/16 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/09/05 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/10/16 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-007-0426-5 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2008 Apr;16(4):420-6. doi:
10.1007/s00167-007-0426-5. Epub 2007 Oct 13.
PMID- 28146402
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170915
LR - 20220331
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 45
IP - 2
DP - 2017 Feb
TI - A Multicenter Study of Early Anti-inflammatory Treatment in Patients With
Acute
Anterior Cruciate Ligament Tear.
PG - 325-333
LID - 10.1177/0363546516666818 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: It is increasingly recognized that biochemical abnormalities of
the
joint precede radiographic abnormalities of posttraumatic osteoarthritis
(PTOA)
by as much as decades. A growing body of evidence strongly suggests that the
progression from anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury to PTOA is
multifactorial, involving the interplay between biomechanical disturbances
and
biochemical homeostasis of articular cartilage. PURPOSE: The purposes of this
randomized study using an acute ACL injury model were to (1) evaluate the
natural
progression of inflammatory and chondrodegenerative biomarkers, (2) evaluate
the
relationship between subjective reports of pain and inflammatory and
chondrodegenerative biomarkers, and (3) determine if postinjury
arthrocentesis
and corticosteroid injection offer the ability to alter this biochemical
cascade.
STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 2. METHODS: A
total
of 49 patients were randomized to 4 groups: group 1 (corticosteroid at 4 days
after ACL injury, placebo injection of saline at 2 weeks), group 2 (placebo
at 4
days after ACL injury, corticosteroid at 2 weeks), group 3 (corticosteroid at
both time intervals), or a placebo group (saline injections at both time
intervals). Patient-reported outcome measures and synovial biomarkers were
collected at approximately 4 days, 11 days, and 5 weeks after injury. The
change
between the time points was assessed for all variables using Wilcoxon tests,
and
the relationship between changes in outcome scores and biomarkers were
assessed
by calculating Spearman ρ. Outcomes and biomarkers were also compared between
the
4 groups using Kruskal-Wallis tests. RESULTS: No adverse events or infections
were observed in any study patients. With the exception of matrix
metalloproteinase 1 (MMP-1) and tumor necrosis factor-inducible gene 6 (TSG-
6),
chondrodegenerative markers worsened over the first 5 weeks while all
patient-reported outcomes improved during this time, regardless of treatment
group. Patient-reported outcomes did not differ between patients receiving
corticosteroid injections and the placebo group. However, increases in
C-telopeptide of type II collagen (CTX-II), associated with collagen type II
breakdown, were significantly greater in the placebo group (1.32 ± 1.10
ng/mL)
than in either of the groups that received the corticosteroid injection
within
the first several days after injury (group 1: 0.23 ± 0.27 ng/mL [ P = .01];
group
3: 0.19 ± 0.34 ng/mL [ P = .01]). CONCLUSION: PTOA begins at the time of
injury
and results early on in dramatic matrix changes in the knee. However, it is
encouraging that early intervention with an anti-inflammatory agent was able
to
affect biomarkers of chondral degeneration. Should early intervention lead to
meaningful changes in either the onset or severity of symptomatic PTOA, the
current treatment paradigm for patients with ACL injury may have to be
restructured to include early aspiration and intra-articular intervention.
TRIAL
REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01692756.
FAU - Lattermann, Christian
AU - Lattermann C
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Jacobs, Cale A
AU - Jacobs CA
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Proffitt Bunnell, Mary
AU - Proffitt Bunnell M
AD - Division of Physical Therapy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky,
USA.
FAU - Huston, Laura J
AU - Huston LJ
AD - Vanderbilt Orthopaedic Institute, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
FAU - Gammon, Lee G
AU - Gammon LG
AD - University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Johnson, Darren L
AU - Johnson DL
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, USA.
FAU - Reinke, Emily K
AU - Reinke EK
AD - Vanderbilt Orthopaedic Institute, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
FAU - Huebner, Janet L
AU - Huebner JL
AD - Department of Medicine, Duke Molecular Physiology Institute, Duke University
School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
FAU - Kraus, Virginia B
AU - Kraus VB
AD - Department of Medicine, Duke Molecular Physiology Institute, Duke University
School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
FAU - Spindler, Kurt P
AU - Spindler KP
AD - Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Garfield Heights, Ohio, USA.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT01692756
PT - Journal Article
PT - Multicenter Study
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20161007
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
RN - 0 (Adrenal Cortex Hormones)
RN - 0 (Anti-Inflammatory Agents)
RN - 0 (Biomarkers)
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adrenal Cortex Hormones/*administration & dosage
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*drug therapy
MH - Anti-Inflammatory Agents/*administration & dosage
MH - *Arthrocentesis
MH - Biomarkers/metabolism
MH - Cartilage, Articular/pathology
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Inflammation/epidemiology/etiology
MH - Injections, Intra-Articular
MH - Kentucky/epidemiology
MH - Male
MH - Osteoarthritis/*drug therapy
MH - Pain/epidemiology/etiology
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Tennessee/epidemiology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - biomarkers
OT - cartilage
OT - injury
OT - knee
OT - posttraumatic osteoarthritis
EDAT- 2017/02/02 06:00
MHDA- 2017/09/16 06:00
CRDT- 2017/02/02 06:00
PHST- 2017/02/02 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2017/02/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/09/16 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1177/0363546516666818 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2017 Feb;45(2):325-333. doi: 10.1177/0363546516666818. Epub
2016
Oct 7.
PMID- 20934698
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110726
LR - 20220408
IS - 1879-0267 (Electronic)
IS - 0020-1383 (Linking)
VI - 41
IP - 11
DP - 2010 Nov
TI - ACL reconstruction in sports active people: transtibial DB technique with
ST/G
vs. transtibial SB technique with BPTB: preliminary results.
PG - 1168-71
LID - 10.1016/j.injury.2010.09.029 [doi]
AB - The single-bundle ACL reconstruction ensures good outcomes and it is a
well-established and widespread technique. Nevertheless, some patients still
present residual pain and instability. Recent studies have showed that the
double-bundle technique restores better natural ACL-fitting kinematics. Long-
term
clinical studies comparing the two surgical techniques are not frequent and
there
is no instrument to evaluate function and kinematics during the knee rotation
in
vivo. In this randomised prospective study performed on sportive people, we
compare the BPTB single-bundle ACL reconstruction technique, which is the
most
common surgical technique performed on these patients' category, with the ACL
double-bundle reconstruction technique (DB), in order to evaluate possible
differences between the groups. Comparing the two groups, no statistically
significant difference regarding the post-operative Lysholm score (p=0.368)
the
Tegner activity scale (p=0.519) and the arthrometric evaluation with KT-1000
(p=0.74) have been observed. On the contrary, the IKDC evaluation showed a
statistically significant difference (p=0.004) better results of the DB
group.
Moreover, as assessed by the Tegner activity scale, only patients of the DB
group
were able to return to sports at a pre-injury level. Our data suggest that
the
double bundle ST/G ACL reconstruction technique results into slightly better
outcome than the traditional technique of single-bundle BPTB. The
verification
and quantification of the advantages of this technique is anticipated with
future
studies focusing to the accurate measurement of knee rotation during
different
activities.
CI - Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
FAU - Volpi, Piero
AU - Volpi P
AD - Sports Traumatology and Arthroscopic Surgery Unit, IRCCS Galeazzi Orthopaedic
Institute, Milan, Italy. volpi.piero@libero.it
FAU - Cervellin, Matteo
AU - Cervellin M
FAU - Denti, Matteo
AU - Denti M
FAU - Bait, Corrado
AU - Bait C
FAU - Melegati, Gianluca
AU - Melegati G
FAU - Quaglia, Alessandro
AU - Quaglia A
FAU - de Girolamo, Laura
AU - de Girolamo L
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20101008
PL - Netherlands
TA - Injury
JT - Injury
JID - 0226040
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Performance
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/physiopathology/*surgery
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Reproducibility of Results
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/10/12 06:00
MHDA- 2011/07/27 06:00
CRDT- 2010/10/12 06:00
PHST- 2010/10/12 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/10/12 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/07/27 06:00 [medline]
AID - S0020-1383(10)00684-4 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.injury.2010.09.029 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Injury. 2010 Nov;41(11):1168-71. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2010.09.029. Epub 2010
Oct
8.
PMID- 16013623
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050804
LR - 20220409
IS - 0008-428X (Print)
IS - 1488-2310 (Electronic)
IS - 0008-428X (Linking)
VI - 48
IP - 3
DP - 2005 Jun
TI - Patient satisfaction with inpatient versus outpatient reconstruction of the
anterior cruciate ligament: a randomized clinical trial.
PG - 201-6
AB - OBJECTIVE: To compare satisfaction levels after reconstruction of the
anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) between inpatients and outpatients by means of a
valid
and comprehensive outcome tool. METHODS: Fifty patients examined at a
tertiary
clinic who met the study's inclusion criteria (15-50 yr old, no previous ACL
reconstruction, > 6 h after injury, living < 1 h from hospital, assigned a
caregiver for outpatient management within 48 h of injury, no serious health
condition, no known hypersensitivity to ASA/NSAIDs, bleeding disorder or
gastric
ulcer, ability to cope at home after operation) were recruited and randomized
into either the inpatient or outpatient groups. Inpatients stayed overnight
in
hospital after their ACL reconstruction and were discharged home the next
day.
Outpatients were discharged home on the day of the procedure. All patients
attended a preoperative educational session and were required to meet the
same
discharge criteria (able to bear weight using crutches and to void, to be
reasonably pain free, no nausea or vomiting, no excess bleeding or drainage,
be
alert, be given take-home medications and be in the company of a caregiver).
Standardized anesthetic and postoperative analgesic protocols were used. One
week
after ACL reconstruction, patient satisfaction was quantified with a
previously
validated visual analogue questionnaire (maximum score of 100). RESULTS: We
collected data on 21 inpatients and 19 outpatients. The mean overall-
satisfaction
score of the outpatient group was higher than that of the inpatient group
(85.1
v. 78.2, p = 0.015). Between-group differences in postoperative pain, nausea,
rate of readmission and complications were not significant. CONCLUSION: As
determined by a comprehensive, population-specific, validated outcome,
patient
satisfaction is higher when ACL reconstruction is done on an outpatient
basis.
FAU - Krywulak, Steven A
AU - Krywulak SA
AD - Division of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Calgary Sport Medicine Centre,
Alta.
FAU - Mohtadi, Nicholas G H
AU - Mohtadi NG
FAU - Russell, Margaret L
AU - Russell ML
FAU - Sasyniuk, Treny M
AU - Sasyniuk TM
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - Canada
TA - Can J Surg
JT - Canadian journal of surgery. Journal canadien de chirurgie
JID - 0372715
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - *Ambulatory Surgical Procedures
MH - Analgesia, Patient-Controlled
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - *Hospitalization
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - *Patient Satisfaction
PMC - PMC3211553
EDAT- 2005/07/15 09:00
MHDA- 2005/08/05 09:00
CRDT- 2005/07/15 09:00
PHST- 2005/07/15 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/08/05 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/07/15 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0002789-200506000-00005 [pii]
PST - ppublish
SO - Can J Surg. 2005 Jun;48(3):201-6.
PMID- 21430514
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20111129
LR - 20161125
IS - 1537-7385 (Electronic)
IS - 0894-9115 (Linking)
VI - 90
IP - 8
DP - 2011 Aug
TI - Vitamins E and C modulate the association between reciprocally regulated
cytokines after an anterior cruciate ligament injury and surgery.
PG - 638-47
LID - 10.1097/PHM.0b013e318214e886 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: : The purpose of this study was to identify the influence of
vitamin E
and C supplementation on inflammatory cytokines and the association between
reciprocally regulated cytokines after anterior cruciate ligament surgery.
DESIGN: : A double-blind, placebo-controlled study was conducted in men
undergoing anterior cruciate ligament surgery who were randomly assigned to
one
of two groups (n = 10/group): (1) antioxidant (vitamins E and C) or (2)
matching
placebos starting ∼2 wks before (baseline) and concluding 3 mos after
surgery.
Plasma inflammatory cytokines were measured in fasting blood draw samples
before
and after anterior cruciate ligament surgery. RESULTS: : Plasma interleukin
(IL)
1β concentrations were double at 3 mos after surgery compared with baseline.
Plasma IL-1β increased to a greater (P < 0.05) extent relative to IL-4 in the
placebo group (mean ± SE slope, 18.87 ± 0.68; r = 0.97) than in the
antioxidant
group (mean ± SE slope, 4.84 ± 0.42; r = 0.89). Similarly, the relative
increase
in IL-1β to IL-2 was greater (P < 0.05) in the placebo (mean ± SE slope, 2.70
±
0.21) than in the antioxidant (mean ± SE slope, 1.08 ± 0.23) group.
CONCLUSIONS:
: Vitamins E and C were ineffective in ameliorating the increases in IL-1β
but
altered associations between reciprocally regulated cytokines after anterior
cruciate ligament surgery.
FAU - Barker, Tyler
AU - Barker T
AD - Sport Science Department, The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital, Murray, Utah
84107,
USA.
FAU - Martins, Thomas B
AU - Martins TB
FAU - Hill, Harry R
AU - Hill HR
FAU - Kjeldsberg, Carl R
AU - Kjeldsberg CR
FAU - Trawick, Roy H
AU - Trawick RH
FAU - Leonard, Scott W
AU - Leonard SW
FAU - Walker, James A
AU - Walker JA
FAU - Traber, Maret G
AU - Traber MG
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Am J Phys Med Rehabil
JT - American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation
JID - 8803677
RN - 0 (Antioxidants)
RN - 0 (Interleukins)
RN - 1406-18-4 (Vitamin E)
RN - PQ6CK8PD0R (Ascorbic Acid)
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Antioxidants/*therapeutic use
MH - Arthroscopy
MH - Ascorbic Acid/*therapeutic use
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Humans
MH - Interleukins/*blood
MH - Male
MH - *Postoperative Care
MH - Vitamin E/*therapeutic use
EDAT- 2011/03/25 06:00
MHDA- 2011/12/13 00:00
CRDT- 2011/03/25 06:00
PHST- 2011/03/25 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/03/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/12/13 00:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1097/PHM.0b013e318214e886 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2011 Aug;90(8):638-47. doi:
10.1097/PHM.0b013e318214e886.
PMID- 24934926
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160530
LR - 20211021
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 23
IP - 11
DP - 2015 Nov
TI - The effect of knee extensor open kinetic chain resistance training in the
ACL-injured knee.
PG - 3168-77
LID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3110-6 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: To investigate the effect of different loads of knee extensor open
kinetic chain resistance training on anterior knee laxity and function in the
ACL-injured (ACLI) knee. METHODS: Fifty-eight ACLI subjects were randomised
to
one of three (12-week duration) training groups. The STAND group trained
according to a standardised rehabilitation protocol. Subjects in the LOW and
HIGH
group trained as did the STAND group but with the addition of seated knee
extensor open kinetic chain resistance training at loads of 2 sets of 20
repetition maximum (RM) and 20 sets of 2RM, respectively. Anterior knee
laxity
and measurements of physical and subjective function were performed at
baseline,
6 and 12 weeks. Thirty-six subjects were tested at both baseline and 12 weeks
(STAND n = 13, LOW n = 11, HIGH n = 12). RESULTS: The LOW group demonstrated
a
reduction in 133 N anterior knee laxity between baseline and 12 weeks testing
when compared to the HIGH and the STAND groups (p = 0.009). Specifically, the
trained-untrained knee laxity decreased an average of approximately 5 mm in
the
LOW group while remaining the same in the other two groups. CONCLUSION:
Twelve
weeks of knee extensor open kinetic chain resistance training at loads of 2
sets
of 20RM led to a reduction in anterior knee laxity in the ACLI knee. This
reduction in laxity does not appear to offer any significant short-term
functional advantages when compared to a standard rehabilitation protocol.
These
results indicate that knee laxity can be decreased with resistance training
of
the thigh muscles. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Randomised controlled trial, Level II.
FAU - Barcellona, Massimo G
AU - Barcellona MG
AD - Academic Department of Physiotherapy, School of Medicine, King's College
London,
London, UK.
FAU - Morrissey, Matthew C
AU - Morrissey MC
AD - Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
morrissey.matt@ymail.com.
FAU - Milligan, Peter
AU - Milligan P
AD - King's College London, London, UK.
FAU - Clinton, Melissa
AU - Clinton M
AD - Guy's and St. Thomas' Hospital, London, UK.
FAU - Amis, Andrew A
AU - Amis AA
AD - Department of Mechanical Engineering, Imperial College London, London, UK.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20140617
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*physiopathology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/physiopathology/*rehabilitation
MH - Kinetics
MH - Knee Injuries/physiopathology/*rehabilitation
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiology
MH - Resistance Training/*methods
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Hypermobility
OT - Joint stability
OT - Quadriceps
OT - Resistance training
OT - Therapeutic exercise
EDAT- 2014/06/18 06:00
MHDA- 2016/05/31 06:00
CRDT- 2014/06/18 06:00
PHST- 2013/11/15 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2014/05/29 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2014/06/18 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/06/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/05/31 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3110-6 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3110-6 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2015 Nov;23(11):3168-77. doi:
10.1007/s00167-014-3110-6. Epub 2014 Jun 17.
PMID- 20594339
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110203
LR - 20220321
IS - 1471-2474 (Electronic)
IS - 1471-2474 (Linking)
VI - 11
DP - 2010 Jul 1
TI - Relationships between postural orientation and self reported function, hop
performance and muscle power in subjects with anterior cruciate ligament
injury.
PG - 143
LID - 10.1186/1471-2474-11-143 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Injury to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is associated not
only
with knee instability and impaired neuromuscular control, but also with
altered
postural orientation manifested as observable "substitution patterns".
However,
tests currently used to evaluate knee function in subjects with ACL injury
are
not designed to assess postural orientation. Therefore, we are in the process
of
developing an observational test set that measures postural orientation in
terms
of the ability to stabilize body segments in relation to each other and to
the
environment. The aim of the present study was to characterise correlations
between this novel test set, called the Test for Substitution Patterns (TSP)
and
commonly used tests of knee function. METHODS: In a blinded set-up, 53
subjects
(mean age 30 years, range 20-39, with 2-5 years since ACL injury) were
assessed
using the TSP, the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score subscale
sport/recreation (KOOS sport/rec), 3 hop tests and 3 muscle power tests.
Correlations between the scores of the TSP and the other tests were
determined.
RESULTS: Moderate correlations were found between TSP scores and KOOS
sport/rec
(rs = -0.43; p = 0.001) and between TSP scores and hop test results (rs = -
0.40
to -0.46; p < or = 0.003), indicating that altered postural orientation was
associated with worse self-reported KOOS sport/rec function and worse hop
performance. No significant correlations were found between TSP scores and
muscle
power results. Subjects had higher TSP scores on their injured side than on
their
uninjured side (median 4 and 1 points; interquartile range 2-6 and 0-1.5,
respectively; p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the Test for
Substitution Patterns is of relevance to the patient and measures a specific
aspect of neuromuscular control not quantified by the other tests
investigated.
We suggest that the TSP may be a valuable complement in the assessment of
neuromuscular control in the rehabilitation of subjects with ACL injury.
FAU - Trulsson, Anna
AU - Trulsson A
AD - Department of Health Sciences, Division of Physiotherapy, Lund University,
Sweden. anna.trulsson@med.lu.se
FAU - Roos, Ewa M
AU - Roos EM
FAU - Ageberg, Eva
AU - Ageberg E
FAU - Garwicz, Martin
AU - Garwicz M
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20100701
PL - England
TA - BMC Musculoskelet Disord
JT - BMC musculoskeletal disorders
JID - 100968565
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*physiopathology
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Cohort Studies
MH - Cross-Sectional Studies
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - Gait/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/complications/diagnosis/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Movement Disorders/diagnosis/etiology/*physiopathology
MH - Muscle Contraction/physiology
MH - Muscle Strength/physiology
MH - Muscle Weakness/diagnosis/etiology/*physiopathology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiopathology
MH - Orientation/physiology
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC2908077
EDAT- 2010/07/03 06:00
MHDA- 2011/02/04 06:00
CRDT- 2010/07/03 06:00
PHST- 2009/12/01 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2010/07/01 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2010/07/03 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/07/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/02/04 06:00 [medline]
AID - 1471-2474-11-143 [pii]
AID - 10.1186/1471-2474-11-143 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2010 Jul 1;11:143. doi: 10.1186/1471-2474-11-143.
PMID- 37134114
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230505
LR - 20230511
IS - 1932-6203 (Electronic)
IS - 1932-6203 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 5
DP - 2023
TI - Transcriptomic changes in porcine articular cartilage one year following
disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament.
PG - e0284777
LID - 10.1371/journal.pone.0284777 [doi]
LID - e0284777
AB - To determine the transcriptomic changes seen in early- to mid-stage
posttraumatic
osteoarthritis (PTOA) development, 72 Yucatan minipigs underwent transection
of
the anterior cruciate ligament. Subjects were randomized to no further
intervention, ligament reconstruction, or ligament repair, followed by
articular
cartilage harvesting and RNA-sequencing at three different postoperative
timepoints (1, 4, and 52 weeks). Six additional subjects received no ligament
transection and provided cartilage tissue to serve as controls. Differential
gene
expression analysis between post-transection cartilage and healthy cartilage
revealed an initial increase in transcriptomic differences at 1 and 4 weeks
followed by a stark reduction in transcriptomic differences at 52 weeks. This
analysis also showed how different treatments genetically modulate the course
of
PTOA following ligament disruption. Specific genes (e.g., MMP1, POSTN, IGF1,
PTGFR, HK1) were identified as being upregulated in the cartilage of injured
subjects across all timepoints regardless of treatment. At the 52-week
timepoint,
4 genes (e.g., A4GALT, EFS, NPTXR, ABCA3) that-as far as we know-have yet to
be
associated with PTOA were identified as being concordantly differentially
expressed across all treatment groups when compared to controls. Functional
pathway analysis of injured subject cartilage compared to control cartilage
revealed overarching patterns of cellular proliferation at 1 week,
angiogenesis,
ECM interaction, focal adhesion, and cellular migration at 4 weeks, and
calcium
signaling, immune system activation, GABA signaling, and HIF-1 signaling at
52
weeks.
CI - Copyright: © 2023 Donnenfield et al. This is an open access article
distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the
original author and source are credited.
FAU - Donnenfield, Jonah I
AU - Donnenfield JI
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8272-3058
AD - Division of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston
Children's
Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States of America.
FAU - Karamchedu, Naga Padmini
AU - Karamchedu NP
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown
University/Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI, United States of America.
FAU - Proffen, Benedikt L
AU - Proffen BL
AD - Division of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston
Children's
Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States of America.
FAU - Molino, Janine
AU - Molino J
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown
University/Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI, United States of America.
FAU - Fleming, Braden C
AU - Fleming BC
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7841-425X
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown
University/Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI, United States of America.
FAU - Murray, Martha M
AU - Murray MM
AD - Division of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston
Children's
Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States of America.
LA - eng
GR - R01 AR056834/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01 AR065462/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - P30 GM122732/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20230503
PL - United States
TA - PLoS One
JT - PloS one
JID - 101285081
SB - IM
MH - Swine
MH - Animals
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery/metabolism
MH - Swine, Miniature/genetics
MH - Transcriptome
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/complications
MH - *Cartilage, Articular/metabolism
MH - *Osteoarthritis/metabolism
MH - Gene Expression Profiling
PMC - PMC10156018
COIS- Dr. Murray is a founder and equity holder, Dr. Proffen is a paid consultant
and
equity holder, and Dr. Fleming is a founder of Miach Orthopaedics, Inc, which
was
formed to upscale production of a scaffold for ACL restoration and is related
to
one of the ACL procedures described herein. Drs. Murray and Proffen maintain
a
conflict-of-interest management plan approved by Boston Children’s Hospital
and
Harvard Medical School. Dr. Fleming maintains a conflict-of-interest
management
plan with Rhode Island Hospital. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS
ONE
policies on sharing data and materials.
EDAT- 2023/05/03 18:41
MHDA- 2023/05/05 06:42
CRDT- 2023/05/03 13:44
PHST- 2023/01/31 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2023/04/07 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/05/05 06:42 [medline]
PHST- 2023/05/03 18:41 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/05/03 13:44 [entrez]
AID - PONE-D-23-01750 [pii]
AID - 10.1371/journal.pone.0284777 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - PLoS One. 2023 May 3;18(5):e0284777. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0284777.
eCollection 2023.
PMID- 34368905
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220426
LR - 20220901
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 30
IP - 5
DP - 2022 May
TI - Minimal graft site morbidity using autogenous semitendinosus graft from the
uninjured leg: a randomised controlled trial.
PG - 1639-1645
LID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06686-6 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: To quantify the effect on strength of semitendinosus (ST) graft
harvest
by comparing isokinetic and isometric muscle strength. METHODS: A cohort of
140
patients underwent anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (ACLR) and
were randomized to ipsilateral or contralateral ST graft harvest. Isokinetic
and
isometric muscle strength testing using a dynamometer were collected for the
operated and non-operated leg. Patients were assessed pre-surgery and at 6,
12
and 24 months after reconstruction. RESULTS: ST graft harvest reduced
isokinetic
flexion muscle strength for 6 months. At 12 months follow up there was no
significant difference between the two groups and they were all stronger than
pre-injury. No other significant differences were found in any primary or
secondary outcome measurements. CONCLUSION: Solitary ST graft harvest does
not
appear to result in a permanent reduced isometric or isokinetic quadriceps
muscle
strength on the side where the graft is harvested. A reduction in hamstring
muscle strength of less than 10% can be seen at short-term follow-up with
full
recovery by 12 months. Most patients report little or no donor site pain.
Given
these findings, ST autograft is an alternative graft choice that could be
used
for various reconstructions in terms of donor site morbidity. LEVEL OF
EVIDENCE:
Level II.
CI - © 2021. The Author(s).
FAU - von Essen, Christoffer
AU - von Essen C
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-6871-3267
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Stockholm South Hospital, Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, Sweden. Christoffer.vonessen@gmail.com.
AD - Capio Artro Clinic, FIFA Medical Centre of Excellence, Sophiahemmet Hospital,
Valhallavägen 91, 11486, Stockholm, Sweden. Christoffer.vonessen@gmail.com.
FAU - McCallum, Sebastian
AU - McCallum S
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Stockholm South Hospital, Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, Sweden.
FAU - Eriksson, Karl
AU - Eriksson K
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Stockholm South Hospital, Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, Sweden.
FAU - Barenius, Björn
AU - Barenius B
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Stockholm South Hospital, Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, Sweden.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210808
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Autografts
MH - *Hamstring Muscles/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Leg
MH - Morbidity
MH - Muscle Strength/physiology
PMC - PMC9033693
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - ACL reconstruction
OT - Contralateral
OT - Isokinetic
OT - Semitendinosus
COIS- Each author declares that no possible conflict of interest (financial or not
financial) exist in connection with this study.
EDAT- 2021/08/10 06:00
MHDA- 2022/04/27 06:00
CRDT- 2021/08/09 06:56
PHST- 2021/02/24 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/07/28 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/08/10 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/04/27 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/08/09 06:56 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06686-6 [pii]
AID - 6686 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06686-6 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2022 May;30(5):1639-1645. doi:
10.1007/s00167-021-06686-6. Epub 2021 Aug 8.
PMID- 29902807
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180723
LR - 20180723
IS - 1439-3964 (Electronic)
IS - 0172-4622 (Linking)
VI - 39
IP - 8
DP - 2018 Jul
TI - A Biomechanical Comparison of Single-Leg Landing and Unplanned Sidestepping.
PG - 636-645
LID - 10.1055/a-0592-7422 [doi]
AB - Unplanned sidestepping and single-leg landing have both been used to screen
athletes for injury risk in sport. The aim of this study was to directly
compare
the lower limb mechanics of three single-leg landing tasks and an unplanned
sidestepping task. Thirteen elite female team sport athletes completed a
series
of non-contact single-leg drop landings, single-leg countermovement jumps,
single-leg jump landings and unplanned sidestepping in a randomized
counterbalanced design. Three dimensional kinematics (250 Hz) and ground
reaction
force (2,000 Hz) data with a participant specific lower limb skeletal model
were
used to calculate and compare hip, knee and ankle joint kinematics, peak
joint
moments, instantaneous joint power and joint work during the weight
acceptance
phase of each sporting task (α=0.05). Peak knee joint moments and relevant
injury
risk thresholds were used to classify each athlete's anterior cruciate
ligament
injury risk during unplanned sidestepping and single-leg jump landing.
Results
showed that peak joint moments, power and work were greater during the
single-leg
jump landing task when compared to the single-leg drop landings and single-
leg
countermovement jumps tasks. Peak frontal and sagittal plane knee joint
moments,
knee joint power, as well as hip and knee joint work were greater during
unplanned sidestepping when compared to the landing tasks. Peak ankle joint
moments, power and work were greater during the landing tasks when compared
to
unplanned sidestepping. For 4 of the 13 athletes tested, their anterior
cruciate
ligament injury risk classification changed depending on whether they
performed
an unplanned sidestepping or single-leg jump landing testing procedure. To
summarize, a single-leg jump landing testing procedure places a larger
mechanical
on the ankle joint when compared to single-leg drop landings, single-leg
countermovement jumps and unplanned sidestepping. An unplanned sidestepping
testing procedure places a larger mechanical demand on the knee joint when
compared to single-leg landing tasks. Both unplanned sidestepping and single-
leg
jump landing testing procedures are recommended for classifying an athlete's
anterior cruciate ligament injury risk in sport.
CI - © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
FAU - Chinnasee, Chamnan
AU - Chinnasee C
AD - Faculty of Health and Sports Science, Thaksin University Phatthalung Campus,
Phatthalung, Thailand.
FAU - Weir, Gillian
AU - Weir G
AD - Biomechanics Laboratory, The University Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst,
United
States.
FAU - Sasimontonkul, Siriporn
AU - Sasimontonkul S
AD - Faculty of Sports Science, Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand.
FAU - Alderson, Jacqueline
AU - Alderson J
AD - School of Human Sciences (Sport and Exercise Science), The University of
Western
Australia, Perth, Australia.
FAU - Donnelly, Cyril
AU - Donnelly C
AD - School of Human Sciences (Sport and Exercise Science), The University of
Western
Australia, Perth, Australia.
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20180614
PL - Germany
TA - Int J Sports Med
JT - International journal of sports medicine
JID - 8008349
SB - IM
MH - Ankle Joint/physiology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*physiopathology
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Exercise Test/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Hip Joint/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/physiology
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Movement
MH - Risk Assessment/*methods
MH - Rotation
MH - Task Performance and Analysis
MH - Weight-Bearing
COIS- The authors have no relevant conflicts of interest, and the results do not
constitute endorsement by the American College of Sports Medicine. The
results of
this study are presented clearly, honestly, and without fabrication,
falsification, or inappropriate data manipulation.
EDAT- 2018/06/15 06:00
MHDA- 2018/07/24 06:00
CRDT- 2018/06/15 06:00
PHST- 2018/06/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/07/24 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/06/15 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1055/a-0592-7422 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Int J Sports Med. 2018 Jul;39(8):636-645. doi: 10.1055/a-0592-7422. Epub 2018
Jun
14.
PMID- 25647536
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160822
LR - 20151029
IS - 1536-3724 (Electronic)
IS - 1050-642X (Linking)
VI - 25
IP - 6
DP - 2015 Nov
TI - Effects of Static Stretching and Playing Soccer on Knee Laxity.
PG - 541-5
LID - 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000174 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: This study investigated exercise-induced effects of static
stretching
and playing soccer on anterior tibial translation (ATT) of the knee joint.
DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING: University biomechanics
laboratory.
PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-one athletes were randomly assigned into a stretching
(26.9
± 6.2 years, 1.77 ± 0.09 m, 67.9 ± 10.7 kg) and a control group (27.9 ± 7.4
years, 1.75 ± 0.08 m, 72.0 ± 14.9 kg). Thirty-one amateur soccer players in
an
additional soccer group (25.1 ± 5.6 years, 1.74 ± 0.10 m, 71.8 ± 14.8 kg).
All
participants had no history of knee injury requiring surgery and any previous
knee ligament or cartilage injury. INTERVENTIONS: The stretching group
performed
4 different static stretching exercises with a duration of 2 × 20 seconds
interspersed with breaks of 10 seconds. The soccer group completed a 90-
minute
soccer-specific training program. The control group did not perform any
physical
activity for approximately 30 minutes. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Anterior tibial
translation was measured with the KT-1000 knee arthrometer at forces of 67 N,
89
N, and maximal manual force (Max) before and after the intervention. RESULTS:
There was a significant increase in ATT after static stretching and playing
soccer at all applied forces. Maximal manual testing revealed a mean increase
of
ATT after static stretching of 2.1 ± 1.6 mm (P < 0.0005) and after playing
soccer
of 1.0 ± 1.5 mm (P = 0.001). The ATT increase after static stretching at 67
and
89 N is significantly higher than in controls. At maximum manual testing,
significant differences were evident between all groups. CONCLUSIONS: Static
stretching and playing soccer increase ATT and may consequently influence
mechanical factors of the anterior cruciate ligament. The ATT increase after
static stretching was greater than after playing soccer. CLINICAL RELEVANCE:
The
observed increase in ATT after static stretching and playing soccer may be
associated with changes in kinesthetic perception and sensorimotor control,
activation of muscles, joint stability, overall performance, and higher
injury
risk.
FAU - Baumgart, Christian
AU - Baumgart C
AD - *Research Center for Performance Diagnostics and Training Advice, University
of
Wuppertal, Wuppertal, Germany; †University of Groningen, University Medical
Center Groningen, Center for Human Movement Sciences, Groningen, The
Netherlands;
and ‡Department of Sport, Exercise and Health, University of Basel, Basel,
Switzerland.
FAU - Gokeler, Alli
AU - Gokeler A
FAU - Donath, Lars
AU - Donath L
FAU - Hoppe, Matthias W
AU - Hoppe MW
FAU - Freiwald, Jürgen
AU - Freiwald J
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Clin J Sport Med
JT - Clinical journal of sport medicine : official journal of the Canadian Academy
of
Sport Medicine
JID - 9103300
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Athletes
MH - Humans
MH - *Joint Instability
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Muscle Stretching Exercises/*methods
MH - Soccer/injuries/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2015/02/04 06:00
MHDA- 2016/08/23 06:00
CRDT- 2015/02/04 06:00
PHST- 2015/02/04 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/02/04 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/08/23 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000174 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin J Sport Med. 2015 Nov;25(6):541-5. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000174.
PMID- 37374316
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230629
LR - 20230701
IS - 1648-9144 (Electronic)
IS - 1010-660X (Print)
IS - 1010-660X (Linking)
VI - 59
IP - 6
DP - 2023 Jun 8
TI - Effects of Eccentric-Oriented Strength Training on Return to Sport Criteria
in
Late-Stage Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL)-Reconstructed Professional Team
Sport
Players.
LID - 10.3390/medicina59061111 [doi]
LID - 1111
AB - Background and Objectives: An effective post-injury training program is
essential
to regain performance and fulfill criteria for return to sport for team sport
athletes following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. The aim
of
this study was to compare the effects of 6 weeks of eccentric-oriented
strength
training vs. traditional strength training during the late-stage ACL-rehab
phase
on leg strength and vertical and horizontal jumping performance in
professional
team sport athletes. Materials and Methods: Twenty-two subjects (14 males, 8
females, age 19.9 ± 4.4 years, mass 77.4 ± 15.6 kg, height 182.4 ± 11.7 cm)
(mean
± SD) with a unilateral reconstructed ACL (BTB graft) were included in the
study.
All participants enrolled in the same rehabilitation protocol prior to the
training study. Players were randomly assigned to an experimental (ECC: n =
11,
age 21.8 ± 4.6 years, mass 82.7 ± 16.6 kg, height 185.4 ± 12.2 cm), and a
control
group (CON: n = 11, age 19.1 ± 2.1 years, mass 76.6 ± 16.5 kg, height 182.5 ±
10.2 cm). Both groups underwent an equivolumed rehabilitation program, with
the
only difference being in strength training, which consisted of flywheel
training
vs. traditional strength training for the experimental and control groups,
respectively. Testing was organized before and after the 6-week training
programs
and included isometric semi-squat tests (ISOSI-injured and ISOSU-uninjured
legs),
vertical jump tests (CMJ), single-leg vertical jump tests (SLJI-injured and
SLJU-uninjured legs), single-leg hop tests (SLHI-injured and SLHU-uninjured
legs), and triple hop tests (TLHI-injured and TLHU-uninjured legs). In
addition,
limb symmetry indexes were calculated for the isometric semi-squat (ISOSLSI)
test, the single-leg vertical jump (SLJLSI), and the hop (SLHLSI) tests, as
well
as the triple-leg hop (THLLSI) test. Results: Main effects of time across
training were observed for all dependent variables (posttest > pretest, p <
0.05). Significant group-by-time interactions were found for ISOSU (p < 0.05,
ES
= 2.51, very large), ISOSI (p < 0.05, ES = 1.78, large), CMJ (p < 0.05, ES =
2.23, very large), SLJI (p < 0.05, ES = 1.48, large), SLHI (p < 0.05, ES =
1.83,
large), and TLHI (p < 0.05, ES = 1.83, large). Conclusions: This study
suggests
that eccentric-oriented strength training in late-stage ACL recovery,
undertaken
twice or three times weekly for 6 weeks, results in better outcomes than
traditional strength training in leg strength, vertical jump ability, and
single
and triple hop tests with injured legs in professional team sport athletes.
It
seems that flywheel strength training can be recommended in late-stage ACL
recovery for professional team sport athletes in order to regain recommended
performance outcome levels faster.
FAU - Stojanović, Marko D M
AU - Stojanović MDM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6606-7449
AD - Training Expertise Lab, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University
of
Novi Sad, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia.
AD - Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University of Novi Sad, 21000 Novi
Sad,
Serbia.
FAU - Andrić, Nikola
AU - Andrić N
AD - Training Expertise Lab, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University
of
Novi Sad, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia.
AD - Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University of Novi Sad, 21000 Novi
Sad,
Serbia.
FAU - Mikić, Mladen
AU - Mikić M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8634-8259
AD - Training Expertise Lab, Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University
of
Novi Sad, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia.
AD - Faculty of Sport and Physical Education, University of Novi Sad, 21000 Novi
Sad,
Serbia.
FAU - Vukosav, Nikola
AU - Vukosav N
AD - Clinic for Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology, Clinical Center of Vojvodina,
21000 Novi Sad, Serbia.
FAU - Vukosav, Borko
AU - Vukosav B
AD - Sports Medicine Department, Medical Clinic "ST Medicina", 21000 Novi Sad,
Serbia.
FAU - Zolog-Șchiopea, Dan-Nicolae
AU - Zolog-Șchiopea DN
AD - Orthopedic Department, Puls Hospital of Regina Maria Hospital, 540136 Targu
Mures, Romania.
AD - Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology Department, Humanitas Hospital, 400001
Cluj
Napoca, Romania.
FAU - Tăbăcar, Mircea
AU - Tăbăcar M
AD - Orthopedic Department, Puls Hospital of Regina Maria Hospital, 540136 Targu
Mures, Romania.
FAU - Melinte, Răzvan Marian
AU - Melinte RM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6965-4649
AD - Orthopedic Department, Puls Hospital of Regina Maria Hospital, 540136 Targu
Mures, Romania.
AD - Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology Department, Humanitas Hospital, 400001
Cluj
Napoca, Romania.
AD - Fizionova Reahabilitation, 540136 Targu Mures, Romania.
AD - Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology Department, Dimitrie Cantemir University,
540136 Targu Mures, Romania.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20230608
PL - Switzerland
TA - Medicina (Kaunas)
JT - Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania)
JID - 9425208
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Young Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Muscle Strength
MH - *Resistance Training
MH - Return to Sport
MH - Team Sports
PMC - PMC10305302
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL rehabilitation
OT - eccentric overload
OT - team sport athletes
COIS- The authors declare no conflict of interest.
EDAT- 2023/06/28 06:42
MHDA- 2023/06/29 06:42
CRDT- 2023/06/28 01:25
PHST- 2023/04/16 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2023/06/01 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2023/06/06 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/06/29 06:42 [medline]
PHST- 2023/06/28 06:42 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/06/28 01:25 [entrez]
AID - medicina59061111 [pii]
AID - medicina-59-01111 [pii]
AID - 10.3390/medicina59061111 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Medicina (Kaunas). 2023 Jun 8;59(6):1111. doi: 10.3390/medicina59061111.
PMID- 36720663
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230228
LR - 20230228
IS - 1879-0267 (Electronic)
IS - 0020-1383 (Linking)
VI - 54
IP - 3
DP - 2023 Mar
TI - A comparison of the outcomes of anterior curciate ligament reconstruction
with
large-size graft versus reconstruction with average-size graft combined with
extraarticular tenodesis.
PG - 976-982
LID - S0020-1383(23)00035-9 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.injury.2023.01.033 [doi]
AB - INTRODUCTION: Many patients who have had anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
reconstruction (R) complain of instability, inability to return to previous
levels of sports activity, and possible ACL graft failure. Graft size was
discovered to be an important factor in lowering ACL failure rates. Also,
extraarticular tenodesis decreases recurrent instability, A comparative study
was
done to compare the effect of graft size and lateral external tenodesis on
the
recurrence of instability after ACL-R. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A Prospective
Blinded Randomized Controlled study included 100 consecutive patients who
underwent ACL-R with hamstring tendon grafts in our Hospital. The patients
were
allocated into two groups (Group A and B) with randomization; group A
received
ACL-R with a large-size ACL-graft diameter of 6 strands, and group B received
ACL-R of 4 strands combined with lateral extraarticular tenodesis (LET)
(Modified
Lemaire). Each group had fifty patients. The follow-up time was two years.
They
were examined for graft failure, anterolateral rotatory instability with the
pivot shift test, and clinical outcomes, which were evaluated with the
International Knee Documentation Committee score (IKDC) both subjective and
objective. RESULTS: In this study; group A, graft failure occurred in three
(6.3%) patients, a positive pivot shift test grade I was detected in eight
(17.8%) patients, grade II in three (6.7%) patients, and grade III in one
(2.2%)
patient. The subjective IKDC score was 87.9 (± 7.19) points. The objective
IKDC
score was normal or nearly normal in 43 (93.4%) patients. In group B, one
(2.1%)
patient had graft failure, five (10.9%) had a positive pivot shift test grade
I,
one (2.1%) had a grade II, and no patient had a grade III. The subjective
IKDC
score was 91.9 (± 8.9) points. The objective IKDC score was normal or nearly
normal in 44 (95.6%) patients. As regard the subjective IKDC score, there was
a
non-significant difference between both groups (p value = 0.465). CONCLUSION:
Both groups showed a low ACL-graft failure rate, low anterolateral rotatory
instability, and a good clinical outcome. Although there was no significant
difference in subjective IKDC score between both groups, the failure rate and
anterolateral rotatory instability were significantly lower in the ACL-R (4
strands) with LET combination group than in the group with the large-diameter
(6
strands) graft. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level 1; Randomized Comparative Study.
CI - Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
FAU - El-Azab, Hossam
AU - El-Azab H
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Sohag Faculty of Medicine, Sohag
University, Egypt. Electronic address: hosam_elazab@yahoo.com.
FAU - Moursy, Mohamed
AU - Moursy M
AD - Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology, Paracelsus Medical University,
Salzburg, Austria.
FAU - Mohamed, Mohamed A
AU - Mohamed MA
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Sohag Faculty of Medicine, Sohag
University, Egypt.
FAU - Elsayed, Moustafa
AU - Elsayed M
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Sohag Faculty of Medicine, Sohag
University, Egypt.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20230120
PL - Netherlands
TA - Injury
JT - Injury
JID - 0226040
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - *Tenodesis
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - *Joint Instability/surgery
MH - Ligaments/surgery
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL-R
OT - Anterolateral instability
OT - Combined with extraarticular tenodesis
OT - Comparison
OT - Graft failure
OT - Large-size ACL-graft versus average-size graft
OT - Modified Lemaire
OT - Pivot shift test
COIS- Declaration of Competing Interest None.
EDAT- 2023/02/01 06:00
MHDA- 2023/03/03 06:00
CRDT- 2023/01/31 21:53
PHST- 2022/07/11 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2023/01/01 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2023/01/16 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/02/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/03/03 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2023/01/31 21:53 [entrez]
AID - S0020-1383(23)00035-9 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.injury.2023.01.033 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Injury. 2023 Mar;54(3):976-982. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2023.01.033. Epub 2023
Jan
20.
PMID- 20543220
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100812
LR - 20220408
IS - 1056-6716 (Print)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 2
DP - 2010 May
TI - A randomized, controlled study of a rehabilitation model to improve knee-
function
self-efficacy with ACL injury.
PG - 200-13
AB - CONTEXT: The Knee Self-Efficacy Scale (K-SES) has good reliability, validity,
and
responsiveness for patients' perceived knee-function self-efficacy during
rehabilitation after an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. Preoperative
knee-function self-efficacy has also been shown to have a predictive ability
in
terms of outcome 1 y after ACL reconstruction. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate a new
clinical rehabilitation model containing strategies to enhance knee-function
self-efficacy. DESIGN: A randomized, controlled study. SETTING:
Rehabilitation
clinic and laboratory. PATIENTS: 40 patients with ACL injuries. INTERVENTION:
All
patients followed a standardized rehabilitation protocol. Patients in the
experimental group were treated by 1 of 3 physiotherapists who had received
specific training in a clinical rehabilitation model. These physiotherapists
were
also given their patients' self-efficacy scores after the initial and 4-, 6-,
and
12-mo follow-ups, whereas the 5 physiotherapists treating the patients in the
control group were not given their patients' self-efficacy scores. MAIN
OUTCOME
MEASURES: The K-SES, the Tegner Activity Scale, the Physical Activity Scale,
the
Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score, and the Multidimensional Health
Locus of Control. RESULTS: Twenty-four patients (12 in each group) completed
all
follow-ups. Current knee-function self-efficacy, knee symptoms in sports, and
knee quality of life improved significantly (P = .05) in both groups during
rehabilitation. Both groups had a significantly (P = .05) lower physical
activity
level at 12 mo than preinjury. No significant differences were found between
groups. CONCLUSION: In this study there was no evidence that the clinical
rehabilitation model with strategies to enhance self-efficacy resulted in a
better outcome than the rehabilitation protocol used for the control group.
FAU - Thomeé, Pia
AU - Thomeé P
AD - Department of Orthopedics, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden.
FAU - Währborg, Peter
AU - Währborg P
FAU - Börjesson, Mats
AU - Börjesson M
FAU - Thomeé, Roland
AU - Thomeé R
FAU - Eriksson, Bengt I
AU - Eriksson BI
FAU - Karlsson, Jon
AU - Karlsson J
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Health Status Indicators
MH - Humans
MH - Internal-External Control
MH - Knee Injuries/*rehabilitation
MH - *Knee Joint/physiology
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Motor Activity
MH - Patient Acceptance of Health Care
MH - Patient Satisfaction
MH - Physical Therapy Modalities
MH - Psychometrics
MH - Quality of Life
MH - *Self Efficacy
MH - Sweden
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/06/15 06:00
MHDA- 2010/08/13 06:00
CRDT- 2010/06/15 06:00
PHST- 2010/06/15 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/06/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/08/13 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.19.2.200 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2010 May;19(2):200-13. doi: 10.1123/jsr.19.2.200.
PMID- 23111827
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20141114
LR - 20211021
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 21
IP - 12
DP - 2013 Dec
TI - Preservation of the posterior cruciate ligament is not helpful in highly
conforming mobile-bearing total knee arthroplasty: a randomized controlled
study.
PG - 2850-9
LID - 10.1007/s00167-012-2265-2 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to investigate whether the preservation
of
the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) can be helpful for improving kinematics
and
clinical outcome in highly conforming mobile-bearing total knee arthroplasty
(TKA). METHODS: Ninety osteoarthritic knees were randomly allocated to either
the
PCL-preserving group or the PCL-sacrificing group. Passive kinematics was
recorded with a navigation system immediately after implantation. Three
parameters (anterior/posterior translation, varus/valgus rotation, and
internal/external rotation) were analysed from 0° to 120° flexion. RESULTS:
The
PCL-preserving group (42 knees) had more varus rotation over 90° flexion (p <
0.05) and more anterior translation of the femur in all ranges of flexion (p
<
0.05) than those in the PCL-sacrificing group (44 knees). There was no
difference
in the internal/external rotation (p > 0.05). The range of motion, functional
scores, and radiographic results did not significantly differ between the two
groups at the final follow-up. Three knees in the PCL-preserving group were
revised: two presented with instability caused by traumatic attenuation of
the
PCL and one with subluxation of the insert due to a tight PCL. CONCLUSION:
The
preservation of the PCL was not helpful for improving kinematics and clinical
outcome in highly conforming mobile-bearing TKA.
FAU - Roh, Yoon Whan
AU - Roh YW
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Seoul National University Hospital, 101
Daehak-Ro Jongno-Gu, Seoul, 110-744, Korea, nohbody7@gmail.com.
FAU - Jang, Jak
AU - Jang J
FAU - Choi, Won Chul
AU - Choi WC
FAU - Lee, Joon Kyu
AU - Lee JK
FAU - Chun, Sae Hyung
AU - Chun SH
FAU - Lee, Sahnghoon
AU - Lee S
FAU - Seong, Sang Cheol
AU - Seong SC
FAU - Lee, Myung Chul
AU - Lee MC
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20121101
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - Aged, 80 and over
MH - Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/*surgery
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Reoperation
MH - Rotation
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2012/11/01 06:00
MHDA- 2014/11/15 06:00
CRDT- 2012/11/01 06:00
PHST- 2012/03/18 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2012/10/16 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2012/11/01 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/11/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/11/15 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-012-2265-2 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2013 Dec;21(12):2850-9. doi:
10.1007/s00167-012-2265-2. Epub 2012 Nov 1.
PMID- 28952862
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20181026
LR - 20181026
IS - 1543-3072 (Electronic)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 27
IP - 6
DP - 2018 Nov 1
TI - Evaluation of Agreement Between Participant and Expert on Jump-Landing
Characteristics During a 4-Week Intervention.
PG - 536-540
LID - 10.1123/jsr.2017-0015 [doi]
AB - CONTEXT: Feedback is an important factor in interventions designed to reduce
anterior cruciate ligament injury risk. Self-analysis feedback requires
participants to self-critique their jump-landing mechanics; however, it is
unknown if individuals can effectively self-analyze their own biomechanics
and if
this self-analysis agrees with observed biomechanical changes by an expert.
OBJECTIVE: To determine agreement between an expert and participants on
biomechanical errors committed during 3 of 12 sessions, which were part of an
intervention to change jump-landing biomechanics in healthy females. DESIGN:
Descriptive analysis. SETTING: Research laboratory. PATIENTS OR OTHER
PARTICIPANTS: Healthy recreationally active females with no history of
lower-extremity fracture or surgery. INTERVENTIONS: Participants completed a
4-week, 12-session feedback intervention. Each intervention session lasted
approximately 15 minutes and included asking participants to perform 6 sets
of 6
jumps off a 30-cm-high box placed 50% of their height away from the target
landing area. Participants performed self-analysis feedback and received
expert
feedback on 7 different jump-landing criteria following each set of jumps.
MAIN
OUTCOME MEASURES: Data were coded, and agreement between the expert and the
participant was assessed using Cohen's unweighted kappa for sessions 1, 6,
and
12. RESULTS: There was agreement between the expert and participants for 0/7
criteria for session 1, 3/7 criteria for session 6, and 4/7 criteria for
session
12. CONCLUSIONS: Participants demonstrated some agreement with the expert
when
evaluating their jump-landing biomechanics. Self-analysis feedback may not
replace what an expert can provide; both types of feedback may be better used
in
conjunction to produce significant biomechanical changes. Changes made by the
participant may not translate into biomechanical changes during a real-life
game
or practice situation. Future research should continue to investigate
effective
interventions to reduce injury risk.
FAU - Ericksen, Hayley M
AU - Ericksen HM
FAU - Pietrosimone, Brian
AU - Pietrosimone B
FAU - Gribble, Phillip A
AU - Gribble PA
FAU - Thomas, Abbey C
AU - Thomas AC
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20180930
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - *Feedback
MH - Female
MH - Hip Joint/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Movement/physiology
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - biomechanics
OT - feedback
OT - injury prevention
EDAT- 2017/09/28 06:00
MHDA- 2018/10/27 06:00
CRDT- 2017/09/28 06:00
PHST- 2017/09/28 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/10/27 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2017/09/28 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.2017-0015 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2018 Nov 1;27(6):536-540. doi: 10.1123/jsr.2017-0015. Epub
2018
Sep 30.
PMID- 18385980
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20081118
LR - 20211020
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 16
IP - 6
DP - 2008 Jun
TI - Effects of biophysical stimulation in patients undergoing arthroscopic
reconstruction of anterior cruciate ligament: prospective, randomized and
double
blind study.
PG - 595-601
LID - 10.1007/s00167-008-0519-9 [doi]
AB - Pre-clinical studies have shown that treatment by pulsed electromagnetic
fields
(PEMFs) can limit the catabolic effects of pro-inflammatory cytokines on
articular cartilage and favour the anabolic activity of the chondrocytes.
Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction is usually performed by
arthroscopic procedure that, even if minimally invasive, may elicit an
inflammatory joint reaction detrimental to articular cartilage. In this study
the
effect of I-ONE PEMFs treatment in patients undergoing ACL reconstruction was
investigated. The study end-points were (1) evaluation of patients'
functional
recovery by International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Form; (2) use
of
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), necessary to control joint
pain
and inflammation. The study design was prospective, randomized and double
blind.
Sixty-nine patients were included in the study at baseline. Follow-up visits
were
scheduled at 30, 60 and 180 days, followed by 2-year follow-up interview.
Patients were evaluated by IKDC Form and were asked to report on the use of
NSAIDs. Patients were randomized to active or placebo treatments; active
device
generated a magnetic field of 1.5 mT at 75 Hz. Patients were instructed to
use
the stimulator (I-ONE) for 4 h per day for 60 days. All patients underwent
ACL
reconstruction with use of quadruple hamstrings semitendinosus and gracilis
technique. At baseline there were no differences in the IKDC scores between
the
two groups. At follow-up visits the SF-36 Health Survey score showed a
statistically significant faster recovery in the group of patients treated
with
I-ONE stimulator (P < 0.05). NSAIDs use was less frequent among active
patients
than controls (P < 0.05). Joint swelling resolution and return to normal
range of
motion occurred faster in the active treated group (P < 0.05) too. The 2-year
follow-up did not shown statistically significant difference between the two
groups. Furthermore for longitudinal analysis the generalized linear mixed
effects model was applied to calculate the group x time interaction
coefficient;
this interaction showed a significant difference (P < 0.0001) between the
active
and placebo groups for all investigated variables: SF-36 Health Survey, IKDC
Subjective Knee Evaluation and VAS. Twenty-nine patients (15 in the active
group;
14 in the placebo group) underwent both ACL reconstruction and meniscectomy;
when
they were analysed separately the differences in SF-36 Health Survey scores
between the two groups were larger then what observed in the whole study
group (P
< 0.05). The results of this study show that patient's functional recovery
occurs
earlier in the active group. No side effects were observed and the treatment
was
well tolerated. The use of I-ONE should always be considered after ACL
reconstruction, particularly in professional athletes, to shorten the
recovery
time, to limit joint inflammatory reaction and its catabolic effects on
articular
cartilage and ultimately for joint preservation.
FAU - Benazzo, Francesco
AU - Benazzo F
AD - IRCCS Foundation, Orthopaedic and Traumatology Department, S. Matteo Hospital
Institute, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
FAU - Zanon, Giacomo
AU - Zanon G
FAU - Pederzini, Luigi
AU - Pederzini L
FAU - Modonesi, Fulvio
AU - Modonesi F
FAU - Cardile, Carlo
AU - Cardile C
FAU - Falez, Francesco
AU - Falez F
FAU - Ciolli, Luigi
AU - Ciolli L
FAU - La Cava, Filippo
AU - La Cava F
FAU - Giannini, Sandro
AU - Giannini S
FAU - Buda, Roberto
AU - Buda R
FAU - Setti, Stefania
AU - Setti S
FAU - Caruso, Gaetano
AU - Caruso G
FAU - Massari, Leo
AU - Massari L
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20080402
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - 0 (Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/therapeutic use
MH - *Arthroscopy
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - *Electric Stimulation Therapy
MH - *Electromagnetic Fields
MH - Humans
MH - Inflammation/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology/surgery
MH - Menisci, Tibial/surgery
MH - Pain Measurement
MH - Postoperative Period
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Tendons/transplantation
MH - Tibial Meniscus Injuries
PMC - PMC2413121
EDAT- 2008/04/04 09:00
MHDA- 2008/11/19 09:00
CRDT- 2008/04/04 09:00
PHST- 2007/11/28 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2008/02/28 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2008/04/04 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/11/19 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/04/04 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 519 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-008-0519-9 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2008 Jun;16(6):595-601. doi:
10.1007/s00167-008-0519-9. Epub 2008 Apr 2.
PMID- 31233541
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20191203
LR - 20200309
IS - 1549-1676 (Electronic)
IS - 1549-1277 (Print)
IS - 1549-1277 (Linking)
VI - 16
IP - 6
DP - 2019 Jun
TI - The Flooring for Injury Prevention (FLIP) Study of compliant flooring for the
prevention of fall-related injuries in long-term care: A randomized trial.
PG - e1002843
LID - 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002843 [doi]
LID - e1002843
AB - BACKGROUND: Fall-related injuries exert an enormous health burden on older
adults
in long-term care (LTC). Softer landing surfaces, such as those provided by
low-stiffness "compliant" flooring, may prevent fall-related injuries by
decreasing the forces applied to the body during fall impact. Our primary
objective was to assess the clinical effectiveness of compliant flooring at
preventing serious fall-related injuries among LTC residents. METHODS AND
FINDINGS: The Flooring for Injury Prevention (FLIP) Study was a 4-year,
randomized superiority trial in 150 single-occupancy resident rooms at a
single
Canadian LTC site. In April 2013, resident rooms were block randomized (1:1)
to
installation of intervention compliant flooring (2.54 cm SmartCells) or rigid
control flooring (2.54 cm plywood) covered with identical hospital-grade
vinyl.
The primary outcome was serious fall-related injury over 4 years that
required an
emergency department visit or hospital admission and a treatment procedure or
diagnostic evaluation in hospital. Secondary outcomes included minor fall-
related
injury, any fall-related injury, falls, and fracture. Outcomes were
ascertained
by blinded assessors between September 1, 2013 and August 31, 2017 and
analyzed
by intention to treat. Adverse outcomes were not assessed. During follow-up,
184
residents occupied 74 intervention rooms, and 173 residents occupied 76
control
rooms. Residents were 64.3% female with mean (SD) baseline age 81.7 (9.5)
years
(range 51.1 to 104.6 years), body mass index 25.9 (7.7) kg/m2, and follow-up
1.64
(1.39) years. 1,907 falls were reported; 23 intervention residents
experienced 38
serious injuries (from 29 falls in 22 rooms), while 23 control residents
experienced 47 serious injuries (from 34 falls in 23 rooms). Compliant
flooring
did not affect odds of ≥1 serious fall-related injury (12.5% intervention
versus
13.3% control, odds ratio [OR]: 0.98, 95% CI: 0.52 to 1.84, p = 0.950) or ≥2
serious fall-related injuries (5.4% versus 7.5%, OR: 0.74, 95% CI: 0.31 to
1.75,
p = 0.500). Compliant flooring did not affect rate of serious fall-related
injuries (0.362 versus 0.422 per 1,000 bed nights, rate ratio [RR]: 1.04, 95%
CI:
0.45 to 2.39, p = 0.925; 0.038 versus 0.053 per fall, RR: 0.81, 95% CI: 0.38
to
1.71, p = 0.560), rate of falls with ≥1 serious fall-related injury (0.276
versus
0.303 per 1,000 bed nights, RR: 0.97, 95% CI: 0.52 to 1.79, p = 0.920), or
time
to first serious fall-related injury (0.237 versus 0.257, hazard ratio [HR]:
0.92, 95% CI: 0.52 to 1.62, p = 0.760). Compliant flooring did not affect any
secondary outcome in this study. Study limitations included the following:
findings were specific to 2.54 cm SmartCells compliant flooring installed in
LTC
resident rooms, standard fall and injury prevention interventions were in use
throughout the study and may have influenced the observed effect of compliant
flooring, and challenges with concussion detection in LTC residents may have
prevented estimation of the effect of compliant flooring on fall-related
concussions. CONCLUSIONS: In contrast to results from previous retrospective
and
nonrandomized studies, this study found that compliant flooring underneath
hospital-grade vinyl was not effective at preventing serious fall-related
injuries in LTC. Future studies are needed to identify effective methods for
preventing fall-related injuries in LTC. TRIAL REGISTRATION:
ClinicalTrials.gov:
NCT01618786.
FAU - Mackey, Dawn C
AU - Mackey DC
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9854-1486
AD - Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University,
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
FAU - Lachance, Chantelle C
AU - Lachance CC
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5755-5160
AD - Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University,
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
FAU - Wang, Peiwei T
AU - Wang PT
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-4643-6219
AD - Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science, Simon Fraser University,
Burnaby,
British Columbia, Canada.
AD - Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science, University of Waterloo,
Waterloo,
Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Feldman, Fabio
AU - Feldman F
AD - Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University,
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
AD - Clinical Quality & Patient Safety, Fraser Health Authority, Surrey, British
Columbia, Canada.
FAU - Laing, Andrew C
AU - Laing AC
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8128-011X
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
FAU - Leung, Pet M
AU - Leung PM
AD - New Vista Society Care Home, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
FAU - Hu, X Joan
AU - Hu XJ
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-1970-2980
AD - Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science, Simon Fraser University,
Burnaby,
British Columbia, Canada.
FAU - Robinovitch, Stephen N
AU - Robinovitch SN
AD - Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University,
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT01618786
GR - TIR-103945/CIHR/Canada
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20190624
PL - United States
TA - PLoS Med
JT - PLoS medicine
JID - 101231360
SB - IM
MH - Accidental Falls/*prevention & control
MH - Aged
MH - Aged, 80 and over
MH - Female
MH - Floors and Floorcoverings/methods/*standards
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Long-Term Care/methods/*standards/trends
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Residential Facilities/*standards
PMC - PMC6590787
COIS- I have read the journal's policy and the authors of this manuscript have the
following competing interests: SNR was a consultant to SATech in 2008 to
evaluate
impact force reduction provided by SmartCells flooring. He had no links to
the
company throughout the trial period and has no current links to the company.
SNR
has a patent US11794550 with royalties paid, related to wearable hip
protectors
for hip fracture prevention. SNR is a consultant to Tytex A/S and BlueTree
Medical Products Inc., companies that manufacture and sell wearable hip
protectors for hip fracture prevention. FF is a consultant to BlueTree
Medical
Products Inc., which manufactures and sells hip protectors for hip fracture
prevention. ACL reports grants from SofSurfaces Inc, grants and personal fees
from SorbaShock LLC, and grants and personal fees from Viconic Sporting,
outside
the submitted work. ACL is a member of an ASTM Work Group (WK38804) whose
Technical Contact is employed by SATech. SATech has donated flooring
materials to
ACL’s laboratory that have formed the basis of several studies examining the
biomechanical effectiveness of compliant flooring. ACL has never had (nor
does he
currently have) any financial links to the company. All other authors have
declared that no competing interests exist.
EDAT- 2019/06/25 06:00
MHDA- 2019/12/04 06:00
CRDT- 2019/06/25 06:00
PHST- 2019/02/26 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2019/05/29 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2019/06/25 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2019/06/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2019/12/04 06:00 [medline]
AID - PMEDICINE-D-19-00725 [pii]
AID - 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002843 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - PLoS Med. 2019 Jun 24;16(6):e1002843. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002843.
eCollection 2019 Jun.
PMID- 16909301
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070227
LR - 20220310
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 14
IP - 11
DP - 2006 Nov
TI - Prospective and randomized evaluation of ACL reconstruction with three
techniques: a clinical and radiographic evaluation at 5 years follow-up.
PG - 1060-9
AB - A variety of graft sources have been used for ACL reconstruction to improve
functions and kinematics in ACL deficient knees. The two most commonly used
autogenous grafts are the central third of the patellar tendon and the
hamstring
tendon constructs. The choice of different grafts and different construct
influence the final clinical outcome of ACL reconstruction. The 3 groups, of
25
patients each, were generated by choosing the technique (PT tendon, 4 strand
hamstring, and single hamstring plus extraarticular plasty) to utilize and
followed for 5 years, with an alternate systematic sampling. Our comparison
has
shown significant kneeling pain in the patellar tendon with respect to the
groups
with hamstrings techniques. Single hamstring plus extraarticular plasty
achieved
subjective score significantly higher with respect to the other two groups as
well as for the time to resume sport. The study confirms that patellar tendon
and
hamstring can be equivalent options for ACL reconstruction. This study
demonstrated that a superior outcome as far as subjective clinical findings
were
concerned, was obtained in group III. Patients in the latter group were also
able
to return to sports sooner than those in the bone-patellar tendon graft group
and
the four-strand hamstring group.
FAU - Zaffagnini, Stefano
AU - Zaffagnini S
AD - Biomechanics Department, Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institute, Via Di Barbiano,
1/10,
40136 Bologna, Italy. s.zaffagnini@biomec.ior.it
FAU - Marcacci, Maurilio
AU - Marcacci M
FAU - Lo Presti, Mirco
AU - Lo Presti M
FAU - Giordano, Giovanni
AU - Giordano G
FAU - Iacono, Francesco
AU - Iacono F
FAU - Neri, Maria Pia
AU - Neri MP
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20060815
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/diagnostic imaging/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroplasty/methods/rehabilitation
MH - Bone-Patellar Tendon-Bone Grafting/diagnostic imaging/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/diagnostic imaging/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/methods
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Radiography
MH - Tendon Transfer
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Thigh/surgery
MH - Time Factors
MH - Transplantation, Autologous
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2006/08/16 09:00
MHDA- 2007/02/28 09:00
CRDT- 2006/08/16 09:00
PHST- 2005/12/12 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2006/02/14 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2006/08/16 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/02/28 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/08/16 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-006-0130-x [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2006 Nov;14(11):1060-9. doi:
10.1007/s00167-006-0130-x. Epub 2006 Aug 15.
PMID- 16392537
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20060228
LR - 20161124
IS - 1543-8627 (Print)
IS - 1543-8627 (Linking)
VI - 13
IP - 3
DP - 2005 Jul-Sep
TI - A randomised controlled trial of proprioceptive and balance training after
surgical reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament.
PG - 217-30
AB - A randomised controlled trial (29 participants) was used to compare a 6-week
proprioceptive and balance exercise program with a 6-week strengthening
program
in the early phases of rehabilitation after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
reconstruction. Measurements of functional activity were taken by a blinded
assessor before the intervention and at the end of the 6 weeks. Results
demonstrated that there were no significant differences between groups on hop
testing at 6 weeks. For several items in the Cincinnati knee rating system
and
the patient specific functional scale however, the strengthening group
improved
more than the proprioceptive and balance group (p < .05). The hypothesis that
proprioceptive and balance training would improve functional activity more
than
strengthening exercises was not supported. There was either no difference
between
the two forms of exercise or strength training may be more beneficial than
proprioceptive and balance training in the early phase of rehabilitation
after
ACL reconstructive surgery.
FAU - Cooper, R L
AU - Cooper RL
AD - Musculoskeletal Research Centre, La Trobe University, Victoria, Australia.
FAU - Taylor, N F
AU - Taylor NF
FAU - Feller, J A
AU - Feller JA
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - England
TA - Res Sports Med
JT - Research in sports medicine (Print)
JID - 101167637
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiopathology/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Exercise/*physiology
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/physiopathology/*rehabilitation
MH - Male
MH - *Physical Therapy Modalities
MH - Proprioception/*physiology
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Recovery of Function/physiology
MH - Single-Blind Method
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Weight-Bearing/physiology
EDAT- 2006/01/06 09:00
MHDA- 2006/03/01 09:00
CRDT- 2006/01/06 09:00
PHST- 2006/01/06 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/03/01 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/01/06 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1080/15438620500222547 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Res Sports Med. 2005 Jul-Sep;13(3):217-30. doi: 10.1080/15438620500222547.
PMID- 21267543
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120119
LR - 20220409
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 7
DP - 2011 Jul
TI - Physiotherapy-guided versus home-based, unsupervised rehabilitation in
isolated
anterior cruciate injuries following surgical reconstruction.
PG - 1158-67
LID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1386-8 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to investigate the outcome after ACL
reconstruction between a group of patients receiving a standardized,
supervised,
physiotherapy-guided rehabilitation programme and a group of patients who
followed an unsupervised, home-based rehabilitation programme. METHODS: Forty
patients with isolated anterior cruciate ligament injuries were allocated to
either a supervised physiotherapy intervention group or home-based exercise
group. Patients were investigated by an independent examiner pre-operative,
3, 6,
9 and 12 months post-surgery using the following outcome measures: Lysholm
Score
and Tegner Activity Scale, functional hopping tests, and isometric and
isokinetic
strength assessments. RESULTS: Both groups improved significantly (P = 0.01-
0.04)
following 12 months after surgery. The median Lysholm score increased from 57
(34-90) to 94 (90-100) in the supervised group and 60 (41-87) to 97 (95-100)
in
the unsupervised group. The median Tegner Activity Scale increased from 3 (2-
8)
to 6 (3-8) in the supervised group and 4 (2-8) to 5 (3-10) in the
unsupervised
group. The combined mean symmetry indices for the hopping tests improved from
77.3 ± 18.7 to 86.8 ± 11.1 (supervised) and from 78.1 ± 30.5 to 88.3 ± 10.9
(unsupervised). Isometric and isokinetic strength symmetry indices for knee
extension improved from 68.9 ± 23.5 to 82.8 ± 11.9, respectively, 63.7 + 22.8
to
82.7 + 15.1 in the supervised group and from 73.6 ± 20.5 to 76.5 ± 17.9,
respectively, 69.5 ± 24.3 to 76.9 ± 16.9 in the unsupervised group. Eccentric
strength symmetry indices for knee extension improved from 67.9 ± 27.7 to
87.8 ± 6.8 in the supervised group and from 71.3 ± 17.8 to 82.6 ± 15.6 in the
unsupervised group. CONCLUSION: This study could not demonstrate a benefit in
a
rehabilitation programme supervised by a physiotherapist in our population
compared to an unsupervised cohort.
FAU - Hohmann, Erik
AU - Hohmann E
AD - Musculoskeletal Research Unit, CQ University, PO Box 4045, Rockhampton, QLD
4700,
Australia. ehohmann@optusnet.com.au
FAU - Tetsworth, Kevin
AU - Tetsworth K
FAU - Bryant, Adam
AU - Bryant A
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20110126
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*rehabilitation/surgery
MH - Male
MH - Movement
MH - Muscle Strength
MH - Orthopedic Procedures
MH - *Physical Therapy Modalities
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2011/01/27 06:00
MHDA- 2012/01/20 06:00
CRDT- 2011/01/27 06:00
PHST- 2009/08/31 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2010/12/27 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2011/01/27 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/01/27 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/01/20 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1386-8 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2011 Jul;19(7):1158-67. doi:
10.1007/s00167-010-1386-8. Epub 2011 Jan 26.
PMID- 33609960
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20210701
LR - 20210701
IS - 1872-7646 (Electronic)
IS - 0167-9457 (Linking)
VI - 76
DP - 2021 Apr
TI - Does delayed onset muscle soreness affect the biomechanical variables of the
drop
vertical jump that have been associated with increased ACL injury risk? A
randomised control trial.
PG - 102772
LID - S0167-9457(21)00020-8 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.humov.2021.102772 [doi]
AB - INTRODUCTION: Delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) and Anterior Cruciate
Ligament
(ACL) injuries are both prevalent in sport. It is currently unknown whether
DOMS
increases ACL injury risk. AIM: This study aimed to provide preliminary
insight
on whether DOMS affects ACL injury risk by investigating whether DOMS affects
the
biomechanical variables of the DVJ that have been identified as risk factors
for
future ACL injury. METHODS: This was a randomised control trial involving 32
active individuals aged 18-35 years, with no history of ACL injury.
Participants
underwent two sessions of force-plate testing and 3D motion analysis of the
drop
vertical jump (DVJ). The DVJ was chosen as it has been investigated
prospectively
for association with future ACL injury. Initial testing was followed by
randomisation to DOMS or control group. The DOMS group underwent a DOMS-
inducing
exercise protocol, the control group did not. Both groups were re-tested 48 h
after initial testing. Five variables of the DVJ that have been associated
with
future ACL injury were chosen for analysis - peak knee flexion angle, peak
vertical ground reaction force, ground contact time, peak knee abduction
angle &
peak knee abduction moment. Between-group differences were compared using a
two-way mixed analysis of variance; alpha level set to 0.05. RESULTS: DOMS
was
successfully induced in all participants of the DOMS group however no
statistically significant group x time interactions were found for any of the
five variables analysed. CONCLUSIONS: DOMS did not affect the biomechanical
variables of the DVJ that have been associated with future ACL injury. By
extension, this may suggest that DOMS might not affect ACL injury risk.
However,
it is also possible that certain attributes of the DVJ meant that any effect
of
DOMS was simply unable to be quantified, even if an effect existed. All
considered, our position is that conclusion cannot be drawn from this study
alone
on whether DOMS affects ACL injury risk. Further research is required.
CI - Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
FAU - Look, Matthew C
AU - Look MC
AD - Academic Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine,
King's College London, 2(nd) Floor Addison House, Guy's Campus, London SE1
1UL,
United Kingdom. Electronic address: mlook.physio@icloud.com.
FAU - Iyengar, Yogita
AU - Iyengar Y
AD - Academic Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine,
King's College London, 2(nd) Floor Addison House, Guy's Campus, London SE1
1UL,
United Kingdom. Electronic address: dr.yogita.iyengar@gmail.com.
FAU - Barcellona, Massimo
AU - Barcellona M
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,
Denmark Hill, London SE5 9RS, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
massimo.barcellona@nhs.net.
FAU - Shortland, Adam
AU - Shortland A
AD - Department of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, Faculty of Life
Sciences
and Medicine, King's College London, 4(th) Floor, Lambeth Wing, St Thomas'
Hospital, London SE1 7EH, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
adam.shortland@kcl.ac.uk.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210217
PL - Netherlands
TA - Hum Mov Sci
JT - Human movement science
JID - 8300127
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*physiopathology
MH - *Athletes
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Exercise
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Movement
MH - Myalgia/*physiopathology
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Sports
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - 3D motion analysis
OT - ACL
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - DOMS
OT - Delayed onset muscle soreness
OT - Drop vertical jump
EDAT- 2021/02/21 06:00
MHDA- 2021/07/02 06:00
CRDT- 2021/02/20 20:12
PHST- 2020/03/26 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2020/11/27 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2021/02/02 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/02/21 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/07/02 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/02/20 20:12 [entrez]
AID - S0167-9457(21)00020-8 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.humov.2021.102772 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Hum Mov Sci. 2021 Apr;76:102772. doi: 10.1016/j.humov.2021.102772. Epub 2021
Feb
17.
PMID- 25552287
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160222
LR - 20220330
IS - 1938-1344 (Electronic)
IS - 0190-6011 (Linking)
VI - 45
IP - 2
DP - 2015 Feb
TI - Immediate effects of real-time feedback on jump-landing kinematics.
PG - 112-8
LID - 10.2519/jospt.2015.4997 [doi]
AB - STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. OBJECTIVE: To determine if the
addition of real-time feedback (RTF) to postresponse feedback (PRF) improves
jump-landing kinematics compared to PRF alone and a no-feedback control
group.
BACKGROUND: Injury-prevention programs to reduce risk of anterior cruciate
ligament injury have shown promising results in altering jump-landing
biomechanics. Real-time feedback provided during the task may allow
participants
to more easily understand and execute new movement strategies compared to PRF
provided after the task is completed. METHODS: Thirty-six healthy females
were
randomized to 1 of 3 groups: RTF plus PRF, PRF, or control. Sagittal plane
moments and angles at the knee and hip, frontal plane angles at the knee, and
vertical ground reaction forces during a jump-landing task were quantified at
baseline and postintervention. The RTF plus PRF and PRF groups received a
PowerPoint presentation containing the goals of correct landing technique. In
addition to the PowerPoint presentation, the RTF plus PRF group was provided
real-time visualization of their frontal plane knee angle. Participants in
the
control group performed the jump-landing task without feedback. RESULTS:
Posttraining, the RTF plus PRF and PRF groups demonstrated similar
improvements
in hip and knee flexion and decreased vertical ground reaction forces
compared to
the control group. There were no changes in frontal plane knee kinematics
between
groups posttraining. CONCLUSION: The addition of RTF to PRF did not result in
significant changes in jump-landing kinematics compared to PRF alone. LEVEL
OF
EVIDENCE: Prevention, level 5.
FAU - Ericksen, Hayley M
AU - Ericksen HM
AD - Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY.
FAU - Thomas, Abbey C
AU - Thomas AC
FAU - Gribble, Phillip A
AU - Gribble PA
FAU - Doebel, Sara C
AU - Doebel SC
FAU - Pietrosimone, Brian G
AU - Pietrosimone BG
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20150101
PL - United States
TA - J Orthop Sports Phys Ther
JT - The Journal of orthopaedic and sports physical therapy
JID - 7908150
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - *Feedback, Physiological
MH - Female
MH - Hip/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Movement/physiology
MH - *Plyometric Exercise
MH - Time Factors
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - biofeedback
OT - instruction
OT - knee abduction
OT - prevention
EDAT- 2015/01/02 06:00
MHDA- 2016/02/24 06:00
CRDT- 2015/01/02 06:00
PHST- 2015/01/02 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/01/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/02/24 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.2519/jospt.2015.4997 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2015 Feb;45(2):112-8. doi:
10.2519/jospt.2015.4997.
Epub 2015 Jan 1.
PMID- 27428644
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170427
LR - 20170427
IS - 1439-3964 (Electronic)
IS - 0172-4622 (Linking)
VI - 38
IP - 2
DP - 2017 Feb
TI - Innovative Video Feedback on Jump Landing Improves Landing Technique in
Males.
PG - 150-158
LID - 10.1055/s-0042-106298 [doi]
AB - Video feedback may be a powerful tool to change biomechanical landing
patterns
associated with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury risk. This study
investigated the effect of video feedback on drop vertical jump (DVJ) landing
strategies in team sport athletes. 59 athletes were assigned to a video
feedback
(VI) or control (CTRL) group. A pretest, 2 training sessions and a posttest
were
conducted. In both training sessions, video feedback, consisting of a video
of
the athlete's contour superimposed onto an expert's contour performing the
DVJ
landing task, was provided to the VI group; the CTRL group did not receive
feedback. Outcomes included: kinematics and kinetics at peak knee
valgus/varus
moment during pre- and posttest and percentage overlap of expert and athlete
during the training sessions. At posttest, males in the VI group showed
greater
hip flexion angles (p=0.001) and range of motion (p<0.001), smaller vertical
ground reaction force, and smaller ankle dorsiflexion moment (p<0.001)
compared
to pretest. At posttest, males in the VI group demonstrated smaller vertical
ground reaction force (p=0.031) and ankle dorsiflexion moment (p=0.001)
compared
to males in the CTRL group. The VI group increased percentage overlap with
the
expert during training sessions and from start of the first to the end of the
second training session (p<0.001). Overall, video feedback was effective to
modify landing strategies favorably in males. While females imitated the
expert
model, their landing strategy did not change significantly. While Females may
need additional (verbal) feedback to benefit from video feedback.
CI - © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
FAU - Dallinga, Joan
AU - Dallinga J
AD - Center for Human Movement Sciences, University of Groningen, University
Medical
Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
FAU - Benjaminse, Anne
AU - Benjaminse A
AD - Center for Human Movement Sciences, University of Groningen, University
Medical
Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
FAU - Gokeler, Alli
AU - Gokeler A
AD - Center for Human Movement Sciences, University of Groningen, University
Medical
Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
FAU - Cortes, Nelson
AU - Cortes N
AD - School of Recreation, Health and Tourism, George Mason University, Fairfax,
United States.
FAU - Otten, Egbert
AU - Otten E
AD - Center for Human Movement Sciences, University of Groningen, University
Medical
Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
FAU - Lemmink, Koen
AU - Lemmink K
AD - Center for Human Movement Sciences, University of Groningen, University
Medical
Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20160718
PL - Germany
TA - Int J Sports Med
JT - International journal of sports medicine
JID - 8008349
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Ankle Joint
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletes
MH - *Athletic Performance
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Feedback
MH - Female
MH - Hip Joint
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Male
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - *Video Recording
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2016/07/19 06:00
MHDA- 2017/04/28 06:00
CRDT- 2016/07/19 06:00
PHST- 2016/07/19 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/04/28 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2016/07/19 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1055/s-0042-106298 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Int J Sports Med. 2017 Feb;38(2):150-158. doi: 10.1055/s-0042-106298. Epub
2016
Jul 18.
PMID- 14977662
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20040527
LR - 20221207
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 32
IP - 2
DP - 2004 Mar
TI - The effect of creatine supplementation on strength recovery after anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction: a randomized, placebo-controlled,
double-blind trial.
PG - 383-8
AB - BACKGROUND: Creatine supplementation has been shown to augment training-
induced
strength gains. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of
creatine
supplementation on recovery of muscle strength after anterior cruciate
ligament
(ACL) reconstruction. HYPOTHESIS: Creatine supplementation will facilitate
strength gains after ACL reconstruction. STUDY DESIGN: Double-blind,
prospective,
and randomized clinical trial. METHODS: Sixty patients were randomized into
creatine or placebo groups. Quadriceps and hamstring strength and power were
measured isokinetically. Hip flexor, abductor, and adductor strengths were
measured with a handheld dynamometer prior to surgery and at 6 weeks, 12
weeks,
or 6 months after surgery. RESULTS: From 6 weeks to 12 weeks after surgery,
there
were significant increases in strength on the involved side for knee
extension
(47%), knee flexion (27%), hip flexion (20%), hip abduction (9%), and hip
adduction (17%). These strength improvements were unaffected by creatine
supplementation with similar effects in the creatine and placebo groups. From
6
weeks to 12 weeks after surgery, there were significant increases in power on
the
involved side for knee extension (46%) and knee flexion (26%), but these
effects
were not affected by creatine supplementation. At 6 months, creatine
supplementation did not affect outcome as measured by the single leg hop test
for
distance or the knee outcome score. CONCLUSIONS: The results demonstrate that
patients do not benefit from creatine supplementation during the first 12
weeks
of rehabilitation after ACL reconstruction.
FAU - Tyler, Timothy F
AU - Tyler TF
AD - NISMAT at Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York, USA.
FAU - Nicholas, Stephen J
AU - Nicholas SJ
FAU - Hershman, Elliott B
AU - Hershman EB
FAU - Glace, Beth W
AU - Glace BW
FAU - Mullaney, Michael J
AU - Mullaney MJ
FAU - McHugh, Malachy P
AU - McHugh MP
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
RN - 0 (Placebos)
RN - MU72812GK0 (Creatine)
SB - IM
MH - Administration, Oral
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Atrophy
MH - Creatine/administration & dosage/*pharmacology
MH - Dietary Supplements
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*rehabilitation/*surgery
MH - Knee Joint/pathology/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Weakness
MH - Placebos
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - *Plastic Surgery Procedures
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2004/02/24 05:00
MHDA- 2004/05/28 05:00
CRDT- 2004/02/24 05:00
PHST- 2004/02/24 05:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2004/05/28 05:00 [medline]
PHST- 2004/02/24 05:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1177/0363546503261731 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2004 Mar;32(2):383-8. doi: 10.1177/0363546503261731.
PMID- 21987363
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20130610
LR - 20211020
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 8
DP - 2012 Aug
TI - Biomechanical comparison of three techniques for fixation of tibial avulsion
fractures of the anterior cruciate ligament.
PG - 1470-8
LID - 10.1007/s00167-011-1694-7 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: To evaluate the initial stability of a suture anchor fixation and to
compare this with a screw fixation and pull-out suture fixation for anterior
cruciate ligament tibial avulsion fracture. METHODS: The initial fixation
strength of 3 different fixation techniques, antegrade cannulated screw
fixation,
pull-out suture fixation with Ethibond and bioabsorbable knotless suture
anchor
fixation, was evaluated. Using 14 fresh cadavers (28 knees), the strength to
failure, initial displacement and mode of failure were measured. RESULTS: The
strength to failure of the suture anchor fixation was not significantly
different
from that of the screw fixation and was higher than that of the pull-out
suture
fixation. The initial displacement of the suture anchor fixation was lower
than
that of the screw fixation and the pull-out suture fixation. The majority of
the
suture anchor fixations and the screw fixations were failed by pull-out from
the
bone. Eight of the 56 suture anchor fixations failed by pull-out of the
suture
from the ligament proper. And, one of the 7 screw fixations failed due to
fracture of the avulsed bony fragment. All of the pull-out suture fixations
failed by suture material rupture. CONCLUSIONS: These biomechanical results
suggest that the initial fixation strength of suture anchor fixation was not
less
than that of screw fixation or pull-out suture fixation. And, the initial
displacement of suture anchor fixation was lower than that of screw fixation
or
pull-out suture fixation. The suture anchor fixation appears to be a good
alternative fixation technique for repair of anterior cruciate ligament
tibial
avulsion fracture.
FAU - In, Yong
AU - In Y
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, College of Medicine, The Catholic
University of
Korea, Seoul, Korea.
FAU - Kwak, Dai-Soon
AU - Kwak DS
FAU - Moon, Chan-Woong
AU - Moon CW
FAU - Han, Seung-Ho
AU - Han SH
FAU - Choi, Nam-Yong
AU - Choi NY
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20111011
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Aged
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Fracture Fixation, Internal/*methods
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Suture Techniques
MH - Tibia/*injuries/surgery
MH - Tibial Fractures/*surgery
EDAT- 2011/10/12 06:00
MHDA- 2013/06/12 06:00
CRDT- 2011/10/12 06:00
PHST- 2011/04/07 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2011/09/27 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2011/10/12 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/10/12 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2013/06/12 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-011-1694-7 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2012 Aug;20(8):1470-8. doi:
10.1007/s00167-011-1694-7. Epub 2011 Oct 11.
PMID- 25583274
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160105
LR - 20161125
IS - 1466-447X (Electronic)
IS - 0264-0414 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 13
DP - 2015
TI - Effects of treadmill versus overground soccer match simulations on
biomechanical
markers of anterior cruciate ligament injury risk in side cutting.
PG - 1332-41
LID - 10.1080/02640414.2014.990491 [doi]
AB - This study aimed to investigate whether treadmill versus overground soccer
match
simulations have similar effects on knee joint mechanics during side cutting.
Nineteen male recreational soccer players completed a 45-min treadmill and
overground match simulation. Heart rate (HR) and rating of perceived exertion
(RPE) were recorded every 5 min. Prior to exercise (time 0 min), at "half-
time"
(time 45 min) and 15 min post-exercise (time 60 min), participants performed
five
trials of 45° side-cutting manoeuvres. Knee abduction moments and knee
extension
angles were analysed using two-way repeated measures analysis of variance (α
=
0.05). Physiological responses were significantly greater during the
overground
(HR 160 ± 7 beats ∙ min(-1); RPE 15 ± 2) than the treadmill simulation (HR
142 ±
5 beats ∙ min(-1); RPE 12 ± 2). Knee extension angles significantly increased
over time and were more extended at time 60 min compared with time 0 min and
time
45 min. No significant differences in knee abduction moments were observed.
Although knee abduction moments were not altered over time during both
simulations, passive rest during half-time induced changes in knee angles
that
may have implications for anterior cruciate ligament injury risk.
FAU - Azidin, R M Firhad Raja
AU - Azidin RM
AD - a School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, Faculty of Science , Liverpool John
Moores University , Liverpool , UK.
FAU - Sankey, Sean
AU - Sankey S
FAU - Drust, Barry
AU - Drust B
FAU - Robinson, Mark A
AU - Robinson MA
FAU - Vanrenterghem, Jos
AU - Vanrenterghem J
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20150113
PL - England
TA - J Sports Sci
JT - Journal of sports sciences
JID - 8405364
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Exercise Test/*methods
MH - Heart Rate
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Perception/physiology
MH - Physical Exertion/physiology
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Soccer/*injuries/physiology
MH - Task Performance and Analysis
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - knee mechanics
OT - soccer
EDAT- 2015/01/15 06:00
MHDA- 2016/01/06 06:00
CRDT- 2015/01/14 06:00
PHST- 2015/01/14 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/01/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/01/06 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1080/02640414.2014.990491 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sports Sci. 2015;33(13):1332-41. doi: 10.1080/02640414.2014.990491. Epub
2015
Jan 13.
PMID- 15888712
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050901
LR - 20221207
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 7
DP - 2005 Jul
TI - A biomechanical comparison of posterior cruciate ligament reconstructions
using
single- and double-bundle tibial inlay techniques.
PG - 976-81
AB - BACKGROUND: The efficacy of using a double-bundle versus single-bundle graft
for
posterior cruciate ligament reconstruction has not been demonstrated.
HYPOTHESIS:
A double-bundle graft restores knee kinematics better than a single-bundle
graft
does in tibial inlay PCL reconstructions. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory
study. METHODS: Eight cadaveric knees were subjected to 6 cycles from a 40-N
anterior reference point to a 100-N posterior translational force at 10
degrees ,
30 degrees , 60 degrees , and 90 degrees of flexion. Testing was performed
for
the intact and posterior cruciate deficient knee as well as for both
reconstructed conditions. Achilles tendons, divided into 2 equal sections,
were
prepared as both single-bundle and double-bundle grafts. Both grafts were
employed in the same knee, and the order of graft reconstruction was
randomized.
RESULTS: There were no statistical differences in translation between the
intact
state and either of the reconstructions (P > .05) or between either of the
reconstructions at any flexion angle (P > .05). CONCLUSION: No differences in
translation between the 2 graft options were identified. CLINICAL RELEVANCE:
The
use of a double-bundle graft may not offer any advantages over a single-
bundle
graft for tibial inlay posterior cruciate reconstructions.
FAU - Bergfeld, John A
AU - Bergfeld JA
AD - South County Orthopedic Specialists, 24331 El Toro Road, Suite 200, Laguna
Hills,
CA 92653, USA.
FAU - Graham, Scott M
AU - Graham SM
FAU - Parker, Richard D
AU - Parker RD
FAU - Valdevit, Antonio D C
AU - Valdevit AD
FAU - Kambic, Helen E
AU - Kambic HE
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20050511
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Achilles Tendon/*transplantation
MH - Adult
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/*injuries/*surgery
MH - Plastic Surgery Procedures
EDAT- 2005/05/13 09:00
MHDA- 2005/09/02 09:00
CRDT- 2005/05/13 09:00
PHST- 2005/05/13 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/09/02 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/05/13 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546504273046 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546504273046 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2005 Jul;33(7):976-81. doi: 10.1177/0363546504273046. Epub
2005
May 11.
PMID- 26615475
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160727
LR - 20220310
IS - 1872-7646 (Electronic)
IS - 0167-9457 (Linking)
VI - 45
DP - 2016 Feb
TI - Enhanced retention of drop vertical jump landing technique: A randomized
controlled trial.
PG - 84-95
LID - S0167-9457(15)30058-0 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.humov.2015.11.008 [doi]
AB - External focus instructions have been shown to result in superior motor
performance compared to internal focus instructions. Using an EF may help to
optimize current anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury prevention programs.
The
purpose of the current study was to investigate the effects of instructions
on
landing technique and performance by comparing an external focus (EF),
internal
focus (IF), video (VI) and control (CTRL) group. Subjects (age
22.50±1.62years,
height 179.70±10.43cm, mass 73.98±12.68kg) were randomly assigned to IF
(n=10),
EF (n=10), VI (n=10) or CTRL group (n=10). Landing was assessed from a drop
vertical jump (DVJ) in five sessions: pretest, two training blocks (TR1 and
TR2)
and directly after the training sessions (post test) and retention test 1week
later. Group specific instructions were offered in TR1 and TR2. Landing
technique
was assessed with the Landing Error Scoring System (LESS) and jump height was
taken as performance measure. The results show that males in the VI group and
females both in the VI and EF groups significantly improved jump-landing
technique. Retention was achieved and jump height was maintained for males in
the
VI group and females both in the VI and EF groups. It is therefore concluded
that
EF and VI instructions have great potential in ACL injury prevention.
CI - Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
FAU - Welling, Wouter
AU - Welling W
AD - University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Center for
Human
Movement Sciences, Groningen, The Netherlands.
FAU - Benjaminse, Anne
AU - Benjaminse A
AD - University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Center for
Human
Movement Sciences, Groningen, The Netherlands; School of Sport Studies, Hanze
University, Groningen, The Netherlands. Electronic address:
a.benjaminse@umcg.nl.
FAU - Gokeler, Alli
AU - Gokeler A
AD - University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Center for
Human
Movement Sciences, Groningen, The Netherlands.
FAU - Otten, Bert
AU - Otten B
AD - University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Center for
Human
Movement Sciences, Groningen, The Netherlands.
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20151123
PL - Netherlands
TA - Hum Mov Sci
JT - Human movement science
JID - 8300127
SB - IM
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Attention
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - *Internal-External Control
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Male
MH - *Motor Skills
MH - Reinforcement, Verbal
MH - *Retention, Psychology
MH - Video Recording
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL injury
OT - Attentional focus
OT - Jump landing performance
OT - Motor learning
OT - Technique
EDAT- 2015/11/30 06:00
MHDA- 2016/07/28 06:00
CRDT- 2015/11/30 06:00
PHST- 2015/05/19 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2015/11/06 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2015/11/16 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2015/11/30 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/11/30 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/07/28 06:00 [medline]
AID - S0167-9457(15)30058-0 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.humov.2015.11.008 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Hum Mov Sci. 2016 Feb;45:84-95. doi: 10.1016/j.humov.2015.11.008. Epub 2015
Nov
23.
PMID- 20068492
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20101112
LR - 20220331
IS - 1530-0315 (Electronic)
IS - 0195-9131 (Linking)
VI - 42
IP - 8
DP - 2010 Aug
TI - Training affects knee kinematics and kinetics in cutting maneuvers in sport.
PG - 1535-44
LID - 10.1249/MSS.0b013e3181d03ba0 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The current study examined how different training affects the
kinematics
and applied moments at the knee during sporting maneuvers and the potential
to
reduce loading of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). The training programs
were 1) machine weights, 2) free weights, 3) balance training, and 4) machine
weights + balance training. METHODS: Fifty healthy male subjects were
allocated
either to a control group or to one of four 12-wk training programs. Subjects
were tested before and after training, performing running and cutting
maneuvers
from which knee angle and applied knee moments were assessed. Data analyzed
were
peak applied flexion/extension, varus/valgus, and internal/external rotation
moments, as well as knee flexion angles during specific phases of stance
during
the maneuvers. RESULTS: The balance training group decreased their peak
valgus
and peak internal rotation moments during weight acceptance in all maneuvers.
This group also lowered their flexion moments during the sidestep to 60
degrees .
Free weights training induced increases in the internal rotation moment and
decreases in knee flexion angle in the peak push-off phase of stance. Machine
weights training elicited increases in the flexion moment and reduced peak
valgus
moments in weight acceptance. Machine weights + balance training resulted in
no
changes to the variables assessed. CONCLUSIONS: Balance training produced
reductions in peak valgus and internal rotation moments, which could lower
ACL
injury risk during sporting maneuvers. Strength training tended to increase
the
applied knee loading known to place strain on the ACL, with the free weights
group also decreasing the amount of knee flexion. It is recommended that
balance
training be implemented because it may reduce the risk of ACL injury.
FAU - Cochrane, Jodie L
AU - Cochrane JL
AD - University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
FAU - Lloyd, David G
AU - Lloyd DG
FAU - Besier, Thor F
AU - Besier TF
FAU - Elliott, Bruce C
AU - Elliott BC
FAU - Doyle, Tim L A
AU - Doyle TL
FAU - Ackland, Timothy R
AU - Ackland TR
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Med Sci Sports Exerc
JT - Medicine and science in sports and exercise
JID - 8005433
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*physiology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/physiopathology/prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee/*physiology
MH - Knee Injuries/physiopathology/prevention & control
MH - Male
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Posture/physiology
MH - Resistance Training
MH - Rotation
MH - Sports/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/01/14 06:00
MHDA- 2010/11/13 06:00
CRDT- 2010/01/14 06:00
PHST- 2010/01/14 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/01/14 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/11/13 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1249/MSS.0b013e3181d03ba0 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2010 Aug;42(8):1535-44. doi:
10.1249/MSS.0b013e3181d03ba0.
PMID- 24405028
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20141103
LR - 20220410
IS - 1466-447X (Electronic)
IS - 0264-0414 (Linking)
VI - 32
IP - 9
DP - 2014
TI - Acute effects of static and dynamic stretching on hamstrings' response times.
PG - 817-25
LID - 10.1080/02640414.2013.861606 [doi]
AB - The main purposes of this study were to (a) investigate acute effects of
static
and dynamic lower limb stretching routines on total response time, pre-motor
time
and motor time of the medial and lateral hamstrings during maximal eccentric
isokinetic knee flexion; and (b) determine whether static and dynamic
routines
elicit similar responses. A total of 38 active adults completed the following
intervention protocols in a randomised order on separate days: (a) non-
stretching
(control condition), (b) static stretching and (c) dynamic stretching. After
the
stretching or control intervention, total response time, pre-motor time and
motor
time of the medial and lateral hamstrings were assessed during eccentric knee
flexion movements with participants prone. Measures were compared via a
mixed-design factorial ANOVA. There were no main effects for total response
time,
pre-motor time and motor time. The results suggest that dynamic and static
stretching has no influence on hamstrings response times (total response
time,
pre-motor time and motor time) and hence neither form of stretching reduces
this
primary risk factor for anterior cruciate ligament injury.
FAU - Ayala, Francisco
AU - Ayala F
AD - a Department of Education , ISEN University Formation, University of Murcia ,
Murcia , Spain.
FAU - De Ste Croix, Mark
AU - De Ste Croix M
FAU - Sainz de Baranda, Pilar
AU - Sainz de Baranda P
FAU - Santonja, Fernando
AU - Santonja F
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20140110
PL - England
TA - J Sports Sci
JT - Journal of sports sciences
JID - 8405364
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Cross-Over Studies
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/physiology
MH - Male
MH - Motor Activity/*physiology
MH - Muscle Stretching Exercises/*methods
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - Reaction Time
MH - Thigh/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2014/01/11 06:00
MHDA- 2014/11/05 06:00
CRDT- 2014/01/11 06:00
PHST- 2014/01/11 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/01/11 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/11/05 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1080/02640414.2013.861606 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sports Sci. 2014;32(9):817-25. doi: 10.1080/02640414.2013.861606. Epub 2014
Jan
10.
PMID- 32569128
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220531
LR - 20220603
IS - 1533-4287 (Electronic)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 36
IP - 6
DP - 2022 Jun 1
TI - Examining the Influence of Attentional Focus on the Effects of a
Neuromuscular
Training Program in Male Athletes.
PG - 1568-1575
LID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000003681 [doi]
AB - Ghanati, HA, Letafatkar, A, Almonroeder, TG, and Rabiei, P. Examining the
influence of attentional focus on the effects of a neuromuscular training
program
in male athletes. J Strength Cond Res 36(6): 1568-1575, 2022-Neuromuscular
training programs that incorporate lower extremity strengthening, plyometric
exercises, balance training, and movement retraining are recommended for
anterior
cruciate ligament injury prevention; however, there is a need to improve
their
effectiveness. The purpose of this study was to examine how athletes'
attentional
focus during training influences the effects of an 8-week neuromuscular
training
program on hip strength, single-leg landing mechanics, and hop performance.
Sixty-six male athletes were randomly allocated to a group that trained with
an
internal focus, a group that trained with an external focus, or a control
group.
All athletes completed testing before (baseline) and after (posttesting) the
8-week period. Isokinetic hip strength, hip and knee kinematics and ground
reaction forces during landing, and hop distance were examined as part of
this
study. Analysis of covariance was used to compare posttesting outcomes among
the
groups while accounting for group differences in baseline performance. The
neuromuscular training program resulted in improved hip abduction strength,
reduced hip adduction and internal rotation motion during landing, and
increased
hop distance for athletes who trained with an external focus. However, the
program did not seem to influence hip strength, landing kinematics, or hop
performance for athletes who trained with an internal focus. Our findings
indicate that male athletes may benefit from completing a neuromuscular
training
program with an external focus vs. an internal focus. Trainers, coaches, and
clinicians should consider using instructions that promote an external focus
when
implementing neuromuscular training programs with male athletes.
CI - Copyright © 2020 National Strength and Conditioning Association.
FAU - Ghanati, Hadi Abbaszadeh
AU - Ghanati HA
AD - Department of Sport Injury and Corrective Exercise, Kharazmi University,
Tehran,
Iran.
FAU - Letafatkar, Amir
AU - Letafatkar A
AD - Department of Sport Injury and Corrective Exercise, Kharazmi University,
Tehran,
Iran.
FAU - Almonroeder, Thomas G
AU - Almonroeder TG
AD - Department of Health Professions, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, La
Crosse,
Wisconsin; and.
FAU - Rabiei, Pouya
AU - Rabiei P
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, Human Physiology and Anatomy, Vrije Universiteit
Brussel, Brussels, Belgium.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20200617
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletes
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Male
MH - *Plyometric Exercise
EDAT- 2020/06/23 06:00
MHDA- 2022/06/01 06:00
CRDT- 2020/06/23 06:00
PHST- 2020/06/23 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/06/01 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2020/06/23 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 00124278-202206000-00013 [pii]
AID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000003681 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2022 Jun 1;36(6):1568-1575. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0000000000003681. Epub 2020 Jun 17.
PMID- 25293676
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170503
LR - 20220411
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 7
DP - 2016 Jul
TI - Increase in ACL and PCL injuries after implementation of a new professional
football league.
PG - 2271-9
LID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3357-y [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: In the season 2008-2009, a third professional football league was
established in Germany. This study analysed the influence of increased
training
and playing intensity on severe knee injuries in football players. METHODS:
In a
prospective controlled one-season trial, injury incidence and injury patterns
of
players of the newly established professional football league were analysed,
particularly with regard to ruptures of the anterior (ACL) and posterior
(PCL)
cruciate ligaments. Players of the highest amateur level served as a control
group. RESULTS: Four hundred and eight players of 24 teams were allocated to
two
groups. The overall training exposure was significantly (p < 0.001) higher in
the
new professional league (335.3 h per player) than at the amateur level
(286.6 h
per player). Players at both levels showed similar overall injury rates and
injury patterns. However, players in the professional league had a
significantly
higher (p = 0.04) incidence of ACL and PCL injuries, than players at the
amateur
level. More than 90 % of all ACL and PCL ruptures in both groups were
sustained
by players, who had played at least one level lower in the previous season.
In
addition, injuries of players who had sustained repeat injuries over the
season
were more severe. CONCLUSION: The introduction of a new professional football
league increased the training and playing intensity of players as well as the
number of ACL and PCL ruptures. A specific injury prevention concept,
particularly for players facing rapidly increasing training and playing
intensity, seems to be mandatory. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prospective controlled
cohort study, Level II.
FAU - Krutsch, Werner
AU - Krutsch W
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg, FIFA
Medical
Centre of Excellence, Franz-Josef-Strauss-Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg,
Germany.
werner.krutsch@ukr.de.
FAU - Zeman, Florian
AU - Zeman F
AD - Centre for Clinical Studies, University Medical Centre Regensburg,
Regensburg,
Germany.
FAU - Zellner, Johannes
AU - Zellner J
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg, FIFA
Medical
Centre of Excellence, Franz-Josef-Strauss-Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg,
Germany.
FAU - Pfeifer, Christian
AU - Pfeifer C
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg, FIFA
Medical
Centre of Excellence, Franz-Josef-Strauss-Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg,
Germany.
FAU - Nerlich, Michael
AU - Nerlich M
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg, FIFA
Medical
Centre of Excellence, Franz-Josef-Strauss-Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg,
Germany.
FAU - Angele, Peter
AU - Angele P
AD - Department of Trauma Surgery, University Medical Centre Regensburg, FIFA
Medical
Centre of Excellence, Franz-Josef-Strauss-Allee 11, 93053, Regensburg,
Germany.
AD - sporthopaedicum Straubing/Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20141008
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/epidemiology/*etiology
MH - Competitive Behavior
MH - Exercise
MH - Germany/epidemiology
MH - Humans
MH - Incidence
MH - Male
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/*injuries
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL ruptures
OT - Injury prevention
OT - Injury severity
OT - PCL ruptures
OT - Professional football
OT - Soccer
EDAT- 2014/10/09 06:00
MHDA- 2017/05/04 06:00
CRDT- 2014/10/09 06:00
PHST- 2014/02/27 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2014/09/23 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2014/10/09 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/10/09 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/05/04 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3357-y [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3357-y [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2016 Jul;24(7):2271-9. doi:
10.1007/s00167-014-3357-y. Epub 2014 Oct 8.
PMID- 27781307
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180319
LR - 20180319
IS - 1600-0838 (Electronic)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 27
IP - 12
DP - 2017 Dec
TI - Composition and adaptation of human myotendinous junction and neighboring
muscle
fibers to heavy resistance training.
PG - 1547-1559
LID - 10.1111/sms.12794 [doi]
AB - The myotendinous junction (MTJ) is a common site of strain injury and yet
understanding of its composition and ability to adapt to loading is poor. The
main aims of this study were to determine the profile of selected collagens
and
macrophage density in human MTJ and adjoining muscle fibers, and to
investigate
whether heavy exercise loading would alter this profile. Fifteen individuals
scheduled for anterior cruciate ligament repair surgery were randomized into
three groups: control, acute or 4 weeks heavy resistance training. MTJ
samples
were collected from the semitendinosus and gracilis muscles and were
sectioned
and stained immunohistochemically for collagen types I, III, VI, XII, XIV,
XXII,
Tenascin-C and CD68. Macrophage density and distribution was evaluated and
the
amount of each collagen type in muscle and MTJ was graded. Collagen XXII was
observed solely at the MTJ, while all other collagens were abundant at the
MTJ
and in muscle perimysium or endomysium. The endomysial content of collagen
XIV,
macrophages and Tenascin-C increased following 4 weeks of training. These
findings illustrate the heterogeneity of collagen type composition of human
MTJ.
The increase in collagen XIV following 4 weeks of training may reflect a
training-induced protection against strain injuries in this region.
CI - © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
FAU - Jakobsen, J R
AU - Jakobsen JR
AD - Section for Sports Traumatology M51, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
Bispebjerg Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Mackey, A L
AU - Mackey AL
AD - Institute of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery M, Bispebjerg
Hospital and Center for Healthy Aging, Faculty of Health and Medical
Sciences,
University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
AD - Center for Healthy Aging, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of
Health
and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Knudsen, A B
AU - Knudsen AB
AD - Section for Sports Traumatology M51, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
Bispebjerg Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Koch, M
AU - Koch M
AD - Institute for Dental Research and Oral Musculoskeletal Biology, and Center
for
Biochemistry, Medical Faculty, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
FAU - Kjaer, M
AU - Kjaer M
AD - Institute of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery M, Bispebjerg
Hospital and Center for Healthy Aging, Faculty of Health and Medical
Sciences,
University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Krogsgaard, M R
AU - Krogsgaard MR
AD - Section for Sports Traumatology M51, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery,
Bispebjerg Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20161026
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
RN - 0 (Antigens, CD)
RN - 0 (Antigens, Differentiation, Myelomonocytic)
RN - 0 (CD68 antigen, human)
RN - 0 (Tenascin)
RN - 9007-34-5 (Collagen)
SB - IM
MH - *Adaptation, Physiological
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - Antigens, CD/physiology
MH - Antigens, Differentiation, Myelomonocytic/physiology
MH - Collagen/physiology
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Macrophages/cytology
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - *Resistance Training
MH - Tenascin/physiology
MH - Tendons/*physiology
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Injury prevention
OT - Nordic Hamstring
OT - extracellular matrix
EDAT- 2016/10/27 06:00
MHDA- 2018/03/20 06:00
CRDT- 2016/10/27 06:00
PHST- 2016/09/30 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2016/10/27 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/03/20 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2016/10/27 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1111/sms.12794 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2017 Dec;27(12):1547-1559. doi: 10.1111/sms.12794.
Epub
2016 Oct 26.
PMID- 17940146
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20080206
LR - 20220331
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 36
IP - 2
DP - 2008 Feb
TI - A comprehensive rehabilitation program with quadriceps strengthening in
closed
versus open kinetic chain exercise in patients with anterior cruciate
ligament
deficiency: a randomized clinical trial evaluating dynamic tibial translation
and
muscle function.
PG - 298-307
AB - BACKGROUND: There is no consensus regarding the optimal rehabilitation
regimen
for increasing quadriceps strength after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
injury.
HYPOTHESIS: A comprehensive rehabilitation program supplemented with
quadriceps
strengthening in open kinetic chain (OKC) exercise will increase quadriceps
strength and improve knee function without increasing static or dynamic
sagittal
tibial translation, compared with the same comprehensive rehabilitation
program
supplemented with quadriceps strengthening in closed kinetic chain (CKC)
exercise, in patients with acute ACL deficiency. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized
controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. METHODS: Forty-two patients were
tested a
mean of 43 days (range, 20-96 days) after an ACL injury. Patients were
randomized
to rehabilitation with CKC quadriceps strengthening (11 men and 9 women) or
OKC
quadriceps strengthening (13 men and 9 women). Aside from these quadriceps
exercises, the 2 rehabilitation programs were identical. Patients were
assessed
after 4 months of rehabilitation. Sagittal static translation and dynamic
tibial
translation were evaluated with a CA-4000 electrogoniometer. Muscle strength,
jump performance, and muscle activation were also assessed. Functional
outcome
was evaluated by determining the Lysholm score and the Knee Injury and
Osteoarthritis Outcome Score. RESULTS: There were no group differences in
static
or dynamic translation after rehabilitation. The OKC group had significantly
greater isokinetic quadriceps strength after rehabilitation (P = .009). The
hamstring strength, performance on the 1-repetition-maximum squat test,
muscle
activation, jump performance, and functional outcome did not differ between
groups. CONCLUSIONS: Rehabilitation with OKC quadriceps exercise led to
significantly greater quadriceps strength compared with rehabilitation with
CKC
quadriceps exercise. Hamstring strength, static and dynamic translation, and
functional outcome were similar between groups. Patients with ACL deficiency
may
need OKC quadriceps strengthening to regain good muscle torque.
FAU - Tagesson, Sofi
AU - Tagesson S
AD - RPT, Department of Medicine and Health Sciences, Division of Physiotherapy,
Linköpings Universitet, SE-581 83 Linköping, Sweden. sofi.tagesson@ihs.liu.se
FAU - Oberg, Birgitta
AU - Oberg B
FAU - Good, Lars
AU - Good L
FAU - Kvist, Joanna
AU - Kvist J
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20071016
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Electromyography
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Gait/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/rehabilitation
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Strength/*physiology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - Patient Satisfaction
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
EDAT- 2007/10/18 09:00
MHDA- 2008/02/07 09:00
CRDT- 2007/10/18 09:00
PHST- 2007/10/18 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/02/07 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/10/18 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546507307867 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546507307867 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2008 Feb;36(2):298-307. doi: 10.1177/0363546507307867. Epub
2007
Oct 16.
PMID- 29467465
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20190906
LR - 20210109
IS - 2045-2322 (Electronic)
IS - 2045-2322 (Linking)
VI - 8
IP - 1
DP - 2018 Feb 21
TI - Development and validation of a clinical prediction model for patient-
reported
pain and function after primary total knee replacement surgery.
PG - 3381
LID - 10.1038/s41598-018-21714-1 [doi]
LID - 3381
AB - To develop and validate a clinical prediction model of patient-reported pain
and
function after undergoing total knee replacement (TKR). We used data of 1,649
patients from the Knee Arthroplasty Trial who received primary TKR across 34
centres in the UK. The external validation included 595 patients from
Southampton
University Hospital, and Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre (Oxford). The outcome
was
the Oxford Knee Score (OKS) 12-month after TKR. Pre-operative predictors
including patient characteristics and clinical factors were considered.
Bootstrap
backward linear regression analysis was used. Low pre-operative OKS, living
in
poor areas, high body mass index, and patient-reported anxiety or depression
were
associated with worse outcome. The clinical factors associated with worse
outcome
were worse pre-operative physical status, presence of other conditions
affecting
mobility and previous knee arthroscopy. Presence of fixed flexion deformity
and
an absent or damaged pre-operative anterior cruciate ligament (compared with
intact) were associated with better outcome. Discrimination and calibration
statistics were satisfactory. External validation predicted 21.1% of the
variance
of outcome. This is the first clinical prediction model for predicting
self-reported pain and function 12 months after TKR to be externally
validated.
It will help to inform to patients regarding expectations of the outcome
after
knee replacement surgery.
FAU - Sanchez-Santos, M T
AU - Sanchez-Santos MT
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
AD - Arthritis research UK Centre for Sport, Exercise and Osteoarthritis, Nuffield
Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences,
University
of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
FAU - Garriga, C
AU - Garriga C
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-7073-3611
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
cesar.garriga-fuentes@ndorms.ox.ac.uk.
FAU - Judge, A
AU - Judge A
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
AD - MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton
General
Hospital, Southampton, UK.
FAU - Batra, R N
AU - Batra RN
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
FAU - Price, A J
AU - Price AJ
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
FAU - Liddle, A D
AU - Liddle AD
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
FAU - Javaid, M K
AU - Javaid MK
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
AD - MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton
General
Hospital, Southampton, UK.
FAU - Cooper, C
AU - Cooper C
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
AD - MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton
General
Hospital, Southampton, UK.
FAU - Murray, D W
AU - Murray DW
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
FAU - Arden, N K
AU - Arden NK
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-3452-3382
AD - Musculoskeletal Epidemiology, Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics,
Rheumatology
and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
AD - MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Unit, University of Southampton, Southampton
General
Hospital, Southampton, UK.
LA - eng
GR - 20499/VAC_/Versus Arthritis/United Kingdom
GR - MC_U147585827/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
GR - MC_U147585819/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
GR - MC_UP_A620_1014/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
GR - 20499/ARC_/Arthritis Research UK/United Kingdom
GR - HTA/95/10/501/DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
GR - MC_UU_12011/1/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
GR - G0400491/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
GR - MC_U147585824/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20180221
PL - England
TA - Sci Rep
JT - Scientific reports
JID - 101563288
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - Aged, 80 and over
MH - Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/*adverse effects
MH - Female
MH - Health Status Indicators
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/surgery
MH - Pain/*etiology
MH - Patient Reported Outcome Measures
MH - Patient Satisfaction
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Self Report
MH - Treatment Outcome
PMC - PMC5821875
COIS- MTSS CG and RNB have no conflicts of interest. AJ has received consultancy
fees
from: Anthera Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Servier, the UK Renal Registry and
Oxford
Craniofacial Unit, and received a research grant from Roche. ADL receives
royalties paid to him by Biomet (the company who make the Oxford
Unicompartmental
Knee Replacement system) and Wright Medical Technology. DM receives royalties
paid to him by Zimmer Biomet and receives research support from Zimmer Biomet
&
Stryker. AP receives consultancy fees from Biomet. MKJ has received
honorariums,
held advisory board positions (which involved receipt of fees), and received
consortium research grants, respectively, from: Novartis and Alliance for
Better
Health and Lilly. CC receives honorariums, held advisory board positions
(which
involved receipt of fees), and received consortium research grants,
respectively,
from: Alliance for Better Bone Health, Amgen, Novartis, Merck Sharp and
Dohme,
Servier, Eli Lilly, and GlaxoSmithKline. NKA receives honorariums, held
advisory
board positions (which involved receipt of fees), and received consortium
research grants, respectively, from: Merck, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Roche,
Novartis, Smith and Nephew, Q-MED, Nicox, Servier, GlaxoSmithKline,
Schering-Plough, Pfizer, and Rotttapharm. They have no other relationships or
activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.
EDAT- 2018/02/23 06:00
MHDA- 2019/09/07 06:00
CRDT- 2018/02/23 06:00
PHST- 2017/03/03 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2018/01/22 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2018/02/23 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2018/02/23 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2019/09/07 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1038/s41598-018-21714-1 [pii]
AID - 21714 [pii]
AID - 10.1038/s41598-018-21714-1 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Sci Rep. 2018 Feb 21;8(1):3381. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-21714-1.
PMID- 25083559
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20150122
LR - 20220331
IS - 1532-821X (Electronic)
IS - 0003-9993 (Linking)
VI - 95
IP - 11
DP - 2014 Nov
TI - Whole body and local muscle vibration reduce artificially induced quadriceps
arthrogenic inhibition.
PG - 2021-8
LID - S0003-9993(14)00888-0 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.apmr.2014.07.393 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of whole body vibration (WBV) and local
muscle
vibration (LMV) on quadriceps function after experimental knee effusion (ie,
simulated pathology). DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Research
laboratory. PARTICIPANTS: Healthy volunteers (N=43) were randomized to WBV
(n=14), LMV (n=16), or control (n=13) groups. INTERVENTIONS: Saline was
injected
into the knee to induce quadriceps arthrogenic muscle inhibition (AMI). All
groups then performed isometric squats while being exposed to WBV, LMV, or no
vibration (control). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Quadriceps function was assessed
at
baseline, immediately after effusion, and immediately and 5 minutes after
each
intervention (WBV, LMV, control) via voluntary peak torque (VPT) and the
central
activation ratio (CAR) during maximal isometric knee extension on a
multifunction
dynamometer. RESULTS: The CAR improved in the WBV (11.4%, P=.021) and LMV
(7.3%,
P<.001) groups immediately postintervention, but they did not improve in the
control group. Similarly, VPT increased by 16.5% (P=.021) in the WBV group
and
23% (P=.078) in the LMV group immediately postintervention, but it did not
increase in the control group. The magnitudes of improvements in the CAR and
VPT
did not differ between the WBV and LMV groups. CONCLUSIONS: Quadriceps AMI is
a
common complication following knee pathology that produces quadriceps
dysfunction
and increases the risk of posttraumatic osteoarthritis. Quadriceps
strengthening
after knee pathology is often ineffective because of AMI. WBV and LMV improve
quadriceps function equivocally after simulated knee pathology, effectively
minimizing quadriceps AMI. Therefore, these stimuli may be used to enhance
quadriceps strengthening, therefore improving the efficacy of rehabilitation
and
reducing the risk of osteoarthritis.
CI - Copyright © 2014 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by
Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
FAU - Blackburn, J Troy
AU - Blackburn JT
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory; Department of Exercise and Sport Science;
Program in Human Movement Science; Department of Orthopaedics. Electronic
address: troyb@email.unc.edu.
FAU - Pamukoff, Derek N
AU - Pamukoff DN
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory; Department of Exercise and Sport Science;
Program in Human Movement Science.
FAU - Sakr, Mark
AU - Sakr M
AD - Department of Family Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Chapel Hill, NC.
FAU - Vaughan, Aaron J
AU - Vaughan AJ
AD - Department of Family Medicine, Mountain Area Health Education Center,
Asheville,
NC.
FAU - Berkoff, David J
AU - Berkoff DJ
AD - Department of Orthopaedics.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20140730
PL - United States
TA - Arch Phys Med Rehabil
JT - Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation
JID - 2985158R
RN - 451W47IQ8X (Sodium Chloride)
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Female
MH - Healthy Volunteers
MH - Humans
MH - Injections, Intra-Articular
MH - Isometric Contraction/*physiology
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Strength Dynamometer
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/*physiopathology
MH - Sodium Chloride/administration & dosage
MH - Torque
MH - Vibration/*therapeutic use
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - Knee
OT - Osteoarthritis
OT - Quadriceps muscle
OT - Rehabilitation
OT - Vibration
EDAT- 2014/08/02 06:00
MHDA- 2015/01/23 06:00
CRDT- 2014/08/02 06:00
PHST- 2014/05/27 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2014/07/10 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2014/08/02 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/08/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2015/01/23 06:00 [medline]
AID - S0003-9993(14)00888-0 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.apmr.2014.07.393 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2014 Nov;95(11):2021-8. doi:
10.1016/j.apmr.2014.07.393.
Epub 2014 Jul 30.
PMID- 17501866
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070719
LR - 20220409
IS - 0905-7188 (Print)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 17
IP - 3
DP - 2007 Jun
TI - Long-term results after primary repair or non-surgical treatment of anterior
cruciate ligament rupture: a randomized study with a 15-year follow-up.
PG - 230-7
AB - We investigated the long-term outcome of 100 patients 15 years after having
been
randomly allocated to primary repair (augmented or non-augmented) or non-
surgical
treatment of an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture. The subjective
outcome
was similar between the groups, with no difference regarding activity level
and
knee-injury and osteoarthritis outcome score but with a slightly lower
Lysholm
score for the non-surgically treated group. This difference was attributed to
more instability symptoms. The radiological osteoarthritis (OA) frequency did
not
differ between surgically or non-surgically treated patients, but if a
meniscectomy was performed, two-thirds of the patients showed OA changes
regardless of initial treatment of the ACL. There were significantly more
meniscus injuries in patients initially treated non-surgically. One-third of
the
patients in the non-surgically treated group underwent secondary ACL
reconstruction due to instability problems. In this study, ACL repair itself
could not reduce the risk of OA nor increase the subjective outcome scores.
However, one-third of the non-surgical treated patients were later ACL
reconstructed due to instability. The status of the menisci was found to be
the
most important predictor of developing OA. Early ACL repair and also ACL
reconstruction can reduce the risk of secondary meniscus tears. Indirectly
this
supports the hypothesis that early stabilization of the knee after ACL injury
is
advantageous for the long-term outcome.
FAU - Meunier, A
AU - Meunier A
AD - Division of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Department of Neurosience and
Locomotion, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Linköping, Linköping,
Sweden. andreas.meunier@lio.se
FAU - Odensten, M
AU - Odensten M
FAU - Good, L
AU - Good L
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/diagnostic imaging/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Radiography
MH - Rupture/physiopathology/*therapy
MH - Sweden
EDAT- 2007/05/16 09:00
MHDA- 2007/07/20 09:00
CRDT- 2007/05/16 09:00
PHST- 2007/05/16 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/07/20 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/05/16 09:00 [entrez]
AID - SMS547 [pii]
AID - 10.1111/j.1600-0838.2006.00547.x [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2007 Jun;17(3):230-7. doi:
10.1111/j.1600-0838.2006.00547.x.
PMID- 30015510
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20190926
LR - 20190926
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 46
IP - 10
DP - 2018 Aug
TI - Partial Controlled Early Postoperative Weightbearing Versus Nonweightbearing
After Reconstruction of the Fibular (Lateral) Collateral Ligament: A
Randomized
Controlled Trial and Equivalence Analysis.
PG - 2355-2365
LID - 10.1177/0363546518784301 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: While early weightbearing protocols have been advocated after
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction, early weightbearing after
fibular (lateral) collateral ligament reconstruction has not been well
defined.
PURPOSE: (1) To determine if early partial controlled weightbearing after
fibular
collateral ligament (FCL) reconstruction resulted in an objective difference
in
laxity on varus stress radiographs at postoperative 6 months as compared with
nonweightbearing, and (2) to determine if there was a difference in pain,
edema,
range of motion, and subjective patient-reported outcomes between these
groups at
3 time points. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence,
1.
METHODS: Patients were prospectively enrolled from January 2014 to April
2017.
Patients who underwent isolated FCL reconstruction or combined ACL and FCL
reconstructions were included in this study. Patients were randomly assigned
to
either a control group (nonweightbearing for 6 weeks) or a treatment group
(partial controlled weightbearing at 40% body weight with crutches for 6
weeks).
Patient-related data, including knee pain, edema, and range of motion, were
collected for all patients at postoperative day 1, 6 weeks, and 6 months.
Subjective outcomes were collected preoperatively and at 6 months
postoperatively. The primary objective endpoint was varus stability,
evaluated by
bilateral varus stress radiographs obtained preoperatively and at 6 months
postoperatively. RESULTS: Thirty-nine patients were enrolled in the study,
with
6-month follow-up obtained for 36 (92%). There was a significant improvement
between the preoperative side-to-side difference (SSD) (2.4 ± 1.0) and
postoperative SSD (0.2 ± 1.0) for lateral compartment laxity on varus stress
radiographs among all patients ( P < .001). Clinical and statistical
equivalence
was found between groups in terms of SSD on varus stress radiographs ( P
< .001).
The SSD in knee edema was significantly lower in the partial early
weightbearing
group (beta = -0.6 cm, P = .001), but there were no significant group
differences
in knee pain, flexion, or extension. All patients demonstrated significant
improvements in subjective outcome scores between the preoperative and 6-
month
postoperative conditions ( P < .001 for every score measured). CONCLUSION:
Clinical and statistical equivalence was found at postoperative 6 months
between
the early partial weightbearing and nonweightbearing groups among patients
undergoing either an isolated FCL reconstruction or a combined ACL and FCL
reconstruction. There were no significant differences observed between the
groups
regarding knee stability, pain, swelling, range of motion, or subjective
outcomes. Given these findings, the authors recommend early partial
weightbearing
after isolated FCL reconstruction or combined ACL and FCL reconstruction.
FAU - LaPrade, Robert F
AU - LaPrade RF
AD - The Steadman Clinic, Vail, Colorado, USA.
AD - Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - DePhillipo, Nicholas N
AU - DePhillipo NN
AD - The Steadman Clinic, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - Cram, Tyler R
AU - Cram TR
AD - The Steadman Clinic, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - Cinque, Mark E
AU - Cinque ME
AD - Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - Kennedy, Mitchell I
AU - Kennedy MI
AD - Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - Dornan, Grant J
AU - Dornan GJ
AD - Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - O'Brien, Luke T
AU - O'Brien LT
AD - Howard Head Sports Medicine, Vail, Colorado, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20180717
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Arthroplasty/*statistics & numerical data
MH - Collateral Ligaments/*surgery
MH - Edema/*epidemiology/etiology
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Incidence
MH - Male
MH - Pain/*epidemiology/etiology
MH - Postoperative Period
MH - Radiography
MH - *Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - *Weight-Bearing
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - fibular collateral ligament
OT - lateral collateral ligament
OT - outcomes
OT - postoperative protocol
EDAT- 2018/07/18 06:00
MHDA- 2019/09/27 06:00
CRDT- 2018/07/18 06:00
PHST- 2018/07/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2019/09/27 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/07/18 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1177/0363546518784301 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2018 Aug;46(10):2355-2365. doi: 10.1177/0363546518784301.
Epub
2018 Jul 17.
PMID- 30522806
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20191210
LR - 20191217
IS - 1477-2566 (Electronic)
IS - 1465-3249 (Linking)
VI - 21
IP - 1
DP - 2019 Jan
TI - Safety and efficacy of allogenic placental mesenchymal stem cells for
treating
knee osteoarthritis: a pilot study.
PG - 54-63
LID - S1465-3249(18)30673-X [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.jcyt.2018.11.003 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a common skeletal impairment that can
cause many limitations in normal life activities. Stem cell therapy has been
studied for decades for its regenerative potency in various diseases. We
investigated the safety and efficacy of intra-articular injection of
placental
mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in knee OA healing. METHODS: In this double-
blind,
placebo-controlled clinical trial, 20 patients with symptomatic knee OA were
randomly divided into two groups to receive intra-articular injection of
either
0.5-0.6 × 10(8) allogenic placenta-derived MSCs or normal saline. The visual
analogue scale, Knee OA Outcome Score (KOOS) questionnaire, knee flexion
range of
motion (ROM) and magnetic resonance arthrography were evaluated for 24 weeks
post-treatment. Blood laboratory tests were performed before and 2 weeks
after
treatment. RESULTS: Four patients in the MSC group showed mild effusion and
increased local pain, which resolved safely within 48-72 h. In 2 weeks
post-injection there was no serious adverse effect and all of the laboratory
test
results were unchanged. Early after treatment, there was a significant knee
ROM
improvement and pain reduction (effect size, 1.4). Significant improvements
were
seen in quality of life, activity of daily living, sport/recreational
activity
and decreased OA symptoms in the MSC-injected group until 8 weeks (P < 0.05).
These clinical improvements were also noted in 24 weeks post-treatment but
were
not statistically significant. Chondral thickness was improved in about 10%
of
the total knee joint area in the intervention group in 24 weeks (effect size,
0.3). There was no significant healing in the medial/lateral meniscus or
anterior
cruciate ligament. There was no internal organ impairment at 24 weeks follow-
up.
CONCLUSION: Single intra-articular allogenic placental MSC injection in knee
OA
is safe and can result in clinical improvements in 24 weeks follow-up. TRIAL
REGISTRATION NUMBER: IRCT2015101823298N.
CI - Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Inc.
FAU - Khalifeh Soltani, Shayesteh
AU - Khalifeh Soltani S
AD - Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Neuromusculoskeletal Research Center,
Iran
University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Forogh, Bijan
AU - Forogh B
AD - Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Neuromusculoskeletal Research Center,
Iran
University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. Electronic address:
bijanfr@gmail.com.
FAU - Ahmadbeigi, Naser
AU - Ahmadbeigi N
AD - Cell-based Therapies Research Center, Digestive Disease Research Institute,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Hadizadeh Kharazi, Homayoun
AU - Hadizadeh Kharazi H
AD - Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Iran University of Medical Sciences,
Tehran,
Iran.
FAU - Fallahzadeh, Khadijeh
AU - Fallahzadeh K
AD - Cell-based Therapies Research Center, Digestive Disease Research Institute,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Kashani, Ladan
AU - Kashani L
AD - Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Arash Hospital, Tehran University of
Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Karami, Masoumeh
AU - Karami M
AD - Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, AJA University of Medical
Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Kheyrollah, Yadollah
AU - Kheyrollah Y
AD - Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Neuromusculoskeletal Research Center,
Iran
University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Vasei, Mohammad
AU - Vasei M
AD - Cell-based Therapies Research Center, Digestive Disease Research Institute,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran; Department of Pathology
and
Cell-based Therapies Research Center, Digestive Disease Research Institute,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. Electronic address:
mvasei@tums.ac.ir.
LA - eng
SI - IRCT/IRCT2015101823298N
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20181203
PL - England
TA - Cytotherapy
JT - Cytotherapy
JID - 100895309
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Aged
MH - Arthrography
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Injections, Intra-Articular
MH - Male
MH - Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation/adverse effects/*methods
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/*therapy
MH - Pilot Projects
MH - Placenta/*cytology
MH - Pregnancy
MH - Quality of Life
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Surveys and Questionnaires
MH - Transplantation, Homologous
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Visual Analog Scale
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - mesenchymal stem cell
OT - osteoarthritis
OT - placenta
EDAT- 2018/12/14 06:00
MHDA- 2019/12/18 06:00
CRDT- 2018/12/08 06:00
PHST- 2018/08/15 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2018/11/02 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2018/11/04 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2018/12/14 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2019/12/18 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/12/08 06:00 [entrez]
AID - S1465-3249(18)30673-X [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.jcyt.2018.11.003 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Cytotherapy. 2019 Jan;21(1):54-63. doi: 10.1016/j.jcyt.2018.11.003. Epub 2018
Dec
3.
PMID- 20111952
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20101210
LR - 20220331
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 9
DP - 2010 Sep
TI - Femoral tunnel enlargement after anatomic ACL reconstruction: a biological
problem?
PG - 1189-94
LID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1046-z [doi]
AB - Tunnel enlargement after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction may
compromise revision surgery. The cause of this tunnel enlargement is not yet
fully understood, but it is thought to be multifactorial, with biomechanical
and
biological factors playing a role. Tunnel enlargement has been described
particularly in patients who underwent ACL reconstruction with hamstring
tendons
with extracortical fixation devices. The purpose of our study was to evaluate
prospectively with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) the changes in femoral
tunnel
diameter following arthroscopic anatomic ACL reconstruction with hamstring
tendons. At 3-month post-op, all tunnels had enlarged compared to the
diameter of
the drill and most tunnels enlarged more in the midsection than at the
aperture.
In the posterolateral tunnels, the entrance increased 16% in diameter and the
middle of the tunnel increased 30% in diameter. In the anteromedial femoral
tunnels, the tunnels enlarged 14% at the aperture and 35% in the midsection.
All
femoral tunnels enlarged and most of them enlarged in a fusiform manner. The
biological factors explain better our findings than the mechanical theory,
although mechanical factors may play a role and the cortical bone at the
entrance
of the tunnel may modify the way tunnels respond to mechanical stress.
FAU - Silva, Alcindo
AU - Silva A
AD - Military Hospital D. Pedro V, Avenida da Boavista, Porto, Portugal.
alcindocsilva@gmail.com
FAU - Sampaio, Ricardo
AU - Sampaio R
FAU - Pinto, Elisabete
AU - Pinto E
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20100129
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Arthroplasty/*adverse effects/methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Femur/*physiopathology/*surgery
MH - Humans
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Platelet-Rich Plasma
MH - Postoperative Complications/diagnosis/*physiopathology
MH - Tendons/transplantation
MH - Wound Healing/physiology
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/01/30 06:00
MHDA- 2010/12/14 06:00
CRDT- 2010/01/30 06:00
PHST- 2009/06/27 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2010/01/07 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2010/01/30 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/01/30 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/12/14 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1046-z [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2010 Sep;18(9):1189-94. doi:
10.1007/s00167-010-1046-z. Epub 2010 Jan 29.
PMID- 16162987
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20060112
LR - 20191109
IS - 1050-642X (Print)
IS - 1050-642X (Linking)
VI - 15
IP - 5
DP - 2005 Sep
TI - The effects of a functional knee brace during early treatment of patients
with a
nonoperated acute anterior cruciate ligament tear: a prospective randomized
study.
PG - 299-304
AB - OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of a functional knee brace on nonoperated
acute
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)-deficient patients. DESIGN: : Prospective
randomized clinical trial. SETTING: University clinic. PATIENTS: Ninety-five
patients (18-50 years old) with an acute ACL tear were included in the
present
study. The subjects were randomized to either brace group, treated with
functional bracing from the first testing session (<5 weeks postinjury) to 12
weeks postinjury or a control group, treated without bracing. The patients
were
followed for 6 months. Twenty-one subjects were excluded due to the following
exclusion criteria: partial rupture or articular cartilage injury shown on
MRI or
with arthroscopy, or other injuries that negatively affected rehabilitation,
or
dropped out due to surgery (n = 22), or personal reasons (n = 10). Forty-two
patients remained in the study, 22 in the brace group and 20 in the control
group. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Visual analogue scale, Knee Osteoarthritis
Outcome
Score, Cincinnati knee score, a brace evaluation form, and muscle peak
torque.
RESULTS: When using the brace the subjects in the brace group experienced
less (P
= 0.047) sense of instability, evaluated with visual analogue scale, than the
control group. However, bracing had no effect on any of the variables in Knee
Osteoarthritis Outcome Score or Cincinnati knee score and no effect on
quadriceps
or hamstring muscle peak torque. Subjectively, the brace group experienced a
positive effect of the brace on rehabilitation. CONCLUSIONS: Nonoperated
acute
ACL-deficient patients experienced a positive effect of the brace regarding
sense
of instability and rehabilitation. However, these findings were not supported
by
objective outcomes.
FAU - Swirtun, Linda R
AU - Swirtun LR
AD - Section of Sports Medicine, Division of Surgical Sciences Karolinska
Institutet,
Stockholm, Sweden. linda.r.swirtun@kirurgi.ki.se
FAU - Jansson, Anna
AU - Jansson A
FAU - Renström, Per
AU - Renström P
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Clin J Sport Med
JT - Clinical journal of sport medicine : official journal of the Canadian Academy
of
Sport Medicine
JID - 9103300
SB - IM
MH - Activities of Daily Living
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - *Braces
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*rehabilitation
MH - Knee Injuries/*rehabilitation
MH - Male
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiology
MH - Muscular Atrophy/*prevention & control
MH - Pain Measurement
MH - Prospective Studies
EDAT- 2005/09/16 09:00
MHDA- 2006/01/13 09:00
CRDT- 2005/09/16 09:00
PHST- 2005/09/16 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/01/13 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/09/16 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 00042752-200509000-00004 [pii]
AID - 10.1097/01.jsm.0000180018.14394.7e [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin J Sport Med. 2005 Sep;15(5):299-304. doi:
10.1097/01.jsm.0000180018.14394.7e.
PMID- 30100304
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20190410
LR - 20190410
IS - 1532-9283 (Electronic)
IS - 1360-8592 (Linking)
VI - 22
IP - 3
DP - 2018 Jul
TI - Does Kinesio taping correct exaggerated dynamic knee valgus? A randomized
double
blinded sham-controlled trial.
PG - 727-732
LID - S1360-8592(17)30227-9 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.jbmt.2017.09.003 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Deficiency in hip girdle neuromuscular control can cause
exaggerated
Dynamic Knee Valgus (DKV) which afflicts the knee joint and lead to knee
injuries
especially ACL injury in sports. Though Kinesio taping (KT) is known to
improve
function, stability and proprioception, the evidence is inconclusive on its
effectiveness in athletes. We hypothesized that kinesio taping could enhance
neuromuscular control of the hip girdle there by causing a reduction in DKV.
AIM/OBJECTIVE: To determine whether KT on Gluteus medius can correct
exaggerated
dynamic knee valgus and improves hip abductor strength when compared to sham
KT.
METHOD: 40 collegiate level athletes, aged between 18 and 28 years, of both
genders with presence of dynamic knee valgus (>8° for men and >13° for women)
were recruited in the study. Athletes were excluded if they had history of
lower
back pain, history of any injury or surgery to the lower extremities during
the
past year. Subjects who met the inclusion criteria were randomized into
kinesio
taping (KT) group and sham taping (ST) group. The Drop Jump test and the
Donnatelli Drop Leg Test (DDT) were performed before, and on the third day,
immediately after the application of KT on them and documented. RESULTS:
There
was a significant reduction in DKV among male [4.0° (95% CI 3.5-4.5);
p < 0.001]
and female [4.3° (95% CI 3.5-5.2); p < 0.002] immediately after application
of
taping but not on the third day after application of KT. There was a
significant
rise in DDT immediately and on the third day after application of KT between
KT
group and SC group. CONCLUSION: There was a reduction in DKV immediately
after
the application of KT. However, there was no significant difference between
KT
group and SC group on the third day. Meanwhile, gluteus medius strength also
showed significant improvement immediately after taping and it was maintained
even on the third day.
CI - Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
FAU - Rajasekar, Sannasi
AU - Rajasekar S
AD - College of Physiotherapy, Srinivas University, Mangalore 575001, Karnataka,
India. Electronic address: rs.rajasheker@yahoo.com.
FAU - Kumar, Ajay
AU - Kumar A
AD - College of Physiotherapy, Srinivas University, Mangalore 575001, Karnataka,
India.
FAU - Patel, Jignesh
AU - Patel J
AD - College of Physiotherapy, Srinivas University, Mangalore 575001, Karnataka,
India.
FAU - Ramprasad, Muthukrishnan
AU - Ramprasad M
AD - Department of Physiotherapy Sciences, Gulf Medical University, Ajman, United
Arab
Emirates.
FAU - Samuel, Asir John
AU - Samuel AJ
AD - Department of Pediatric and Neonatal Physiotherapy, Maharishi Markandeshwar
Institute of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation, Maharishi Markandeshwar
University, Mullana 133207, Haryana, India. Electronic address:
asirjohnsamuel@mmumullana.org.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20170908
PL - United States
TA - J Bodyw Mov Ther
JT - Journal of bodywork and movement therapies
JID - 9700068
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - *Athletic Tape
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Genu Valgum/*rehabilitation
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Strength/*physiology
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/*physiology
MH - Walking/physiology
MH - Weight-Bearing/physiology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Dynamic knee valgus
OT - Hip abductor muscles
OT - Kinesio taping
OT - Neuromuscular control
EDAT- 2018/08/14 06:00
MHDA- 2019/04/11 06:00
CRDT- 2018/08/14 06:00
PHST- 2017/06/09 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/08/12 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2017/08/30 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2018/08/14 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2018/08/14 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2019/04/11 06:00 [medline]
AID - S1360-8592(17)30227-9 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.jbmt.2017.09.003 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Bodyw Mov Ther. 2018 Jul;22(3):727-732. doi: 10.1016/j.jbmt.2017.09.003.
Epub
2017 Sep 8.
PMID- 31663311
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20200507
LR - 20200507
IS - 1827-1928 (Electronic)
IS - 0022-4707 (Linking)
VI - 60
IP - 1
DP - 2020 Jan
TI - Acute effects of preventive warm-up exercises on modifiable risk factors for
anterior cruciate ligament injuries: a three-arm randomized-controlled
crossover
trial.
PG - 92-101
LID - 10.23736/S0022-4707.19.09949-3 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: We aimed to compare the potential acute effects of single bouts
of a
classic prevention and a risk factor-focus training aiming to target
modifiable
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture risk factors and the impact of
neuromuscular fatigue on relevant ACL rupture risk factors. METHODS: Two
preventive warm-up (standard and ACL rupture risk factor training) and one
inactive arm were compared; each of these were followed by a standardized
neuromuscular fatigue protocol. The assessments included two Trail making
tests
(TMT-A; TMT-B, time to complete), drop jump landings (knee separation
distance,
normalized at hip width), as well as unanticipated counter movement jump
landings
(time to stabilization and peak ground reaction force). RESULTS: We included
18
participants (25±2years). No differences were found between times and
conditions
for TMT (P>0.05). A significant time effect occurred in time to stabilization
(F=2.6; P<0.05) and a significant time*baseline-value*jumping time
interaction
was seen in peak ground reaction force (F=3.1; P<0.05). No time effect was
found
for any knee separation distance (F=.1-2.4; P>0.05); but a significant
time*baseline-value*jumping time interaction was seen at initial ground
contact
(F=2.8; P<0.05), and lowest point (F=4.2; P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Risk factor-
focus
and classic warm-up may not differ in their acute effects on modifiable
functional ACL (re-)injury risks factors.
FAU - Niederer, Daniel
AU - Niederer D
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany -
niederer@sport.uni-frankfurt.de.
FAU - Willberg, Christina
AU - Willberg C
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany.
AD - Department of Movement and Training Science, Goethe University, Frankfurt,
Germany.
FAU - Kruse, Adele
AU - Kruse A
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany.
FAU - Exler, Nicola
AU - Exler N
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany.
FAU - Giesche, Florian
AU - Giesche F
AD - Department of Preventive and Sports Medicine, Institute of Occupational,
Social
and Environmental Medicine, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany.
FAU - Vogt, Lutz
AU - Vogt L
AD - Department of Sports Medicine, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany.
FAU - Banzer, Winfried
AU - Banzer W
AD - Department of Preventive and Sports Medicine, Institute of Occupational,
Social
and Environmental Medicine, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20191024
PL - Italy
TA - J Sports Med Phys Fitness
JT - The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness
JID - 0376337
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena/physiology
MH - Cross-Over Studies
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Warm-Up Exercise/*physiology
EDAT- 2019/10/31 06:00
MHDA- 2020/05/08 06:00
CRDT- 2019/10/31 06:00
PHST- 2019/10/31 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2020/05/08 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2019/10/31 06:00 [entrez]
AID - S0022-4707.19.09949-3 [pii]
AID - 10.23736/S0022-4707.19.09949-3 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 2020 Jan;60(1):92-101. doi:
10.23736/S0022-4707.19.09949-3. Epub 2019 Oct 24.
PMID- 15446522
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20041005
LR - 20220317
IS - 0301-620X (Print)
IS - 0301-620X (Linking)
VI - 86
IP - 7
DP - 2004 Sep
TI - Patient preferences in knee prostheses.
PG - 979-82
AB - A total of 344 patients underwent bilateral total knee replacement (TKR)
using a
different prosthesis on each side. Four knee prostheses were used: anterior
and
posterior cruciate-retaining (ACL-PCL), posterior cruciate-retaining (PCL),
medial or lateral pivot (MLP), and posterior cruciate-substituting (PS). All
patients had good or excellent results. The range of movement, relief from
pain,
alignment, and stability did not vary among any of the prostheses. Forty-one
of
46 patients (89%) preferred the ACL-PCL to the PS knee and 27 of 35 patients
(77%) the MLP knee to the PS knee. Of the patients with an ACL-PCL knee on
one
side and a MLP on the other, an equal number preferred each type. The MLP
knee
was preferred to the PCL by 34 (79%) patients. PS and PCL knees were
preferred
equally. Patients with bilateral TKRs preferred retention of both their
cruciate
ligaments or substitution with a medial or lateral pivot prosthesis.
FAU - Pritchett, J W
AU - Pritchett JW
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, University of Washington,
Seattle, Washington, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - England
TA - J Bone Joint Surg Br
JT - The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume
JID - 0375355
SB - IM
CIN - J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2005 Aug;87(8):1164-5; author reply 1165. PMID:
16049258
MH - Aged
MH - Aged, 80 and over
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/*instrumentation/methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - *Knee Prosthesis
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - *Patient Satisfaction
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Prosthesis Design
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2004/09/28 05:00
MHDA- 2004/10/06 09:00
CRDT- 2004/09/28 05:00
PHST- 2004/09/28 05:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2004/10/06 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2004/09/28 05:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1302/0301-620x.86b7.14991 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2004 Sep;86(7):979-82. doi: 10.1302/0301-
620x.86b7.14991.
PMID- 17245238
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070525
LR - 20191110
IS - 0035-1040 (Print)
IS - 0035-1040 (Linking)
VI - 92
IP - 8
DP - 2006 Dec
TI - [Intra-articular reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament with and
without extra-articular supplementation by quadricipital tendon plasty:
seven-year follow-up].
PG - 788-97
AB - PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: Reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
is a
common procedure, but use of lateral reinforcement is still a subject of
debate.
The purpose of this study was to compare two randomized series of ACL
reconstructions, one using an intra-articular method (patellar tendon
autograft)
and the other an intra- and extra-articular method (Mac-InJones). MATERIAL
AND
METHODS: From January 1995 to March 1998, 63 knees underwent surgery for ACL
reconstruction. Inclusion criteria was significant medial differential laxity
measured between 7 and 12 mm on passive dynamic x-rays as 20 degrees flexion.
Group 1 (patellar tendon intra-articular reconstruction) included 34 patients
(27.1+/-7.5 years) and group 2 (intra-articular reconstruction plus
extra-articular quadircipital tendon plasty) included 29 patients (28.5+/-12
years). The IKDC score was determined for 72% of the knees in group 1 and 68%
in
group 2 at seven years follow-up on average (102 and 93 months respectively).
Anterior laxity was measured radiographically and with KT-1000. The position
of
the tunnels was controlled using the Aglietti method. RESULTS: The subjective
functional score was 83.6+/-3.5 in group 1 and 83.5+/-3.5 in group 2. The
overall
IKDC knee score classes for group 1 were 0% A, 52.4% B, 28.6% C, and 19% D
and
for group 2 were 5.5% group A, 50% group B, 33.3% group C, and 11.1% group D.
In
group 1, the pivot test was negative in 61.9% and noted stage 1 in 28.6% and
stage 2 in 9.5%. In group 2, the pivot test was negative in 78.9% and noted
stage
1 in 15.8% and stage 2 in 5.3%. The KT-1000 showed no difference in gain in
laxity: 31% for group 1 and 27% for group 2. Similarly, radiographically
there
was no difference with a 43.9% gain in differential laxity for the medial
compartment and 45.3% for the lateral compartment in group 1. In group 2 the
corresponding values were 51.9% and 41.8%. The position of the tunnels was
the
same in the two groups. DISCUSSION: In a preliminary study with two years
follow-up, the results in these two series were not significantly different.
It
was concluded that there was not clear advantage to adding the extra-
articular
lateral plasty. At the present 7-year follow-up, pivoting appears to be
better
controlled in the lateral plasty group (p=0.23), but with no significant
difference for laxity for both knee compartments. The inclusion criteria
would be
different today and would be based on the laxity of the lateral compartment.
FAU - Giraud, B
AU - Giraud B
AD - Service de Chirurgie Orthopédique et de Médecine du Sport, Centre Hospitalier
Lyon-Sud, 69495 Pierre-Bénite.
FAU - Besse, J-L
AU - Besse JL
FAU - Cladière, F
AU - Cladière F
FAU - Ecochard, R
AU - Ecochard R
FAU - Moyen, B
AU - Moyen B
FAU - Lerat, J-L
AU - Lerat JL
LA - fre
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
TT - Influence d'une ligamentoplastie extra-articulaire latérale sur les résultats
de
la reconstruction du ligament croisé antérieur avec le ligament patellaire
avec 7
ans de recul.
PL - France
TA - Rev Chir Orthop Reparatrice Appar Mot
JT - Revue de chirurgie orthopedique et reparatrice de l'appareil moteur
JID - 1272427
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/methods
MH - Patellar Ligament/*transplantation
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Time Factors
EDAT- 2007/01/25 09:00
MHDA- 2007/05/26 09:00
CRDT- 2007/01/25 09:00
PHST- 2007/01/25 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/05/26 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/01/25 09:00 [entrez]
AID - MDOI-RCO-12-2006-92-8-0035-1040-101019-200520008 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/s0035-1040(06)75947-5 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Rev Chir Orthop Reparatrice Appar Mot. 2006 Dec;92(8):788-97. doi:
10.1016/s0035-1040(06)75947-5.
PMID- 18762911
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090429
LR - 20220330
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 16
IP - 12
DP - 2008 Dec
TI - Comparison of the bioabsorbable and metal screw fixation after ACL
reconstruction
with a hamstring autograft in MRI and clinical outcome: a prospective
randomized
study.
PG - 1080-6
LID - 10.1007/s00167-008-0593-z [doi]
AB - There has never been an MRI study of tunnel widening comparing bioabsorbable
to
metal screw fixation in autologous hamstring anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
reconstruction. We randomized 62 patients to hamstring ACL reconstruction
with
either a bioabsorbable (n=31) or metal screw (n=31) fixation. The evaluation
methods were clinical examination, KT-1000 arthrometric measurement, the
International Knee Documentation Committee and Lysholm scores, and MRI. There
were no differences between the groups preoperatively. Fifty-five patients
(89%)
were available at a minimum of 2-year follow-up (range 24-36 months). There
was
tunnel widening in both groups, but the increase was significantly greater in
the
AP dimension of the femoral tunnel in the bioabsorbable screw group compared
to
metal group (P=0.01). The tibial tunnels showed no intergroup difference.
Ninety-four percent of the knees were normal or nearly normal according to
the
IKDC scores and the average Lysholm score was 91 with no intergroup
difference.
The follow-up AP tibial tunnel diameter was smaller with normal knee laxity
compared to abnormal knee laxity. The graft failure rate in the bioabsorbable
screw group was 23% (7/31 patients) and 6% (2/31 patients) in the metal screw
group. The use of bioabsorbable screws resulted in more femoral tunnel
widening,
and more graft failures compared to metal screws. The tunnel widening in the
tibia was associated with the knee laxity (P=0.02).
FAU - Moisala, Anna-Stina
AU - Moisala AS
AD - Division of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Department of Trauma,
Musculoskeletal
Surgery and Rehabilitation, Tampere University Hospital, Medical School,
University of Tampere, Teiskontie 35, 33014, Tampere, Finland.
anna-stina.moisala@fimnet.fi
FAU - Järvelä, Timo
AU - Järvelä T
FAU - Paakkala, Antti
AU - Paakkala A
FAU - Paakkala, Timo
AU - Paakkala T
FAU - Kannus, Pekka
AU - Kannus P
FAU - Järvinen, Markku
AU - Järvinen M
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20080902
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Absorbable Implants/*adverse effects
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*pathology/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy/*adverse effects/methods
MH - *Bone Screws
MH - Female
MH - Femur/pathology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/*pathology/surgery
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Tibia/pathology/surgery
MH - Transplantation, Autologous
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2008/09/03 09:00
MHDA- 2009/04/30 09:00
CRDT- 2008/09/03 09:00
PHST- 2008/01/11 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2008/07/04 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2008/09/03 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/04/30 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/09/03 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-008-0593-z [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2008 Dec;16(12):1080-6. doi:
10.1007/s00167-008-0593-z. Epub 2008 Sep 2.
PMID- 22525777
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20130218
LR - 20211021
IS - 1530-0315 (Electronic)
IS - 0195-9131 (Linking)
VI - 44
IP - 10
DP - 2012 Oct
TI - Randomized controlled trial of the effects of a trunk stabilization program
on
trunk control and knee loading.
PG - 1924-34
AB - BACKGROUND: Many athletic maneuvers involve coordination of movement between
the
lower and upper extremities, suggesting that better core muscle use may lead
to
improved athletic performance and reduced injury risk. PURPOSE: To determine
to
what extent a training program with quasistatic trunk stabilization (TS)
exercises would improve measures of core performance, leg strength, agility,
and
dynamic knee loading compared with a program incorporating only resistance
training (RT). METHODS: Thirty-seven male subjects were randomly assigned to
either an RT-only or a resistance and TS training program, each lasting 6 wk.
Core strength and endurance, trunk control, knee loading during unanticipated
cutting, leg strength, and agility were collected pre- and posttraining.
RESULTS:
Between-group analyses showed that the TS group significantly improved only
core
endurance when compared with the RT group (side bridge, P = 0.050). Within-
group
analyses showed that the TS group improved lateral core strength (maximum
pull,
cable on nondominant side; 44.5 ± 61.3 N, P = 0.037). Both groups increased
leg
strength (deadlift 1 repetition maximum; TS: 55.1 ± 46.5 lb, P = 0.003; RT:
33.4
± 17.5 lb, P < 0.001) and decreased sagittal plane trunk control (sudden
force
release test; cable in front; TS: 2.54° ± 3.68°, P = 0.045; RT: 3.47° ±
2.83°, P
= 0.004), but only the RT group decreased lateral trunk control (sudden force
release; cable on dominant side; 1.36° ± 1.65°, P = 0.029). The RT group
improved
standing broad jump (73.2 ± 108.4 mm, P = 0.049) but also showed increased
knee
abduction moment during unanticipated cutting (1.503-fold increase
(percentage
body weight × height), P = 0.012). CONCLUSIONS: Quasistatic TS exercises did
not
improve core strength, trunk control, or knee loading relative to RT
potentially
because of a lack of exercises, including unexpected perturbations and
dynamic
movement. Together, these results suggest the potential importance of
targeted
trunk control training to address these known anterior cruciate ligament
injury
risk factors.
FAU - Jamison, Steve T
AU - Jamison ST
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43221, USA.
FAU - McNeilan, Ryan J
AU - McNeilan RJ
FAU - Young, Gregory S
AU - Young GS
FAU - Givens, Deborah L
AU - Givens DL
FAU - Best, Thomas M
AU - Best TM
FAU - Chaudhari, Ajit M W
AU - Chaudhari AM
LA - eng
GR - UL1 TR000090/TR/NCATS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Med Sci Sports Exerc
JT - Medicine and science in sports and exercise
JID - 8005433
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Humans
MH - Knee/*physiology
MH - Leg/physiology
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Strength/*physiology
MH - Physical Endurance/physiology
MH - Resistance Training/*methods
MH - Running/physiology
MH - Torso/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2012/04/25 06:00
MHDA- 2013/02/19 06:00
CRDT- 2012/04/25 06:00
PHST- 2012/04/25 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/04/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2013/02/19 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1249/MSS.0b013e31825a2f61 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2012 Oct;44(10):1924-34. doi:
10.1249/MSS.0b013e31825a2f61.
PMID- 19843377
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100115
LR - 20220408
IS - 1743-2928 (Electronic)
IS - 1351-0002 (Linking)
VI - 14
IP - 5
DP - 2009
TI - Antioxidant supplementation lowers circulating IGF-1 but not F(2)-
isoprostanes
immediately following anterior cruciate ligament surgery.
PG - 221-6
LID - 10.1179/135100009X12525712409535 [doi]
AB - Interleukin (IL)-10 is an anti-inflammatory cytokine that suppresses
pro-inflammatory cytokines. We previously demonstrated that supplementation
with
vitamins E and C ameliorated the increase in IL-10 immediately following
anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) surgery in the absence of other cytokine
perturbations.
Since both oxidative stress and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) can
modulate
IL-10 concentrations, the mechanisms for these changes warranted further
investigation. Our objective was to evaluate the mechanism for the IL-10
decrease
following ACL surgery. This study consisted of randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled experimental design. Subjects were randomly assigned to
daily
supplementation with either: (i) antioxidants (AO; vitamins E [alpha-
tocopherol]
and C [ascorbic acid]; n = 10); or (ii) matching placebos (PL; n = 10).
Supplementation started approximately 2 weeks prior to surgery (baseline) and
concluded 3 months after surgery. Subjects provided six fasting blood samples
at:
(i) baseline; (ii) immediately pre-surgery (Pre); (iii) 90 min; (iv) 72 h;
(v) 7
days; and (vi) 3 months post-surgery. alpha-Tocopherol, ascorbic acid,
F(2)-isoprostane and IGF-1 concentrations were measured in each blood sample.
At
90 min relative to other times, plasma F(2)-isoprostane concentrations were
significantly (P < 0.05) elevated in both groups, while at 90 min IGF-1 was
significantly (P < 0.05) lower in the AO compared to the PL group. The
changes in
IGF-1 at 90 min relative to baseline were correlated (P < 0.0001) with the
changes in IL-10. The decrease in IL-10 observed in the AO group is likely
dependent on the decrease IGF-1 since lipid peroxidation was unchanged
between
the two groups.
FAU - Barker, Tyler
AU - Barker T
AD - Sport Science Department, The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital, Murray, Utah,
USA.
FAU - Leonard, Scott W
AU - Leonard SW
FAU - Trawick, Roy H
AU - Trawick RH
FAU - Walker, James A
AU - Walker JA
FAU - Traber, Maret G
AU - Traber MG
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - England
TA - Redox Rep
JT - Redox report : communications in free radical research
JID - 9511366
RN - 0 (Antioxidants)
RN - 0 (F2-Isoprostanes)
RN - 1406-18-4 (Vitamin E)
RN - 67763-96-6 (Insulin-Like Growth Factor I)
RN - PQ6CK8PD0R (Ascorbic Acid)
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Antioxidants/*metabolism/*therapeutic use
MH - Ascorbic Acid/*blood/*therapeutic use
MH - Dietary Supplements
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - F2-Isoprostanes/blood
MH - Humans
MH - Insulin-Like Growth Factor I/metabolism
MH - Vitamin E/*blood/*therapeutic use
EDAT- 2009/10/22 06:00
MHDA- 2010/01/16 06:00
CRDT- 2009/10/22 06:00
PHST- 2009/10/22 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/10/22 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/01/16 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1179/135100009X12525712409535 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Redox Rep. 2009;14(5):221-6. doi: 10.1179/135100009X12525712409535.
PMID- 20351591
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110203
LR - 20131121
IS - 1530-0315 (Electronic)
IS - 0195-9131 (Linking)
VI - 42
IP - 11
DP - 2010 Nov
TI - Effect of ankle taping on knee and ankle joint biomechanics in sporting
tasks.
PG - 2089-97
LID - 10.1249/MSS.0b013e3181de2e4f [doi]
AB - INTRODUCTION: Prophylactic taping is commonly used to prevent ankle injuries
during sports. However, unnatural constraint of the ankle joint may increase
the
risk of injury to proximal joints such as the knee. The association between
ankle
taping and knee joint loading during open sporting tasks has not been
quantified.
This research aimed to measure changes in knee and ankle kinetics and
kinematics
during dynamic athletic activities undertaken with and without ankle taping.
METHODS: A kinematic and inverse dynamics model was used to determine ankle
and
knee joint motion and loading in 22 healthy male participants undertaking
running
and sidestepping tasks. Both tasks were randomized to planned and unplanned
conditions and undertaken with and without the use of ankle tape. RESULTS: At
the
knee, peak internal rotation moments (P < 0.001) and peak varus moments (P <
0.05) were significantly reduced during all running and sidestepping trials
(planned and unplanned) when undertaken with ankle tape. Internal rotation
impulse (P < 0.001) was reduced for sidestepping tasks. Varus impulse during
unplanned sidestepping maneuvers (P = 0.04) was reduced with the use of ankle
tape. However, there was a trend toward increased valgus moments and impulse
for
planned sidestepping trials undertaken with ankle tape(P = 0.056). Taping
reduced
the range of motion at the ankle in all three planes (P < 0.05). Peak
inversion
(P < 0.001) was reduced for running trials only. Average eversion and peak
dorsiflexion moments were significantly reduced in sidestepping tasks by use
of
taping. CONCLUSIONS: By limiting motion at the ankle, taping increased
mechanical
stability at this joint. Ankle taping also provided protective benefits to
the
knee via reduced internal rotation moments and varus impulses during both
planned
and unplanned maneuvers. Medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligament
injuries may, however, occur through increased valgus impulse during
sidestepping
undertaken with ankle tape.
FAU - Stoffel, Karl K
AU - Stoffel KK
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Fremantle Hospital, Fremantle, Western
Australia, Australia. nkstoffel@hotmail.com
FAU - Nicholls, Rochelle L
AU - Nicholls RL
FAU - Winata, Andrianto R
AU - Winata AR
FAU - Dempsey, Alasdair R
AU - Dempsey AR
FAU - Boyle, Jeffrey J W
AU - Boyle JJ
FAU - Lloyd, David G
AU - Lloyd DG
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Med Sci Sports Exerc
JT - Medicine and science in sports and exercise
JID - 8005433
SB - IM
MH - Ankle Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - *Athletic Tape
MH - Australia
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Exercise Test
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Male
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/*physiology
MH - *Sports
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/03/31 06:00
MHDA- 2011/02/04 06:00
CRDT- 2010/03/31 06:00
PHST- 2010/03/31 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/03/31 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/02/04 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1249/MSS.0b013e3181de2e4f [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2010 Nov;42(11):2089-97. doi:
10.1249/MSS.0b013e3181de2e4f.
PMID- 22706937
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20130401
LR - 20161125
IS - 1439-3964 (Electronic)
IS - 0172-4622 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 11
DP - 2012 Nov
TI - Effect of brace design on patients with ACL-ruptures.
PG - 934-9
LID - 10.1055/s-0032-1304634 [doi]
AB - Different designs of functional knee braces for ACL-injury rehabilitation
exist.
In addition to the mechanical stabilization provided by rigid shell braces,
sleeve braces also address proprioceptive mechanisms, but little is known if
this
leads to benefits for ACL-deficient subjects. Therefore the aim of this study
was
to investigate the effect of 2 different functional brace designs (shell and
sleeve brace) on functional achievements in ACL-deficient patients. 28
subjects
with ACL-ruptured knees performed tests for knee joint laxity, joint position
sense, static and dynamic balance and isometric and dynamic lower limb
extension
strength in non-braced, sleeve braced and shell braced condition. The results
showed a significant decrease in knee joint laxity for sleeve (33%; p<0.001)
and
rigid shell bracing (14%, p=0.039). The sleeve brace revealed a significant
increase in dynamic balance after perturbation (20%; p=0.024) and a
significant
increase in dynamic lower limb peak rate of force development (17%; p=0.015)
compared to the non-braced condition. The effects might be caused by the
flexible
area of support and the incorporated mechanisms to address proprioceptive
aspects. Braces might not be needed in simple daily life tasks, but could
provide
beneficial support in more dynamic settings when patients return to sporting
activities after an ACL-injury.
CI - © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
FAU - Strutzenberger, G
AU - Strutzenberger G
AD - Department of Sport Science and Kinesiology, University of Salzburg, Hallein-
Rif,
Austria. gerda.strutzenberger@sbg.c.at
FAU - Braig, M
AU - Braig M
FAU - Sell, S
AU - Sell S
FAU - Boes, K
AU - Boes K
FAU - Schwameder, H
AU - Schwameder H
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20120615
PL - Germany
TA - Int J Sports Med
JT - International journal of sports medicine
JID - 8008349
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - *Braces
MH - Equipment Design
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/pathology/*rehabilitation
MH - Knee Injuries/pathology/*rehabilitation
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Postural Balance/physiology
MH - Rupture
EDAT- 2012/06/19 06:00
MHDA- 2013/04/02 06:00
CRDT- 2012/06/19 06:00
PHST- 2012/06/19 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/06/19 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2013/04/02 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1055/s-0032-1304634 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Int J Sports Med. 2012 Nov;33(11):934-9. doi: 10.1055/s-0032-1304634. Epub
2012
Jun 15.
PMID- 35809105
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230228
LR - 20230228
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 31
IP - 3
DP - 2023 Mar
TI - Medial congruent polyethylene design show different tibiofemoral kinematics
and
enhanced congruency compared to a standard symmetrical cruciate retaining
design
for total knee arthroplasty-an in vivo randomized controlled study of gait
using
dynamic radiostereometry.
PG - 933-945
LID - 10.1007/s00167-022-07036-w [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: New total knee arthroplasty implant designs attempt to normalize
kinematics patterns that may improve functional performance and patient
satisfaction. It was hypothesized that a more medial congruent (MC) anatomic
bearing design (1) influences the tibiofemoral kinematics and (2) enhances
articular congruency compared to a standard symmetrical cruciate retaining
(CR)
bearing design. METHODS: In this double-blinded randomized study, 66 patients
with knee osteoarthritis were randomly included in two groups: MC (n = 31) and
CR
(n = 33). Clinical characteristics such as knee ligament lesions and knee
osteoarthritis scores were graded on preoperative magnetic resonance imaging
and
radiography. At the 1-year follow-up, dynamic radiostereometric analysis was
used
to assess tibiofemoral joint kinematics and articulation congruency.
Patient-reported outcome measures, Oxford Knee Score, the Forgotten Joint
Score,
and the Knee Osteoarthritis Outcome Score, were assessed preoperatively and
at
the 1-year follow-up. RESULTS: Compared to the CR bearing, the MC bearing
displayed an offset with approximately 3 mm greater anterior tibial drawer
(p < 0.001) during the entire motion, and up to approximately 3.5 degrees more
tibial external rotation (p = 0.004) from mid-swing to the end of the gait
cycle
at the 1-year follow-up. Furthermore, the congruency area in the joint
articulation was larger during approximately 80% of the gait cycle for the MC
bearing compared to the CR. The patient-reported outcome measures improved
(p < 0.001), but there were no differences between groups. In addition, there
were no differences in clinical characteristics and there were no knee
revisions
or recognized deep infections during follow-up. CONCLUSION: The study
demonstrates that the MC-bearing design changes tibiofemoral kinematics and
increases the area of congruency towards more native knee kinematics than the
CR
bearing. In perspective this may contribute to a more stabilized knee motion,
restoring the patient's confidence in knee function during daily activities.
CI - © 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to European Society of Sports
Traumatology, Knee Surgery, Arthroscopy (ESSKA).
FAU - Petersen, Emil Toft
AU - Petersen ET
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-1697-8778
AD - University Clinic for Hand, Hip and Knee Surgery, Holstebro Central Hospital,
Holstebro, Denmark. emiltp@clin.au.dk.
AD - Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus N, Denmark.
emiltp@clin.au.dk.
AD - AutoRSA Research Group, Orthopaedic Research Unit, Aarhus University
Hospital,
Aarhus N, Denmark. emiltp@clin.au.dk.
FAU - Rytter, Søren
AU - Rytter S
AD - Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus N, Denmark.
AD - AutoRSA Research Group, Orthopaedic Research Unit, Aarhus University
Hospital,
Aarhus N, Denmark.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus N,
Denmark.
FAU - Koppens, Daan
AU - Koppens D
AD - University Clinic for Hand, Hip and Knee Surgery, Holstebro Central Hospital,
Holstebro, Denmark.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus N,
Denmark.
FAU - Dalsgaard, Jesper
AU - Dalsgaard J
AD - University Clinic for Hand, Hip and Knee Surgery, Holstebro Central Hospital,
Holstebro, Denmark.
FAU - Hansen, Torben Bæk
AU - Hansen TB
AD - University Clinic for Hand, Hip and Knee Surgery, Holstebro Central Hospital,
Holstebro, Denmark.
AD - Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus N, Denmark.
FAU - Andersen, Michael Skipper
AU - Andersen MS
AD - Department of Materials and Production, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark.
FAU - Stilling, Maiken
AU - Stilling M
AD - Department of Clinical Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus N, Denmark.
AD - AutoRSA Research Group, Orthopaedic Research Unit, Aarhus University
Hospital,
Aarhus N, Denmark.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus N,
Denmark.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220709
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - 9002-88-4 (Polyethylene)
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - *Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/methods
MH - Radiostereometric Analysis
MH - *Osteoarthritis, Knee/surgery
MH - Polyethylene
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - Gait
MH - *Knee Prosthesis
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Double-blinded randomized controlled
OT - Gait
OT - Joint congruency
OT - Joint kinematics
OT - Medial congruent
OT - Radiostereometric analysis
OT - Total knee arthroplasty
EDAT- 2022/07/10 06:00
MHDA- 2023/03/03 06:00
CRDT- 2022/07/09 11:13
PHST- 2022/01/04 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/06/01 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/07/10 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/03/03 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/07/09 11:13 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-022-07036-w [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-022-07036-w [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2023 Mar;31(3):933-945. doi:
10.1007/s00167-022-07036-w. Epub 2022 Jul 9.
PMID- 21331651
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120403
LR - 20220317
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 12
DP - 2011 Dec
TI - Comparisons of kinematics and range of motion in high-flexion total knee
arthroplasty: cruciate retaining vs. substituting designs.
PG - 2016-22
LID - 10.1007/s00167-011-1434-z [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to compare in vivo kinematics, range
of
motion, and functional outcomes in patients that received either a high-
flexion
cruciate retaining or a high-flexion cruciate substituting knee. METHODS:
Forty-eight high-flexion cruciate retaining (CR) and 47 high-flexion cruciate
substituting (PS) knees were included in this study and followed for an
average
of 27 months (24-33). Weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing maximal flexions
and
functional scores were compared between two groups. For kinematics
evaluations,
amount of posterior femoral roll-back and internal tibial rotation from 0° to
maximal flexion using lateral radiographs under weight-bearing conditions
were
also compared. RESULTS: Average weight-bearing maximal flexion was 126.3° in
the
PS group, which was significantly higher than the 115.0° in the CR group.
Average
functional scores showed no significant difference between the two groups. In
terms of kinematics, the average amount of posterior femoral roll-back during
full flexion was 9.6 mm in the PS group and 6.1 mm in the CR group, which was
a
significant difference. However, internal tibial rotation during full flexion
was
not significantly different in the two groups. CONCLUSION: PS high-flexion
TKA
provided greater weight-bearing maximal flexion and posterior femoral roll-
back
than CR high-flexion TKA, although no difference in clinical outcomes was
observed between the two prosthesis designs.
FAU - Seon, Jong-Keun
AU - Seon JK
AD - Department of Orthopaedic, Center for Joint Disease, Chonnam National
University
Hwasun Hospital, Jeonnam, South Korea.
FAU - Park, Ju-Kwon
AU - Park JK
FAU - Shin, Young-Joo
AU - Shin YJ
FAU - Seo, Hyung-Yeon
AU - Seo HY
FAU - Lee, Keun-Bae
AU - Lee KB
FAU - Song, Eun-Kyoo
AU - Song EK
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20110218
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - Aged, 80 and over
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiopathology/surgery
MH - Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Chi-Square Distribution
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/physiopathology/surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/*physiology
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Statistics, Nonparametric
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Weight-Bearing
EDAT- 2011/02/19 06:00
MHDA- 2012/04/04 06:00
CRDT- 2011/02/19 06:00
PHST- 2010/08/29 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2011/02/01 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2011/02/19 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/02/19 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/04/04 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-011-1434-z [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2011 Dec;19(12):2016-22. doi:
10.1007/s00167-011-1434-z. Epub 2011 Feb 18.
PMID- 23962878
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20140409
LR - 20220411
IS - 1473-0480 (Electronic)
IS - 0306-3674 (Linking)
VI - 47
IP - 15
DP - 2013 Oct
TI - Superior compliance with a neuromuscular training programme is associated
with
fewer ACL injuries and fewer acute knee injuries in female adolescent
football
players: secondary analysis of an RCT.
PG - 974-9
LID - 10.1136/bjsports-2013-092644 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Little is known about the influence of compliance with
neuromuscular
training (NMT) on the knee injury rate in football. AIM: To evaluate team and
player compliance with an NMT programme in adolescent female football and to
study the association between compliance and acute knee injury rates.
METHODS:
Prospective cohort study based on a cluster randomised controlled trial on
players aged 12-17 years with 184 intervention teams (2471 players) and 157
control teams (2085 players). Exposure and acute time loss knee injuries were
recorded. Team and player compliance was recorded by the coaches on a player
attendance form. The intervention group was divided into tertiles of
compliance.
Injury rates were compared by calculating rate ratios (RRs) and 95% CIs using
exact Poisson tests with the low-compliance tertile as reference. Seasonal
compliance trends were analysed using linear regression. RESULTS: Players in
the
high-compliance tertile had an 88% reduction in the anterior cruciate
ligament
(ACL) injury rate (RR 0.12, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.85), whereas the rate in the
control
group players was not significantly different from those in the low-
compliance
tertile (RR 0.77, 95% CI 0.27 to 2.21). A significant deterioration occurred
in
team (b=-3.0% per month, 95% CI -5.2 to -0.8) and player (b=-5.0% per month,
95%
CI -7.1 to -2.9) compliance over the season. CONCLUSIONS: Players with high
compliance with the NMT programme had significantly reduced ACL injury rate
compared with players with low compliance. Significant deterioration in team
and
player compliance occurred over the season.
FAU - Hägglund, Martin
AU - Hägglund M
AD - Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping
University, , Linköping, Sweden.
FAU - Atroshi, Isam
AU - Atroshi I
FAU - Wagner, Philippe
AU - Wagner P
FAU - Waldén, Markus
AU - Waldén M
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20130820
PL - England
TA - Br J Sports Med
JT - British journal of sports medicine
JID - 0432520
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Child
MH - Cluster Analysis
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Patient Compliance
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Time Factors
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Adolescents
OT - Contact Sports
OT - Injury Prevention
OT - Soccer
EDAT- 2013/08/22 06:00
MHDA- 2014/04/10 06:00
CRDT- 2013/08/22 06:00
PHST- 2013/08/22 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/08/22 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/04/10 06:00 [medline]
AID - bjsports-2013-092644 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bjsports-2013-092644 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Br J Sports Med. 2013 Oct;47(15):974-9. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2013-092644.
Epub
2013 Aug 20.
PMID- 17889972
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20080327
LR - 20220408
IS - 0268-0033 (Print)
IS - 0268-0033 (Linking)
VI - 23
IP - 1
DP - 2008 Jan
TI - Combined effects of fatigue and decision making on female lower limb landing
postures: central and peripheral contributions to ACL injury risk.
PG - 81-92
AB - BACKGROUND: In spite of ongoing prevention developments, anterior cruciate
ligament injury rates and the associated sex-disparity have remained,
suggesting
an incomplete understanding of the injury mechanism. While both fatigue and
decision making are known in isolation to directly impact anterior cruciate
ligament injury risk, their combined manifestations remain unknown. We thus
examined the combined effects of fatigue and decision making on lower limb
kinematics during sports relevant landings. METHODS: Twenty five female
National
College Athletic Association athletes had initial contact and peak stance
phase
3D lower limb joint kinematics quantified during anticipated and
unanticipated
single (left and right) leg landings, both before and during the accumulation
of
fatigue. Jump direction was governed by light stimuli activated prior to and
during the pre-land phase of respective anticipated and unanticipated trials.
To
induce fatigue, subjects performed repetitive squat (n=5) and randomly
ordered
jump sequences, until squats were no longer possible. Subject-based measures
of
each dependent factor were then calculated across pre-fatigue trials, and for
those denoting 100% and 50% fatigue, and submitted to a 3-way mixed design
analysis of covariance to test for the main effects of fatigue time, decision
and
leg. FINDINGS: Fatigue caused significant increases in initial contact hip
extension and internal rotation, and in peak stance knee abduction and
internal
rotation and ankle supination angles. Fatigue-induced increases in initial
contact hip rotations and in peak knee abduction angle were also
significantly
more pronounced during unanticipated compared to anticipated landings.
INTERPRETATION: The integrative effects of fatigue and decision making may
represent a worst case scenario in terms of anterior cruciate ligament injury
risk during dynamic single leg landings, by perpetuating substantial
degradation
and overload of central control mechanisms.
FAU - Borotikar, Bhushan S
AU - Borotikar BS
AD - Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation,
Cleveland,
OH, USA.
FAU - Newcomer, Rhonda
AU - Newcomer R
FAU - Koppes, Ryan
AU - Koppes R
FAU - McLean, Scott G
AU - McLean SG
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20070924
PL - England
TA - Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon)
JT - Clinical biomechanics (Bristol, Avon)
JID - 8611877
SB - IM
CIN - Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon). 2016 Jun;35:62-7. PMID: 27128767
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/epidemiology/physiopathology
MH - Decision Making
MH - Fatigue/*physiopathology
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Leg/*physiology
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Posture/*physiology
MH - Risk Assessment
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Sports/*physiology
EDAT- 2007/09/25 09:00
MHDA- 2008/03/28 09:00
CRDT- 2007/09/25 09:00
PHST- 2007/06/09 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2007/08/06 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2007/08/08 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2007/09/25 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/03/28 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/09/25 09:00 [entrez]
AID - S0268-0033(07)00168-4 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2007.08.008 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon). 2008 Jan;23(1):81-92. doi:
10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2007.08.008. Epub 2007 Sep 24.
PMID- 21431376
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120130
LR - 20211020
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 9
DP - 2011 Sep
TI - Sagittal plane kinematics of fixed- and mobile-bearing total knee
replacements.
PG - 1488-95
LID - 10.1007/s00167-011-1462-8 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The objective of this prospective, randomized, patient- and
observer-blinded study was to analyze, in vivo, the knee joint kinematics in
the
sagittal plane in a patient population that had received either a fixed or a
mobile TKA. METHODS: Thirty-one patients (57 knees) were evaluated by means
of
fluoroscopy during unloaded flexion and extension against gravity as well as
during step up and step down with full weight bearing. In these 31 patients,
22
fixed-bearing TKAs, 16 mobile-bearing TKAs, and 19 natural knee joints were
included. Fluoroscopic radiographs were evaluated by measuring the "patella
tendon angle" in relation to the knee flexion angle, as a measure of
anteroposterior translation, as well as the "kinematic index," as a measure
of
reproducibility. RESULTS: During unloaded movement, fluoroscopic analysis did
not
show a significant difference between both types of prosthesis design and the
natural knee. In the weight-bearing movement, both types of TKA designs
revealed
a more linear patellar tendon angle curve, with a greater angle in extension
and
in flexion than in the natural knees. In the mobile-bearing group,
interindividual deviations from the mean during weight-bearing movements were
significantly less than in the fixed-bearing group. CONCLUSIONS: No
functional
advantage of mobile-bearing TKA over fixed-bearing devices could be found.
Both
TKA designs showed the typical kinematics of an anterior instability. These
results only apply to cruciate retaining mobile-bearing TKA with a bearing
that
allows both rotation and anteroposterior translation, using a sagittal plane
kinematics analysis evaluated by such methodology. A possible influence of
less
variability of the kinematic pattern on clinical results still needs to be
confirmed.
FAU - Tibesku, Carsten O
AU - Tibesku CO
AD - Sporthopaedicum Straubing, Bahnhofplatz 8, 94315 Straubing, Germany.
carsten@tibesku.de
FAU - Daniilidis, Kiriakos
AU - Daniilidis K
FAU - Vieth, Volker
AU - Vieth V
FAU - Skwara, Adrian
AU - Skwara A
FAU - Heindel, Walter
AU - Heindel W
FAU - Fuchs-Winkelmann, Susanne
AU - Fuchs-Winkelmann S
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20110323
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - Aged, 80 and over
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/adverse effects/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted/methods
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - Fluoroscopy/methods
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*diagnosis/prevention & control
MH - *Knee Prosthesis
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Observer Variation
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/diagnostic imaging/surgery
MH - Patellar Ligament/surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - *Prosthesis Design
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/*physiology
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Statistics, Nonparametric
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Weight-Bearing
EDAT- 2011/03/25 06:00
MHDA- 2012/01/31 06:00
CRDT- 2011/03/25 06:00
PHST- 2010/02/12 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2011/02/21 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2011/03/25 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/03/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/01/31 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-011-1462-8 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2011 Sep;19(9):1488-95. doi:
10.1007/s00167-011-1462-8. Epub 2011 Mar 23.
PMID- 16084050
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20051209
LR - 20220318
IS - 0736-0266 (Print)
IS - 0736-0266 (Linking)
VI - 23
IP - 6
DP - 2005 Nov
TI - An investigation to examine the inter-tester and intra-tester reliability of
the
Rolimeter knee tester, and its sensitivity in identifying knee joint laxity.
PG - 1399-403
AB - PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the Rolimeter knee tester
(Aircast, Europe) as reliable and clinically sensitive tool for identifying
and
quantifying knee joint laxity utilising a sample of both known ACLD and
normal
knees. METHODS: Thirty matched subjects (15 known ACLD and 15 normal
subjects)
were tested for knee joint laxity using the Rolimeter. Each subject was
measured
at both 90 degrees and 30 degrees of knee flexion, by each of the six
investigators. This was then repeated again by all six investigators so that
inter-tester and intra-tester reliability could be examined. RESULTS: Results
showed that there was good reliability between testers, and intra-tester
reliability was good for both left and right knees in both 90 degrees and 30
degrees of flexion. Results also demonstrated a high level of sensitivity for
determining knee joint laxity in ACLD compared to normal knees. CONCLUSION:
The
Rolimeter knee tester is a reliable device for quantifying knee joint laxity,
and
is sensitive enough to identify anterior cruciate ligament deficiency.
FAU - Hatcher, Julian
AU - Hatcher J
AD - Directorate of Sport and Centre for Rehabilitation and Human Performance
Research, School of Health Care Professions, University of Salford, Salford
M6
6PU, United Kingdom. j.hatcher@salford.ac.uk
FAU - Hatcher, Alison
AU - Hatcher A
FAU - Arbuthnot, Jamie
AU - Arbuthnot J
FAU - McNicholas, Mike
AU - McNicholas M
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20050803
PL - United States
TA - J Orthop Res
JT - Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic
Research Society
JID - 8404726
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*physiopathology
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*diagnosis/physiopathology
MH - Knee Injuries/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Middle Aged
MH - *Orthopedic Equipment
MH - Sensitivity and Specificity
MH - Single-Blind Method
EDAT- 2005/08/09 09:00
MHDA- 2005/12/13 09:00
CRDT- 2005/08/09 09:00
PHST- 2005/04/19 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2005/06/10 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2005/08/09 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/12/13 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/08/09 09:00 [entrez]
AID - S0736-0266(05)00146-4 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.orthres.2005.06.003.1100230623 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Orthop Res. 2005 Nov;23(6):1399-403. doi:
10.1016/j.orthres.2005.06.003.1100230623. Epub 2005 Aug 3.
PMID- 15983125
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050901
LR - 20220408
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 7
DP - 2005 Jul
TI - Effect of fatigue on knee kinetics and kinematics in stop-jump tasks.
PG - 1022-9
AB - BACKGROUND: Altered motor control strategies in landing and jumping maneuvers
are
a potential mechanism of noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injury. There
are
biomechanical differences between male and female athletes in the landing
phase
of stop-jump tasks. Fatigue is a risk factor in musculoskeletal injuries.
HYPOTHESIS: Lower extremity muscle fatigue alters the knee kinetics and
kinematics during the landing phase of 3 stop-jump tasks and increases an
athlete's risk of anterior cruciate ligament injury. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled
laboratory study. METHODS: Three-dimensional videography and force plate data
were collected for 20 recreational athletes (10 male and 10 female athletes)
performing 3 stop-jump tasks before and after completing a fatigue exercise.
Knee
joint angles and resultant forces and moments were calculated. RESULTS: Both
male
and female subjects had significantly increased peak proximal tibial anterior
shear forces (P = .01), increased valgus moments (P = .03), and decreased
knee
flexion angles (P = .03) during landings of all 3 stop-jump tasks when
fatigued.
Fatigue did not significantly affect the peak knee extension moment for male
or
female athletes. CONCLUSION: Fatigued recreational athletes demonstrate
altered
motor control strategies, which may increase anterior tibial shear force,
strain
on the anterior cruciate ligament, and risk of injury for both female and
male
subjects. CLINIC RELEVANCE: Fatigued athletes may have an increased risk of
noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injury.
FAU - Chappell, Jonathan D
AU - Chappell JD
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, Division of Physical Therapy, CB 7135
Medical
School Wing E, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC
27599-7136, USA.
FAU - Herman, Daniel C
AU - Herman DC
FAU - Knight, Bradford S
AU - Knight BS
FAU - Kirkendall, Donald T
AU - Kirkendall DT
FAU - Garrett, William E
AU - Garrett WE
FAU - Yu, Bing
AU - Yu B
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2006 Feb;34(2):312-5; author reply 313-5. PMID: 16423914
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2006 Feb;34(2):312; author reply 313-5. PMID: 16423915
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Fatigue/*physiology
MH - Sports/*physiology
EDAT- 2005/06/29 09:00
MHDA- 2005/09/02 09:00
CRDT- 2005/06/29 09:00
PHST- 2005/06/29 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/09/02 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/06/29 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 33/7/1022 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546504273047 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2005 Jul;33(7):1022-9. doi: 10.1177/0363546504273047.
PMID- 20942920
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110609
LR - 20211020
IS - 1471-2474 (Electronic)
IS - 1471-2474 (Linking)
VI - 11
DP - 2010 Oct 13
TI - An investigation of motor learning during side-step cutting: design of a
randomised controlled trial.
PG - 235
LID - 10.1186/1471-2474-11-235 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Of all athletic knee injuries an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
rupture results in the longest time loss from sport. Regardless of the
therapy
chosen, conservative or reconstructive, athletes are often forced to reduce
their
level of physical activity and their involvement in sport. Moreover, a recent
review reported prevalences of osteoarthritis ranging from 0% to 13% for
patients
with isolated ACL-deficient (ACL-D) knees and respectively 21% to 48% in
patients
with combined injuries. The need for ACL injury prevention is clear. The
identification of risk factors and the development of prevention strategies
may
therefore have widespread health and economic implications. The focus of this
investigation is to assess the role of implicit and explicit motor learning
in
optimising the performance of a side-step-cutting task. METHODS/DESIGN: A
randomized controlled laboratory study will be conducted. Healthy basketball
players, females and males, 18 years and older, with no previous lower
extremity
injuries, playing at the highest recreational level will be included.
Subjects
will receive a dynamic feedback intervention. Kinematic and kinetic data of
the
hip, knee and ankle and EMG activity of the quadriceps, hamstrings and
gastrocnemius will be recorded. DISCUSSION: Female athletes have a
significantly
higher risk of sustaining an ACL injury than male athletes. Poor
biomechanical
and neuromuscular control of the lower limb is suggested to be a primary risk
factor of an ACL injury mechanism in females. This randomized controlled
trial
has been designed to investigate whether individual feedback on task
performance
appears to be an effective intervention method. Results and principles found
in
this study will be applied to future ACL injury prevention programs, which
should
maybe more focus on individual injury predisposition. TRIAL REGISTRATION:
Trial
registration number NTR2250.
FAU - Benjaminse, Anne
AU - Benjaminse A
AD - University Medical Center Groningen, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Center for
Human Movement Sciences, University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1,
9713 AV
Groningen, The Netherlands. a.benjaminse@med.umcg.nl
FAU - Lemmink, Koen A P M
AU - Lemmink KA
FAU - Diercks, Ron L
AU - Diercks RL
FAU - Otten, Bert
AU - Otten B
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20101013
PL - England
TA - BMC Musculoskelet Disord
JT - BMC musculoskeletal disorders
JID - 100968565
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiopathology
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/physiopathology/*prevention & control
MH - Learning/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC2976735
EDAT- 2010/10/15 06:00
MHDA- 2011/06/10 06:00
CRDT- 2010/10/15 06:00
PHST- 2010/03/13 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2010/10/13 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2010/10/15 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/10/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/06/10 06:00 [medline]
AID - 1471-2474-11-235 [pii]
AID - 10.1186/1471-2474-11-235 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2010 Oct 13;11:235. doi: 10.1186/1471-2474-11-235.
PMID- 28605148
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180430
LR - 20180430
IS - 1600-0838 (Electronic)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 28
IP - 2
DP - 2018 Feb
TI - Effects of a dynamic core stability program on the biomechanics of cutting
maneuvers: A randomized controlled trial.
PG - 452-462
LID - 10.1111/sms.12931 [doi]
AB - Deficits in trunk control predict ACL injuries which frequently occur during
high-risk activities such as cutting. However, no existing trunk control/core
stability program has been found to positively affect trunk kinematics during
cutting activities. This study investigated the effectiveness of a 6-week
dynamic
core stability program (DCS) on the biomechanics of anticipated and
unanticipated
side and crossover cutting maneuvers. Thirty-one male, varsity footballers
participated in this randomized controlled trial. Three-dimensional trunk and
lower limb biomechanics were captured in a motion analysis laboratory during
the
weight acceptance phase of anticipated and unanticipated side and crossover
cutting maneuvers at baseline and 6-week follow-up. The DCS group performed a
DCS
program three times weekly for 6 weeks in a university rehabilitation room.
Both
the DCS and control groups concurrently completed their regular practice and
match play. Statistical parametric mapping and repeated measures analysis of
variance were used to determine any group (DCS vs control) by time (pre vs
post)
interactions. The DCS resulted in greater internal hip extensor (P=.017, η(2)
=0.079), smaller internal knee valgus (P=.026, η(2) =0.076), and smaller
internal
knee external rotator moments (P=.041, η(2) =0.066) during anticipated side
cutting compared with the control group. It also led to reduced posterior
ground
reaction forces for all cutting activities (P=.015-.030, η(2) =0.074-0.105).
A
6-week DCS program did not affect trunk kinematics, but it did reduce a small
number of biomechanical risk factors for ACL injury, predominantly during
anticipated side cutting. A DCS program could play a role in multimodal ACL
injury prevention programs.
CI - © 2017 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
FAU - Whyte, E F
AU - Whyte EF
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9458-9498
AD - School of Health and Human Performance, Dublin City University, Glasnevin,
Dublin, Ireland.
FAU - Richter, C
AU - Richter C
AD - Sports Surgery Clinic, Dublin, Ireland.
FAU - O'Connor, S
AU - O'Connor S
AD - School of Health and Human Performance, Dublin City University, Glasnevin,
Dublin, Ireland.
FAU - Moran, K A
AU - Moran KA
AD - School of Health and Human Performance, Dublin City University, Glasnevin,
Dublin, Ireland.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20170713
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Humans
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Movement
MH - *Physical Conditioning, Human
MH - Soccer
MH - Torso/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - anticipation
OT - crossover cutting
OT - side cutting
OT - statistical parametric mapping
OT - trunk control
EDAT- 2017/06/13 06:00
MHDA- 2018/05/01 06:00
CRDT- 2017/06/13 06:00
PHST- 2017/06/06 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/06/13 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/05/01 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2017/06/13 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1111/sms.12931 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2018 Feb;28(2):452-462. doi: 10.1111/sms.12931. Epub
2017
Jul 13.
PMID- 37329711
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230801
LR - 20230801
IS - 1872-7646 (Electronic)
IS - 0167-9457 (Linking)
VI - 90
DP - 2023 Aug
TI - How to improve movement execution in sidestep cutting? Involve me and I will
learn.
PG - 103115
LID - S0167-9457(23)00061-1 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.humov.2023.103115 [doi]
AB - Providing choices, i.e., autonomy, to athletes during practice increases
intrinsic motivation and positively influences the motor learning process.
The
effects of autonomy on the timing of feedback (self-controlled timing of
feedback) when optimizing the movement execution of sidestep cutting (SSC), a
task that is highly related with ACL injury risk, are unknown. The aim of
this
study was to investigate the effect of self-controlled timing of video and
EF-feedback on movement execution of SSC in team sport athletes. Thirty
healthy
ball team sport athletes (22.9 ± 1.7 years, 185.5 ± 7.2 cm, 79.3 ± 9.2 kg)
were
recruited from local sports clubs. Participants were alternately assigned to
the
self-control (SC) or the yoked (YK) group based on arrival and performed five
anticipated and five unanticipated 45° SSC trials as pre-, immediate-post and
one-week retention test. Movement execution was measured with the Cutting
Movement Assessment Score (CMAS). Training consisted of three randomized 45°
SSC
conditions: one anticipated and two unanticipated conditions. All
participants
received expert video instructions and were instructed to 'try to do your
best in
copying the movement of the expert'. The SC group was allowed to request
feedback
whenever they wanted during training. The feedback consisted of 1) CMAS
score, 2)
posterior and sagittal videos of the last trial and 3) an external focus
verbal
cue on how to improve their execution. The participants were told to lower
their
score and they knew the lower the score, the better. The YK group received
feedback after the same trial on which their matched participant in the SC
group
had requested feedback. Data of twenty-two participants (50% in SC group) was
analyzed. Pre-test and training CMAS scores between groups were equal
(p > 0.05).
In the anticipated condition, the SC group (1.7 ± 0.9) had better CMAS scores
than the YK group (2.4 ± 1.1) at the retention test (p < 0.001).
Additionally, in
the anticipated condition, the SC group showed improved movement execution
during
immediate-post (2.0 ± 1.1) compared to pre-test (3.0 ± 1.0), which was
maintained
during retention (p < 0.001). The YK group also improved in the anticipated
condition during immediate-post (1.8 ± 1.1) compared to pre-test (2.6 ± 1.0)
(p < 0.001) but showed decreased movement execution during retention compared
to
immediate-post test (p = 0.001). In conclusion, self-controlled timing of
feedback resulted in better learning and greater improvements in movement
execution compared to the control group in the anticipated condition.
Self-controlled timing of feedback seems beneficial in optimizing movement
execution in SSC and is advised to be implemented in ACL injury prevention
programs.
CI - Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights
reserved.
FAU - Nijmeijer, Eline M
AU - Nijmeijer EM
AD - Department of Human Movement Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV Groningen, The
Netherlands. Electronic address: e.m.nijmeijer@umcg.nl.
FAU - Elferink-Gemser, Marije T
AU - Elferink-Gemser MT
AD - Department of Human Movement Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV Groningen, The
Netherlands. Electronic address: m.t.elferink-gemser@umcg.nl.
FAU - McCrory, Stuart
AU - McCrory S
AD - Sports Medicine, Assessment, Research & Testing (SMART) Laboratory, School of
Kinesiology, George Mason University, 9100 Freedom Center Blvd, Manassas, VA
20110, USA. Electronic address: cmccrory@gmu.edu.
FAU - Cortes, Nelson
AU - Cortes N
AD - School of Sport, Rehabilitation, and Exercise Science, University of Essex,
Colchester CO4 3WA, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland;
Department of Bioengineering, George Mason University, 4400 University Drive,
Fairfax, VA 22030, USA. Electronic address: n.cortes@essex.ac.uk.
FAU - Benjaminse, Anne
AU - Benjaminse A
AD - Department of Human Movement Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV Groningen, The
Netherlands; School of Sport Studies, Hanze University of Applied Sciences,
Zernikeplein 17, 9747 AS Groningen, The Netherlands. Electronic address:
a.benjaminse@umcg.nl.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20230615
PL - Netherlands
TA - Hum Mov Sci
JT - Human movement science
JID - 8300127
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Feedback
MH - Learning
MH - Motivation
MH - Movement
MH - *Sports
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Autonomy
OT - Motor learning
OT - Movement analysis
OT - Retention
OT - Sidestep cutting
OT - Video feedback
COIS- Declaration of competing interest None of the authors have any conflicts of
interest that are relevant to this work.
EDAT- 2023/06/18 01:07
MHDA- 2023/07/31 06:42
CRDT- 2023/06/17 18:05
PHST- 2022/06/03 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2023/03/29 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2023/06/01 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/07/31 06:42 [medline]
PHST- 2023/06/18 01:07 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/06/17 18:05 [entrez]
AID - S0167-9457(23)00061-1 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.humov.2023.103115 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Hum Mov Sci. 2023 Aug;90:103115. doi: 10.1016/j.humov.2023.103115. Epub 2023
Jun
15.
PMID- 24880917
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160121
LR - 20161020
IS - 1878-1861 (Electronic)
IS - 1878-1861 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 3
DP - 2015 May
TI - Changes in muscle activation following balance and technique training and a
season of Australian football.
PG - 348-52
LID - S1440-2440(14)00081-4 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.jsams.2014.04.012 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: Determine if balance and technique training implemented adjunct
to
1001 male Australian football players' training influenced the
activation/strength of the muscles crossing the knee during pre-planned and
unplanned sidestepping. DESIGN: Randomized Control Trial. METHODS: Each
Australian football player participated in either 28 weeks of balance and
technique training or 'sham' training. Twenty-eight Australian football
players
(balance and technique training, n=12; 'sham' training, n=16) completed
biomechanical testing pre-to-post training. Peak knee moments and directed
co-contraction ratios in three degrees of freedom, as well as total muscle
activation were calculated during pre-planned and unplanned sidestepping.
RESULTS: No significant differences in muscle activation/strength were
observed
between the 'sham' training and balance and technique training groups.
Following
a season of Australian football, knee extensor (p=0.023) and semimembranosus
(p=0.006) muscle activation increased during both pre-planned sidestepping
and
unplanned sidestepping. Following a season of Australian football, total
muscle
activation was 30% lower and peak valgus knee moments 80% greater (p=0.022)
during unplanned sidestepping when compared with pre-planned sidestepping.
CONCLUSIONS: When implemented in a community level training environment,
balance
and technique training was not effective in changing the activation of the
muscles crossing the knee during sidestepping. Following a season of
Australian
football, players are better able to support both frontal and sagittal plane
knee
moments. When compared to pre-planned sidestepping, Australian football
players
may be at increased risk of anterior cruciate ligament injury during
unplanned
sidestepping in the latter half of an Australian football season.
CI - Copyright © 2014 Sports Medicine Australia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All
rights
reserved.
FAU - Donnelly, C J
AU - Donnelly CJ
AD - The School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, University of Western
Australia, Australia. Electronic address: cyril.donnelly@uwa.edu.au.
FAU - Elliott, B C
AU - Elliott BC
AD - The School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, University of Western
Australia, Australia.
FAU - Doyle, T L A
AU - Doyle TL
AD - The School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, University of Western
Australia, Australia.
FAU - Finch, C F
AU - Finch CF
AD - Centre for Healthy and Safe Sport, University of Ballarat, Federation
University,
Australia.
FAU - Dempsey, A R
AU - Dempsey AR
AD - The School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, University of Western
Australia, Australia; School of Psychology and Exercise Science, Murdoch
University, Australia.
FAU - Lloyd, D G
AU - Lloyd DG
AD - The School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, University of Western
Australia, Australia; Centre for Musculoskeletal Research, Griffith Health
Institute, Griffith University, Australia.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20140514
PL - Australia
TA - J Sci Med Sport
JT - Journal of science and medicine in sport
JID - 9812598
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Australia
MH - Football/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee/physiology
MH - Male
MH - Movement/physiology
MH - Muscle Contraction
MH - Muscle Strength
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods
MH - Postural Balance/*physiology
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/physiology
MH - Thigh
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Exercise
OT - Injury prevention
OT - Knee
OT - Muscle
OT - Prophylactic
EDAT- 2014/06/02 06:00
MHDA- 2016/01/23 06:00
CRDT- 2014/06/02 06:00
PHST- 2013/09/25 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2014/03/20 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2014/04/19 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2014/06/02 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/06/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/01/23 06:00 [medline]
AID - S1440-2440(14)00081-4 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.jsams.2014.04.012 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sci Med Sport. 2015 May;18(3):348-52. doi: 10.1016/j.jsams.2014.04.012.
Epub
2014 May 14.
PMID- 19851754
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100913
LR - 20220408
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 6
DP - 2010 Jun
TI - A 2-year follow-up of rehabilitation after ACL reconstruction using patellar
tendon or hamstring tendon grafts: a prospective randomised outcome study.
PG - 805-13
LID - 10.1007/s00167-009-0961-3 [doi]
AB - Sixty-eight patients were clinically evaluated preoperatively, 3, 5, 7, 9
months,
1 and 2 years after ACL reconstruction, 34 with patellar tendon graft, 34
with
hamstring graft. Outcome regarding graft choice and anterior knee laxity (P =
0.04) was in favour of patellar tendon graft. Hamstring graft led to a larger
laxity, 2.4 mm compared with patellar tendon graft, 1.3 mm at 1 year and 2.5
mm
and 1.5 mm, respectively, at 2 years (P = 0.05). There was a significant
difference in rotational knee stability in favour of the patellar tendon
graft at
all test occasions but 9 months. A general effect regarding graft choice and
muscle torque was found at 90 degrees/s for quadriceps (P = 0.03) and
hamstrings
(P < or = 0.0001) and at 230 degrees/s for hamstrings (P < or = 0.0001). No
treatment effect regarding graft choice and one-leg hop test, postural sway
or
knee function was found. No group differences in anterior knee pain were
found at
any of the test occasions but 2 years in favour of hamstring graft compared
to
patellar tendon graft (P = 0.04). Patellar tendon graft resulted in higher
activity level than hamstring graft at all test occasions but 1 year (P =
0.01).
Patellar tendon ACL reconstruction led to more stable knees with less
anterior
knee laxity and less rotational instability than hamstring ACL
reconstruction.
Hamstring graft patients had not reached preoperative level in hamstring
torque
even 2 years after ACL reconstruction. Athletes with patellar tendon graft
returned to sports earlier and at a higher level than those with hamstring
graft.
FAU - Heijne, Annette
AU - Heijne A
AD - Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and
Society,
Karolinska Institutet, 23100, 141 86, Huddinge, Sweden. annette.heijne@ki.se
FAU - Werner, Suzanne
AU - Werner S
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20091023
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Bone-Patellar Tendon-Bone Grafting/adverse effects/*rehabilitation
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/etiology
MH - Knee Injuries/*rehabilitation/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Tendons/transplantation
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2009/10/24 06:00
MHDA- 2010/09/14 06:00
CRDT- 2009/10/24 06:00
PHST- 2009/07/11 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2009/10/05 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2009/10/24 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/10/24 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/09/14 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-009-0961-3 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2010 Jun;18(6):805-13. doi:
10.1007/s00167-009-0961-3. Epub 2009 Oct 23.
PMID- 16552549
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20061121
LR - 20181113
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 14
IP - 6
DP - 2006 Jun
TI - Randomized prospective study of ACL reconstruction with interference screw
fixation in patellar tendon autografts versus femoral metal plate suspension
and
tibial post fixation in hamstring tendon autografts: 5-year clinical and
radiological follow-up results.
PG - 517-28
AB - Patellar tendon graft has been the most frequently used material in anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction, but the hamstring tendons have been
increasingly used as well; however, which graft is to be preferred is not
adequately supported by existing clinical studies. In this prospective
randomized
clinical trial, the study hypothesis was that the hamstring tendons are
equally
good graft material as the patellar tendon in ACL reconstruction. Ninety-nine
patients with laxity due to a torn ACL underwent arthroscopically assisted
reconstruction with graft randomization according to their birth year to
either
patellar tendon with metal interference screw fixation or double looped
semitendinosus and gracilis tendons with fixation similar to the Endobutton
technique using a titanium metal plate suspension proximally and screw-washer
postdistally. Excluding preoperative Lysholm knee score, there were no
significant differences between the two groups in the preoperative and
operative
data. A standard rehabilitation regimen was used for all the patients,
including
immediate postoperative mobilization without a knee brace, protected weight
bearing for 2 weeks, and return to full activity at 6-12 months
postoperatively.
Forty patients in the patellar tendon group and 39 patients in the hamstring
tendon group were available for clinical evaluation at median 5 years after
surgery (ranges 3 years 11 months-6 years 7 months). The results revealed no
statistically significant differences with respect to clinical and
instrumented
laxity testing, isokinetic muscle torque measurements, International Knee
Documentation Committee ratings, Lysholm (knee score), Tegner (activity
level)
and Kujala patellofemoral knee scores. There was an enlargement of the drill
tunnels, statistically more in the hamstring tendon group, but no increase
from 2
to 5 years in either group. Narrowing of the joint spaces (IKDC measurement
method) from 2 to 5 years postoperatively was seen in both the groups,
however,
without difference between the two groups.
FAU - Harilainen, Arsi
AU - Harilainen A
AD - ORTON Orthopaedic Hospital, Invalid Foundation, Tenholantie 10, 00280,
Helsinki,
Finland. arsi.harilainen@invalidisaatio.fi
FAU - Linko, Eric
AU - Linko E
FAU - Sandelin, Jerker
AU - Sandelin J
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20060322
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy
MH - *Bone Screws
MH - *Bone-Patellar Tendon-Bone Grafting/adverse effects
MH - Femur/surgery
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/*methods
MH - Patella/surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Tibia/surgery
MH - Transplantation, Autologous
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2006/03/23 09:00
MHDA- 2006/12/09 09:00
CRDT- 2006/03/23 09:00
PHST- 2005/05/30 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2005/08/25 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2006/03/23 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/12/09 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/03/23 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-006-0059-0 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2006 Jun;14(6):517-28. doi:
10.1007/s00167-006-0059-0. Epub 2006 Mar 22.
PMID- 29340745
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20181218
LR - 20181218
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 26
IP - 10
DP - 2018 Oct
TI - A 6-week warm-up injury prevention programme results in minimal biomechanical
changes during jump landings: a randomized controlled trial.
PG - 2942-2951
LID - 10.1007/s00167-018-4835-4 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: To examine the extent to which an ACL injury prevention programme
modifies lower extremity biomechanics during single- and double-leg landing
tasks
in both the sagittal and frontal plane. It was hypothesized that the training
programme would elicit improvements in lower extremity biomechanics, but that
these improvements would be greater during a double-leg sagittal plane
landing
task than tasks performed on a single leg or in the frontal plane. METHODS:
Ninety-seven competitive multi-directional sport athletes that competed at
the
middle- or high-school level were cluster randomized into intervention (n =
48,
age = 15.4 ± 1.0 years, height = 1.7 ± 0.07 m, mass = 59.9 ± 11.0 kg) and control
(n = 49, age = 15.7 ± 1.6 years, height = 1.7 ± 0.06 m, mass = 60.4 ± 7.7 kg)
groups. The intervention group participated in an established 6-week
warm-up-based ACL injury prevention programme. Three-dimensional
biomechanical
analyses of a double- (SAG-DL) and single-leg (SAG-SL) sagittal, and double-
(FRONT-DL) and single-leg (FRONT-SL) frontal plane jump landing tasks were
tested
before and after the intervention. Peak angles, excursions, and external
joint
moments were analysed for group differences using 2 (group) × 4 (task)
repeated
measures MANOVA models of delta scores (post-pre-test value) (α < 0.05).
RESULTS:
Relative to the control group, no significant biomechanical changes were
identified in the intervention group for any of the tasks (n.s.). However, a
group by task interaction was identified for knee abduction (λ = 0.80, p =
0.02),
such that participants in the intervention group showed relative decreases in
knee abduction moments during the SAG-DL compared to the SAG-SL (p = 0.005;
d = 0.45, CI = 0.04-0.85) task. CONCLUSION: A 6-week warm-up-based ACL injury
prevention programme resulted in no significant biomechanical changes during
a
variety of multi-directional jump landings. Clinically, future prevention
programmes should provide a greater training stimulus (intensity, volume),
more
specificity to tasks associated with the mechanism of ACL injury (single-leg,
non-sagittal plane jump landings), and longer programme duration (> 6 weeks)
to
elicit meaningful biomechanical changes. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: I.
FAU - Taylor, Jeffrey B
AU - Taylor JB
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6608-0192
AD - Department of Physical Therapy, High Point University, One University
Parkway,
High Point, NC, 27268, USA. jtaylor@highpoint.edu.
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro,
Greensboro, NC, USA. jtaylor@highpoint.edu.
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
AD - Department of Physical Therapy, High Point University, One University
Parkway,
High Point, NC, 27268, USA.
FAU - Schmitz, Randy J
AU - Schmitz RJ
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro,
Greensboro, NC, USA.
FAU - Ross, Scott E
AU - Ross SE
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro,
Greensboro, NC, USA.
FAU - Ackerman, Terry A
AU - Ackerman TA
AD - American College Testing, Iowa City, IA, USA.
FAU - Shultz, Sandra J
AU - Shultz SJ
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro,
Greensboro, NC, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20180116
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Exercise Test
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee
MH - Lower Extremity
MH - Male
MH - Movement
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Rotation
MH - *Warm-Up Exercise
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Injury prevention
OT - Lower extremity biomechanics
OT - Multi-directional sports
EDAT- 2018/01/18 06:00
MHDA- 2018/12/19 06:00
CRDT- 2018/01/18 06:00
PHST- 2017/05/31 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2018/01/08 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2018/01/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/12/19 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/01/18 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-018-4835-4 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-018-4835-4 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2018 Oct;26(10):2942-2951. doi:
10.1007/s00167-018-4835-4. Epub 2018 Jan 16.
PMID- 27552270
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170605
LR - 20220330
IS - 1541-0048 (Electronic)
IS - 0090-0036 (Print)
IS - 0090-0036 (Linking)
VI - 106
IP - 10
DP - 2016 Oct
TI - Safety and Health Support for Home Care Workers: The COMPASS Randomized
Controlled Trial.
PG - 1823-32
LID - 10.2105/AJPH.2016.303327 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: To determine the effectiveness of the COMmunity of Practice And
Safety Support (COMPASS) Total Worker Health intervention for home care
workers.
METHODS: We randomized 16 clusters of workers (n = 149) to intervention or
usual-practice control conditions. The 12-month intervention was scripted and
peer-led, and involved education on safety, health, and well-being; goal
setting
and self-monitoring; and structured social support. We collected measures at
baseline, 6 months, and 12 months, which included workers' experienced
community
of practice (i.e., people engaged in a common activity who interact regularly
for
shared learning and improvement). Implementation occurred during 2013 and
2014 in
Oregon. RESULTS: In an intent-to-treat analysis, relative to control, the
intervention produced significant and sustained improvements in workers'
experienced community of practice. Additional significant improvements
included
the use of ergonomic tools or techniques for physical work, safety
communication
with consumer-employers, hazard correction in homes, fruit and vegetable
consumption, lost work days because of injury, high-density lipoprotein
cholesterol, and grip strength. Consumer-employers' reports of caregiver
safety
behaviors also significantly improved. CONCLUSIONS: COMPASS was effective for
improving home care workers' social resources and simultaneously impacted
both
safety and health factors.
FAU - Olson, Ryan
AU - Olson R
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Thompson, Sharon V
AU - Thompson SV
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Elliot, Diane L
AU - Elliot DL
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Hess, Jennifer A
AU - Hess JA
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Rhoten, Kristy Luther
AU - Rhoten KL
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Parker, Kelsey N
AU - Parker KN
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Wright, Robert R
AU - Wright RR
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Wipfli, Brad
AU - Wipfli B
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Bettencourt, Katrina M
AU - Bettencourt KM
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Buckmaster, Annie
AU - Buckmaster A
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
FAU - Marino, Miguel
AU - Marino M
AD - At the time of the study, Ryan Olson, Sharon V. Thompson, Kristy Luther
Rhoten,
Kelsey N. Parker, Brad Wipfli, Katrina M. Bettencourt, Annie Buckmaster, and
Robert R. Wright were with the Oregon Institute of Occupational Health
Sciences,
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), Portland. Miguel Marino is with
the
Department of Family Medicine, OHSU. Diane L. Elliot is with the Division of
Health Promotion and Sports Medicine, OHSU. Jennifer A. Hess is with the
Labor
Education and Research Center, University of Oregon, Eugene.
LA - eng
GR - U19OH010154/ACL HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20160823
PL - United States
TA - Am J Public Health
JT - American journal of public health
JID - 1254074
SB - IM
MH - Female
MH - Health Behavior/physiology
MH - Health Status
MH - Home Care Services
MH - Home Health Aides/*education/psychology
MH - Humans
MH - Inservice Training/methods
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Occupational Health/*education
MH - Oregon
MH - Safety/*standards
MH - *Social Support
PMC - PMC5024377
EDAT- 2016/08/24 06:00
MHDA- 2017/06/06 06:00
CRDT- 2016/08/24 06:00
PHST- 2016/08/24 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2016/08/24 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/06/06 06:00 [medline]
AID - 201616025 [pii]
AID - 10.2105/AJPH.2016.303327 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Public Health. 2016 Oct;106(10):1823-32. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2016.303327.
Epub
2016 Aug 23.
PMID- 12641643
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20030703
LR - 20191106
IS - 0905-7188 (Print)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 13
IP - 2
DP - 2003 Apr
TI - The effects of proprioceptive or strength training on the neuromuscular
function
of the ACL reconstructed knee: a randomized clinical trial.
PG - 115-23
AB - OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of a
proprioceptive training program (PT) vs. a strength training (ST) program on
neuromuscular function after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction.
The
second purpose was to establish the determinants of functional ability for
the
operated limb. METHODS: Ten participants with unilateral ACL reconstructions
were
randomly assigned to one of the following 12-week training protocols: (1)
isotonic ST, and (2) PT. The outcome measures were: (1) peak torque time of
the
hamstring muscles (PeakTT), (2) average concentric and eccentric torques of
the
quadriceps and hamstring muscles, (3) one-legged single hop for distance
(SLHD),
(4) one-legged time hop (TH), and (5) subjective scores. RESULTS: : There was
a
significant group by time interaction effect for PeakTT (P = 0.017). The PT
group
demonstrated greater percent change in isokinetic torques than the ST group
at
the end of the 12 weeks (P < or = 0.05). Participants in both groups
demonstrated
similar significant gains in functional ability and subjective scores (P < or
=
0.014). Quadriceps strength is a determinant of functional ability for the
operated limb (R2 = 0.72). CONCLUSIONS: : Both training protocols influenced
PeakTT. The beneficial effects of ST on PeakTT appear to be load-dependent,
while
sufficient practice may be crucial in maintaining PeakTT improvements induced
by
PT. Proprioceptive training alone can induce isokinetic strength gains.
Restoring
and increasing quadriceps strength is essential to maximize functional
ability of
the operated knee joint.
FAU - Liu-Ambrose, T
AU - Liu-Ambrose T
AD - School of Human Kinetics, University of British Columbia, Canada.
FAU - Taunton, J E
AU - Taunton JE
FAU - MacIntyre, D
AU - MacIntyre D
FAU - McConkey, P
AU - McConkey P
FAU - Khan, K M
AU - Khan KM
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*physiopathology/*rehabilitation/surgery
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiopathology
MH - Proprioception
MH - Regression Analysis
EDAT- 2003/03/19 04:00
MHDA- 2003/07/04 05:00
CRDT- 2003/03/19 04:00
PHST- 2003/03/19 04:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2003/07/04 05:00 [medline]
PHST- 2003/03/19 04:00 [entrez]
AID - 2113 [pii]
AID - 10.1034/j.1600-0838.2003.02113.x [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2003 Apr;13(2):115-23. doi:
10.1034/j.1600-0838.2003.02113.x.
PMID- 37382335
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230803
LR - 20230803
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 51
IP - 10
DP - 2023 Aug
TI - Screws or Sutures? A Pediatric Cadaveric Study of Tibial Spine Fracture
Repairs.
PG - 2589-2595
LID - 10.1177/03635465231181059 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Tibial spine fractures are common in the pediatric population
because
of the biomechanical properties of children's subchondral epiphyseal bone.
Most
studies in porcine or adult human bone suggest that suture fixation performs
better than screw fixation, but these tissues may be poor surrogates for
pediatric bone. No previous study has evaluated fixation methods in human
pediatric knees. PURPOSE: To quantify the biomechanical properties of 2-screw
and
2-suture repair of tibial spine fracture in human pediatric knees. STUDY
DESIGN:
Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: Cadaveric specimens were randomly
assigned
to either 2-screw or 2-suture fixation. A standardized Meyers-Mckeever type 3
tibial spine fracture was induced. Screw-fixation fractures were reduced with
two
4.0-mm cannulated screws and washers. Suture-fixation fractures were reduced
by
passing 2 No. 2 FiberWire sutures through the fracture fragment and the base
of
the anterior cruciate ligament. Sutures were secured through bony tunnels
over a
1-cm tibial cortical bridge. Each specimen was mounted at 30° of flexion. A
cyclic loading protocol was applied to each specimen, followed by a
load-to-failure test. Outcome measures were ultimate failure load, stiffness,
and
fixation elongation. RESULTS: Twelve matched pediatric cadaveric knees were
tested. Repair groups had identical mean (8.3 years) and median (8.5 years)
ages
and an identical number of samples of each laterality. Ultimate failure load
did
not significantly differ between screw (mean ± SD, 143.52 ± 41.9 7 N) and
suture
(135.35 ± 47.94 N) fixations (P = .760). Screws demonstrated increased
stiffness
and decreased elongation, although neither result was statistically
significant
at the .05 level (21.79 vs 13.83 N/mm and 5.02 vs 8.46 mm; P = .076 and P
= .069,
respectively). CONCLUSION: Screw fixation and suture fixation of tibial spine
fractures in human pediatric tissue were biomechanically comparable. CLINICAL
RELEVANCE: Suture fixations are not biomechanically superior to screw
fixations
in pediatric bone. Pediatric bone fails at lower loads, and in different
modes,
compared with adult cadaveric bone and porcine bone. Further investigation
into
optimal repair is warranted, including techniques that may reduce suture
pullout
and "cheese-wiring" through softer pediatric bone. This study provides new
biomechanical data regarding the properties of different fixation types in
pediatric tibial spine fractures to inform clinical management of these
injuries.
FAU - Johnstone, Thomas M
AU - Johnstone TM
AD - Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford,
California, USA.
FAU - Baird, David W Jr
AU - Baird DW Jr
AD - Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford,
California, USA.
FAU - Cuellar-Montes, Annelisse
AU - Cuellar-Montes A
AD - Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford,
California, USA.
FAU - van Deursen, Willemijn Hendrike
AU - van Deursen WH
AD - Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford,
California, USA.
FAU - Tompkins, Marc
AU - Tompkins M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-8641-3150
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis,
Minnesota, USA.
FAU - Ganley, Theodore J
AU - Ganley TJ
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, USA.
FAU - Yen, Yi-Meng
AU - Yen YM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-1306-4201
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts,
USA.
FAU - Ellis, Henry B
AU - Ellis HB
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Scottish Rite Hospital for Children,
Frisco,
Texas, USA.
FAU - Chan, Calvin K
AU - Chan CK
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California,
USA.
FAU - Green, Daniel W
AU - Green DW
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New
York, USA.
FAU - Sherman, Seth L
AU - Sherman SL
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California,
USA.
FAU - Shea, Kevin G
AU - Shea KG
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California,
USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20230629
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Animals
MH - Child
MH - Humans
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Bone Screws
MH - Cadaver
MH - Fracture Fixation, Internal/methods
MH - *Knee Fractures
MH - Suture Techniques
MH - Sutures
MH - Swine
MH - *Tibial Fractures/surgery
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - biomechanics
OT - screws
OT - sutures
OT - tibial eminence
OT - tibial spine
EDAT- 2023/06/29 13:42
MHDA- 2023/08/02 06:43
CRDT- 2023/06/29 07:53
PHST- 2023/08/02 06:43 [medline]
PHST- 2023/06/29 13:42 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/06/29 07:53 [entrez]
AID - 10.1177/03635465231181059 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2023 Aug;51(10):2589-2595. doi: 10.1177/03635465231181059.
Epub
2023 Jun 29.
PMID- 19180214
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100309
LR - 20220316
IS - 1938-162X (Electronic)
IS - 1062-6050 (Print)
IS - 1062-6050 (Linking)
VI - 44
IP - 1
DP - 2009 Jan-Feb
TI - Thigh muscle activity, knee motion, and impact force during side-step
pivoting in
agility-trained female basketball players.
PG - 14-25
LID - 10.4085/1062-6050-44.1.14 [doi]
AB - CONTEXT: Improving neuromuscular control of hamstrings muscles might have
implications for decreasing anterior cruciate ligament injuries in females.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the effects of a 6-week agility training program on
quadriceps and hamstrings muscle activation, knee flexion angles, and peak
vertical ground reaction force. DESIGN: Prospective, randomized clinical
research
trial. SETTING: Sports medicine research laboratory. PATIENTS OR OTHER
PARTICIPANTS: Thirty female intramural basketball players with no history of
knee
injury (age = 21.07 +/- 2.82 years, height = 171.27 +/- 4.66 cm, mass = 66.36
+/-
7.41 kg). INTERVENTION(S): Participants were assigned to an agility training
group or a control group that did not participate in agility training.
Participants in the agility training group trained 4 times per week for 6
weeks.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): We used surface electromyography to assess muscle
activation for the rectus femoris, vastus medialis oblique, medial
hamstrings,
and lateral hamstrings for 50 milliseconds before initial ground contact and
while the foot was in contact with the ground during a side-step pivot
maneuver.
Knee flexion angles (at initial ground contact, maximum knee flexion, knee
flexion displacement) and peak vertical ground reaction force also were
assessed
during this maneuver. RESULTS: Participants in the training group increased
medial hamstrings activation during ground contact after the 6-week agility
training program. Both groups decreased their vastus medialis oblique muscle
activation during ground contact. Knee flexion angles and peak vertical
ground
reaction force did not change for either group. CONCLUSIONS: Agility training
improved medial hamstrings activity in female intramural basketball players
during a side-step pivot maneuver. Agility training that improves hamstrings
activity might have implications for reducing anterior cruciate ligament
sprain
injury associated with side-step pivots.
FAU - Wilderman, Danielle R
AU - Wilderman DR
AD - University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
FAU - Ross, Scott E
AU - Ross SE
FAU - Padua, Darin A
AU - Padua DA
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - J Athl Train
JT - Journal of athletic training
JID - 9301647
SB - IM
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Basketball/injuries/*physiology
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Confidence Intervals
MH - Electromyography
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Isometric Contraction
MH - Knee/*physiology
MH - Knee Injuries/*etiology/prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/physiology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/physiology
MH - Thigh
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC2629035
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - anterior cruciate ligament
OT - injury prevention
OT - knee sprains
EDAT- 2009/01/31 09:00
MHDA- 2010/03/10 06:00
CRDT- 2009/01/31 09:00
PHST- 2009/01/31 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/01/31 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/03/10 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.4085/1062-6050-44.1.14 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Athl Train. 2009 Jan-Feb;44(1):14-25. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-44.1.14.
PMID- 30526375
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20210319
LR - 20210319
IS - 1752-6116 (Electronic)
IS - 1476-3141 (Print)
IS - 1476-3141 (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 2
DP - 2021 Mar
TI - The effect of landing surface on landing error scoring system grades.
PG - 190-197
LID - 10.1080/14763141.2018.1535617 [doi]
AB - Different landing surfaces may affect lower extremity biomechanical
performance
during athletic tasks. The magnitude of this effect on clinical screening
measures such as jump-landings is unknown. This study determined the effect
of
court (CS), grass (GS), and tile (TS) surfaces on Landing Error Scoring
System
(LESS) grades. A repeated-measures design was used. A total of 40 (21F, 19M;
mean
age = 23.8 ± 2.4 yr) recreational athletes performed a jump-landing task on
three
different landing surfaces. 2D videography recorded jump-landings in the
frontal
and sagittal planes. A 2 × 3 (sex by surface) mixed-model repeated-measures
analysis of variance was used to examine main and interaction effects
associated
with surface and sex. No significant sex by landing surface interactions
existed
for LESS grades. No significant differences were observed on LESS grades for
the
main effect of surface (CS = 4.83 ± 1.31 points; GS = 5.01 ± 1.40 points;
TS = 5.09 ± 1.86 points; all p > 0.05). Correlations were found between LESS
grades among different conditions (r range = 0.587-0.611; all p < 0.001).
Commonly used jump-landing surfaces for clinical biomechanical evaluations do
not
affect LESS grades, suggesting generalisability as a screening tool for
anterior
cruciate ligament injury risk in different sport environments.
FAU - Jacobs, Kimberley
AU - Jacobs K
AD - College of Medicine, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL, USA.
FAU - Riveros, Diego
AU - Riveros D
AD - College of Medicine, University of Florida , Gainesville, FL, USA.
FAU - Vincent, Heather K
AU - Vincent HK
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-2177-1683
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, College of Medicine,
University of
Florida , Gainesville, FL, USA.
FAU - Herman, Daniel C
AU - Herman DC
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6646-2975
AD - Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, College of Medicine,
University of
Florida , Gainesville, FL, USA.
LA - eng
GR - K12 HD001097/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20181210
PL - England
TA - Sports Biomech
JT - Sports biomechanics
JID - 101151352
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/physiopathology
MH - Athletic Injuries/physiopathology
MH - Basketball/injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - *Environment
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - *Plyometric Exercise
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Sex Factors
MH - Time and Motion Studies
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC6557694
MID - NIHMS1520235
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - basketball court
OT - drop jump
OT - drop-jump landing
OT - grass
EDAT- 2018/12/12 06:00
MHDA- 2021/03/20 06:00
CRDT- 2018/12/12 06:00
PHST- 2018/12/12 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/03/20 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/12/12 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1080/14763141.2018.1535617 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Sports Biomech. 2021 Mar;20(2):190-197. doi: 10.1080/14763141.2018.1535617.
Epub
2018 Dec 10.
PMID- 19288080
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090810
LR - 20220408
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 17
IP - 6
DP - 2009 Jun
TI - Anatomic ACL reconstruction: does the platelet-rich plasma accelerate tendon
healing?
PG - 676-82
LID - 10.1007/s00167-009-0762-8 [doi]
AB - Recently, the use of hamstring tendons in anterior cruciate ligament repair
has
been increasing. However, tendon-to-bone healing occurs slowly, which can be
a
problem to an early return to sport activities. The use of growth factors
from
platelets seems to improve tissue healing. We enrolled 40 patients in a
prospective study that were submitted to an anatomic reconstruction of the
anterior cruciate ligament. Patients were sequentially enrolled into four
groups:
group A without platelet-rich plasma (PRP); group B with PRP in femoral
tunnels
at the end of surgery; group C with PRP in femoral tunnels at the end of
surgery
and intra-articular at 2- and 4 weeks after surgery; group D with PRP
activated
with thrombin in the femoral tunnels. All patients underwent magnetic
resonance
imaging of the knee 3 months after surgery to evaluate the signal intensity
of
the fibrous interzone (FIZ) in the femoral tunnels. We did not find any
difference among the groups when comparing the signal intensity of the FIZ on
magnetic resonance imaging.
FAU - Silva, Alcindo
AU - Silva A
AD - Military Hospital D. Pedro V, Avenida da Boavista, 4050-113, Porto, Portugal.
alcindosilva@netcabo.pt
FAU - Sampaio, Ricardo
AU - Sampaio R
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20090314
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - 0 (Fibrin Tissue Adhesive)
RN - 0 (Tissue Adhesives)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - Fibrin Tissue Adhesive/therapeutic use
MH - Humans
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/*methods
MH - *Platelet-Rich Plasma
MH - Tendons/*transplantation/ultrastructure
MH - Tissue Adhesives/therapeutic use
MH - *Wound Healing
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2009/03/17 09:00
MHDA- 2009/08/11 09:00
CRDT- 2009/03/17 09:00
PHST- 2008/10/02 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2009/02/18 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2009/03/17 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/03/17 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/08/11 09:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-009-0762-8 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2009 Jun;17(6):676-82. doi:
10.1007/s00167-009-0762-8. Epub 2009 Mar 14.
PMID- 33842984
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220830
LR - 20221003
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 30
IP - 9
DP - 2022 Sep
TI - Ultracongruent insert design is a safe alternative to posterior
cruciate-substituting total knee arthroplasty: 5-year results of a randomized
controlled trial.
PG - 3000-3006
LID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06545-4 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: If substitution of the posterior cruciate ligament in total knee
arthroplasty is necessary, there are two options available: posterior
stabilized
(PS) design with a post-cam mechanism or anterior-lipped ultracongruent (UC)
inserts. UC inserts have the advantage that no femoral box is necessary and a
standard femoral component can be used. The aim of this study was to compare
the
range of motion (ROM) and patient-reported outcome (PRO) after UC and PS
fixed-bearing TKA. Better ROM in PS TKA and no difference in PRO between both
designs was hypothesized. METHODS: A randomized controlled trial with 127
patients receiving a fixed-bearing UC or PS design of the same knee system
was
performed. Nine patients died and there were four revision surgeries. 107
patients completed the 5-year follow-up. Patient-reported outcome was
assessed.
Patellofemoral problems were evaluated using selected applicable questions of
the
Oxford Knee Score (getting up from a table, kneeling, climbing stairs).
RESULTS:
Surgical time was 10 min shorter in the UC group (p < 0.001). After 5 years,
both
groups demonstrated good knee function and health-related quality of life
without
significant differences between the groups. Both groups demonstrated a high
satisfaction score and the majority of patients would undergo this surgery
again.
Patellofemoral problems were recognized more frequently in the PS group
(p = 0.025). CONCLUSION: Both designs demonstrated similar good results after
5 years. Stabilization with an anterior-lipped UC insert can be considered a
safe
alternative to the well-established PS design if cruciate substitution is
necessary.
CI - © 2021. The Author(s).
FAU - Lützner, Jörg
AU - Lützner J
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7162-828X
AD - University Center of Orthopaedic, Trauma and Plastic Surgery, University
Hospital
Carl Gustav Carus, TU Dresden, Fetscherstr. 74, 01307, Dresden, Germany.
Joerg.Luetzner@ukdd.de.
FAU - Beyer, Franziska
AU - Beyer F
AD - University Center of Orthopaedic, Trauma and Plastic Surgery, University
Hospital
Carl Gustav Carus, TU Dresden, Fetscherstr. 74, 01307, Dresden, Germany.
FAU - Lützner, Cornelia
AU - Lützner C
AD - University Center of Orthopaedic, Trauma and Plastic Surgery, University
Hospital
Carl Gustav Carus, TU Dresden, Fetscherstr. 74, 01307, Dresden, Germany.
FAU - Riedel, Roman
AU - Riedel R
AD - University Center of Orthopaedic, Trauma and Plastic Surgery, University
Hospital
Carl Gustav Carus, TU Dresden, Fetscherstr. 74, 01307, Dresden, Germany.
FAU - Tille, Eric
AU - Tille E
AD - University Center of Orthopaedic, Trauma and Plastic Surgery, University
Hospital
Carl Gustav Carus, TU Dresden, Fetscherstr. 74, 01307, Dresden, Germany.
LA - eng
GR - STEADINESS/Aesculap/
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210411
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - *Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint
MH - *Knee Prosthesis
MH - *Osteoarthritis, Knee
MH - *Posterior Cruciate Ligament
MH - Prosthesis Design
MH - Quality of Life
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
PMC - PMC9418092
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior stabilized
OT - Deep dished insert
OT - Patient-reported outcome
OT - Posterior stabilized
OT - Range of motion
OT - Results
OT - Stability
OT - TKA
OT - TKR
OT - Ultracongruent insert
COIS- JL has received research grants from Aesculap, Link, Mathys, Smith & Nephew
and
Zimmer and honoraria from Aesculap, Link, Mathys and Pfizer.
EDAT- 2021/04/13 06:00
MHDA- 2022/08/31 06:00
CRDT- 2021/04/12 06:32
PHST- 2021/01/21 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/03/18 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/04/13 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/08/31 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/04/12 06:32 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06545-4 [pii]
AID - 6545 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06545-4 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2022 Sep;30(9):3000-3006. doi:
10.1007/s00167-021-06545-4. Epub 2021 Apr 11.
PMID- 34182833
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230310
LR - 20230310
IS - 1543-8635 (Electronic)
IS - 1543-8627 (Linking)
VI - 31
IP - 2
DP - 2023 Mar-Apr
TI - Effects of a specific injury prevention neuromuscular training program for
young
female dancers. A randomized-controlled trial.
PG - 90-100
LID - 10.1080/15438627.2021.1943388 [doi]
AB - To assess the effects of a specific injury prevention neuromuscular training
programme (IPP) on balance and lower-limb asymmetry in female competitive
dancers
(age 12-20 years; height 1.57 ± 0.06 m; weight 24.27 ± 2.79 kg) were randomly
allocated to an active general control (GIPP, n = 7) and specific (SIPP n
= 7)
group. Both programmes were conducted for 6 weeks, with a frequency of three
sessions per week. Dynamic balance and lower-limb asymmetry were assessed
before
and after the intervention. A greater improvement in right-leg total balance
(86.6[84.0-90.5] vs 93.8[86.7-99.4];p = 0.035), left-leg total
balance(87.8[81.0-89.1] vs 93.6[90.6-100.0];p = 0.013), left-leg anterior
balance
(71.9[69.1-72.2] vs 74.6[72.0-77.3];p = 0.041), left-leg posteromedial
balance
(80.5[72.9-83.3] vs 85.9[83.0-94.0];p = 0.048), and left-leg posterolateral
balance (79.5[70.4-84.5] vs 85.0[80.0-88.5];p = 0.048) was observed in the
SIPP
group compared to the GIPP group. No other significant intra-group changes
nor
inter-group differences were noted. Therefore, compared to a GIPP, a SIPP
induced
greater improvements in lower-limb dynamic balance in female dancers,
potentially
leading to greater reduction in lower-limb injury risk.
FAU - Cofré-Fernández, Valentina
AU - Cofré-Fernández V
AD - Escuela De Kinesiología. Universidad Austral De Chile. Valdivia, Chile.
FAU - Burgos-Estrada, Nicol
AU - Burgos-Estrada N
AD - Escuela De Kinesiología. Universidad Austral De Chile. Valdivia, Chile.
FAU - Meneses-Hermosilla, Vanessa
AU - Meneses-Hermosilla V
AD - Escuela De Kinesiología. Universidad Austral De Chile. Valdivia, Chile.
FAU - Ramirez-Campillo, Rodrigo
AU - Ramirez-Campillo R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-2035-3279
AD - Human Performance Laboratory. Quality of Life and Wellness Research Group.
Department of Physical Activity Sciences. Universidad De Los Lagos. Osorno,
Chile.
AD - Centro De Investigación En Fisiología Del Ejercicio, Universidad Mayor,
Santiago,
Chile.
FAU - Keogh, Justin W
AU - Keogh JW
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9851-1068
AD - Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University, Gold Coast,
Australia.
AD - Sports Performance Research Centre New Zealand, AUT University, Auckland, New
Zealand.
AD - Cluster for Health Improvement, Faculty of Science, Health, Education and
Engineering, University of the Sunshine, Coast, Australia.
AD - Kasturba Medical College, Mangalore, Manipal Academy of Higher Education,
Manipal, Karnataka, India.
FAU - Gajardo-Burgos, Rubén
AU - Gajardo-Burgos R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-4515-2492
AD - Instituto De Aparato Locomotor Y Rehabilitación. Universidad Austral De
Chile.
Valdivia, Chile.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210629
PL - England
TA - Res Sports Med
JT - Research in sports medicine (Print)
JID - 101167637
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - Female
MH - Child
MH - Adolescent
MH - Young Adult
MH - Adult
MH - *Postural Balance
MH - Lower Extremity
MH - Leg
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Primary prevention
OT - muscle strength
OT - physical functional performance
OT - postural balance
OT - proprioception
EDAT- 2021/06/30 06:00
MHDA- 2023/03/11 06:00
CRDT- 2021/06/29 05:31
PHST- 2021/06/30 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/03/11 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/06/29 05:31 [entrez]
AID - 10.1080/15438627.2021.1943388 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Res Sports Med. 2023 Mar-Apr;31(2):90-100. doi:
10.1080/15438627.2021.1943388.
Epub 2021 Jun 29.
PMID- 29276123
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20190204
LR - 20190215
IS - 1532-8406 (Electronic)
IS - 0883-5403 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 5
DP - 2018 May
TI - Prospective Randomized Comparison of Posterior-Stabilized Versus
Condylar-Stabilized Total Knee Arthroplasty: Final Report of a Five-Year
Study.
PG - 1384-1388
LID - S0883-5403(17)31042-2 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.arth.2017.11.037 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: This report presents the minimum 5-year results of a prospective,
randomized, Level of Evidence I study that evaluated cruciate-sacrificing
total
knee arthroplasty using either a posterior-stabilized (PS) device or a
condylar-stabilized (CS) device. We hypothesized that the clinical outcomes
of
both groups would be equivalent and that there would be differences in
operative
time and/or blood loss parameters. METHODS: One-hundred eleven patients
undergoing total knee arthroplasty were randomized to receive either a post-
cam
style tibial insert (PS, n = 56) or a more congruent anterior-lipped tibial
insert (CS, n = 55). All posterior cruciate ligaments were sacrificed.
RESULTS:
Comparison of the clinical scores and radiographic results between both
groups
were essentially equivalent with no statistically significant differences at
the
final 5-year evaluation, although the CS knee group had significantly fewer
incidences of postoperative mechanical sensations (P = .01). CONCLUSION:
These
results demonstrate that the CS knee provides excellent clinical, functional,
and
radiographic outcomes that are comparable to the results achieved with the PS
knee, with a lower incidence of mechanical sensations, and support the use of
a
CS device as an alternative to the PS device.
CI - Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
FAU - Scott, David F
AU - Scott DF
AD - Spokane Joint Replacement Center, Spokane, Washington; Department of
Orthopaedics
and Sports Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Spokane,
Washington.
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20171207
PL - United States
TA - J Arthroplasty
JT - The Journal of arthroplasty
JID - 8703515
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/*instrumentation/*methods
MH - Bone and Bones/*surgery
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/*surgery
MH - *Knee Prosthesis
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Operative Time
MH - Osteotomy
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Surveys and Questionnaires
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Triathlon CS
OT - Triathlon PS
OT - condylar-stabilized
OT - cruciate-sacrificing
OT - posterior-stabilized
OT - total knee arthroplasty
EDAT- 2017/12/26 06:00
MHDA- 2019/02/05 06:00
CRDT- 2017/12/26 06:00
PHST- 2017/10/05 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/11/12 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2017/11/20 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/12/26 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2019/02/05 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2017/12/26 06:00 [entrez]
AID - S0883-5403(17)31042-2 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.arth.2017.11.037 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Arthroplasty. 2018 May;33(5):1384-1388. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2017.11.037.
Epub
2017 Dec 7.
PMID- 15182981
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20040722
LR - 20220409
IS - 0268-0033 (Print)
IS - 0268-0033 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 5
DP - 2004 Jun
TI - Differences in normal and perturbed walking kinematics between male and
female
athletes.
PG - 465-72
AB - OBJECTIVE: To identify differences in lower extremity kinematic movement
patterns
between genders during walking through the application of an expected
perturbation. DESIGN: Randomized limb kinematics were compared between
healthy
active males and females. BACKGROUND: Lower extremity kinematics during jump
landing and cutting have been implicated as a potential source of the
discrepancy
in anterior cruciate ligament injury rates between genders. Kinematic
differences
between genders have been identified during tasks that are not provocative of
anterior cruciate ligament injury but do result in increased ligament strain.
Repetition of movement patterns that increase anterior cruciate ligament
strain
may increase the likelihood they will be reproduced during athletic tasks
that
produce force loads that exceed anterior cruciate ligament tensile strength.
METHODS: Twenty subjects (10 women, 10 men) classified as a level I or II
athlete
underwent motion analyses while performing self-paced walking trials. Five
trials
were undisturbed, and five each with a platform translating either laterally
or
anteriorly at heel contact. Sagittal, frontal, and transverse hip angles as
well
as sagittal and frontal knee angles were collected during stance. RESULTS:
Excursions in the frontal and transverse planes were greater at the hip and
knee
for females compared to males in each walking condition. The rate of these
excursions also occurred more rapidly for females than males. There was no
difference for joint angles at initial contact between genders, and there was
no
difference in the amount of sagittal plane excursion for the hip and knee
when
comparing genders. CONCLUSIONS: Females demonstrate characteristics during
both
normal and perturbed gait that may potentially contribute to increased
anterior
cruciate ligament strain. Repetition of these potentially harmful movement
patterns during provocative athletic maneuvers may lead to anterior cruciate
ligament injury. RELEVANCE: Females exhibit lower extremity kinematic
patterns
that differ from males. Female kinematic patterns may contribute to an
increased
risk for anterior cruciate ligament injury.
CI - Copyright 2004 Elsevier Ltd.
FAU - Hurd, Wendy J
AU - Hurd WJ
AD - Department of Physical Therapy, University of Delaware, Newark 19716, USA.
wjhurd2001@yahoo.com
FAU - Chmielewski, Terese L
AU - Chmielewski TL
FAU - Axe, Michael J
AU - Axe MJ
FAU - Davis, Irene
AU - Davis I
FAU - Snyder-Mackler, Lynn
AU - Snyder-Mackler L
LA - eng
GR - R01 HD37985/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PT - Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
PL - England
TA - Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon)
JT - Clinical biomechanics (Bristol, Avon)
JID - 8611877
SB - IM
MH - Adaptation, Physiological
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiopathology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/physiopathology/prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena/methods
MH - Cumulative Trauma Disorders/physiopathology/prevention & control
MH - Feedback/physiology
MH - Female
MH - Gait/*physiology
MH - Hip Joint/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Movement/physiology
MH - Postural Balance/*physiology
MH - Rotation
MH - Sex Factors
MH - Sports/*physiology
MH - Walking/*physiology
EDAT- 2004/06/09 05:00
MHDA- 2004/07/23 05:00
CRDT- 2004/06/09 05:00
PHST- 2003/10/10 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2004/01/29 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2004/06/09 05:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2004/07/23 05:00 [medline]
PHST- 2004/06/09 05:00 [entrez]
AID - S0268003304000294 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2004.01.013 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon). 2004 Jun;19(5):465-72. doi:
10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2004.01.013.
PMID- 30577048
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20200518
LR - 20200518
IS - 1938-2480 (Electronic)
IS - 1538-8506 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 1
DP - 2020 Jan
TI - The Forced Active Buckling Sign: A New Clinical Test for the Diagnosis of ACL
Insufficiency.
PG - 42-47
LID - 10.1055/s-0038-1676351 [doi]
AB - Although insufficiency of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is a frequent
result of an injury, validated tests are associated with unsatisfying
validity.
Moreover, some of these tests are not easy to perform and patient's muscular
resistance often limits their reliability. Therefore, with this study, we
want to
design an accurate test to diagnose an ACL insufficiency, which is
independent of
the assessor's skills and overcome any muscular resistance. Fifty patients
with
an isolated ACL rupture (group A; age 26.4 years ± 14.9 standard deviation
[SD];
female, n = 15) and additional 50 patients with an intact ACL but meniscal
lesions (group B; age 45.4 years ± 12.9 SD; female, n = 23) were consecutively
included in this study. The integrity of the ACL and the menisci were
evaluated
by magnetic resonance imaging and verified arthroscopically. Two orthopaedic
surgeons performed a pivot shift test, a Lachman's test, and our new "forced
active buckling" (FAB)-sign test in all patients. The surgeons were blinded
for
the pathology of the knee and we randomized the tests for each patient and
examiner. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative
predictive value, and positive and negative likelihood ratios with confidence
intervals were calculated and compared. With a prevalence of 0.5, the FAB-
sign
test revealed the best overall sensitivity of 0.78 compared with the
Lachman's
and pivot shift tests of 0.74 and 0.46, respectively. Also, the overall
specificity of the FAB-sign test of 0.95 was higher than the Lachman's test
of
0.83, however, comparable to the pivot shift test of 0.96. The FAB-sign test
demonstrated the best positive and negative predictive values of 0.94 and
0.81.
There was no significant difference between the two examiners concerning the
accuracy of results in each test (p = 0.83). This study shows that the
introduced
FAB-sign test can detect an ACL insufficiency more sensitive and more
specific
compared to the pivot shift and Lachman's tests in the subacute phase. This
is a
randomized controlled diagnostic study, level 1b.
CI - Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.
FAU - Blanke, Fabian
AU - Blanke F
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Hessing
Stiftung Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
FAU - Haenle, Maximilian
AU - Haenle M
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Hessing
Stiftung Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
FAU - Feitenhansl, Andreas
AU - Feitenhansl A
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Hessing
Stiftung Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
FAU - Vogt, Stephan
AU - Vogt S
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Hessing
Stiftung Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
AD - Department of Orthopedic Sports Medicine and Arthroscopic Surgery, Klinikum
Rechts der Isar, Technische Universität München, München, Germany.
FAU - Camathias, Carlo
AU - Camathias C
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University Children's Hospital Basel
(UKBB),
Basel, Switzerland.
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20181221
PL - Germany
TA - J Knee Surg
JT - The journal of knee surgery
JID - 101137599
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*diagnosis/diagnostic imaging/surgery
MH - Child
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/diagnostic imaging/physiopathology/surgery
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Physical Examination/*methods
MH - Reproducibility of Results
MH - Sensitivity and Specificity
MH - Young Adult
COIS- None declared.
EDAT- 2018/12/24 06:00
MHDA- 2020/05/19 06:00
CRDT- 2018/12/22 06:00
PHST- 2018/12/24 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2020/05/19 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/12/22 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1055/s-0038-1676351 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Knee Surg. 2020 Jan;33(1):42-47. doi: 10.1055/s-0038-1676351. Epub 2018 Dec
21.
PMID- 19494090
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100720
LR - 20220408
IS - 1475-5785 (Electronic)
IS - 1353-8047 (Print)
IS - 1353-8047 (Linking)
VI - 15
IP - 3
DP - 2009 Jun
TI - The Preventing Australian Football Injuries with Exercise (PAFIX) Study: a
group
randomised controlled trial.
PG - e1
LID - 10.1136/ip.2008.021279 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Knee injuries are a major injury concern for Australian Football
players and participants of many other sports worldwide. There is increasing
evidence from laboratory and biomechanically focused studies about the likely
benefit of targeted exercise programmes to prevent knee injuries. However,
there
have been few international studies that have evaluated the effectiveness of
such
programmes in the real-world context of community sport that have combined
epidemiological, behavioural and biomechanical approaches. OBJECTIVE: To
implement a fully piloted and tested exercise training intervention to reduce
the
number of football-related knee injuries. In so doing, to evaluate the
intervention's effectiveness in the real-world context of community football
and
to determine if the underlying neural and biomechanical training adaptations
are
associated with decreased risk of injury. SETTING: Adult players from
community-level Australian Football clubs in two Australian states over the
2007-08 playing seasons. METHODS: A group-clustered randomised controlled
trial
with teams of players randomly allocated to either a coach-delivered targeted
exercise programme or usual behaviour (control). Epidemiological component:
field-based injury surveillance and monitoring of training/game exposures.
Behavioural component: evaluation of player and coach attitudes, knowledge,
behaviours and compliance, both before and after the intervention is
implemented.
Biomechanical component: biomechanical, game mobility and neuromuscular
parameters assessed to determine the fundamental effect of training on these
factors and injury risk. OUTCOME MEASURES: The rate and severity of injury in
the
intervention group compared with the control group. Changes, if any, in
behavioural components. Process evaluation: coach delivery factors and likely
sustainability.
FAU - Finch, C
AU - Finch C
AD - School of Human Movement and Sport Sciences, University of Ballarat,
Ballarat,
Victoria, Australia. c.finch@ballarat.edu.au
FAU - Lloyd, D
AU - Lloyd D
FAU - Elliott, B
AU - Elliott B
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Multicenter Study
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - England
TA - Inj Prev
JT - Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and
Adolescent
Injury Prevention
JID - 9510056
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiology
MH - Australia
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Cluster Analysis
MH - Exercise/*physiology
MH - Female
MH - Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/epidemiology/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/physiology
MH - Male
MH - Outcome Assessment, Health Care/methods
MH - Physical Education and Training/*methods
MH - Research Design
MH - Soccer/*injuries
PMC - PMC2684655
COIS- Competing interests: None.
EDAT- 2009/06/06 09:00
MHDA- 2010/07/21 06:00
CRDT- 2009/06/05 09:00
PHST- 2009/06/05 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/06/06 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/07/21 06:00 [medline]
AID - 15/3/e1 [pii]
AID - ip21279 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/ip.2008.021279 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Inj Prev. 2009 Jun;15(3):e1. doi: 10.1136/ip.2008.021279.
PMID- 30300051
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20210413
LR - 20210413
IS - 1543-3072 (Electronic)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 28
IP - 8
DP - 2019 Nov 1
TI - Females Decrease Vertical Ground Reaction Forces Following 4-Week Jump-
Landing
Feedback Intervention Without Negative Affect on Vertical Jump Performance.
PG - 866-870
LID - jsr.2018-0140 [pii]
LID - 10.1123/jsr.2018-0140 [doi]
AB - CONTEXT: High vertical ground reaction force (vGRF) when initiating ground
contact during jump landing is one biomechanical factor that may increase
risk of
anterior cruciate ligament injury. Intervention programs have been developed
to
decrease vGRF to reduce injury risk, yet generating high forces is still
critical
for performing dynamic activities such as a vertical jump task. OBJECTIVE: To
evaluate if a jump-landing feedback intervention, cueing a decrease in vGRF,
would impair vertical jump performance in a separate task (Vertmax). DESIGN:
Randomized controlled trial. Patients (or Other Participants): Forty-eight
recreationally active females (feedback: n = 31; 19.63 [1.54] y, 1.6
[0.08] cm,
58.13 [7.84] kg and control: n = 15; 19.6 [1.68] y, 1.64 [0.05] cm, 60.11
[8.36] kg) participated in this study. INTERVENTION: Peak vGRF during a jump
landing and Vertmax were recorded at baseline and 4 weeks post. The feedback
group participated in 12 sessions over the 4-week period consisting of
feedback
provided for 6 sets of 6 jumps off a 30-cm box. The control group was
instructed
to return to the lab 28 days following the baseline measurements. MAIN
OUTCOME
MEASURES: Change scores (postbaseline) were calculated for peak vGRF and
Vertmax.
Group differences were evaluated for peak vGRF and Vertmax using a Mann-
Whitney U
test (P < .05). RESULTS: There were no significant differences between groups
at
baseline (P > .05). The feedback group (-0.5 [0.3] N/kg) demonstrated a
greater
decrease in vGRF compared with the control group (0.01 [0.3] N/kg) (t(46) =
-5.52, P < .001). There were no significant differences in change in Vertmax
between groups (feedback = 0.9 [2.2] cm, control = 0.06 [2.1] cm; t(46) =
0.46, P
= .64). CONCLUSIONS: While the feedback intervention was effective in
decreasing
vGRF when landing from a jump, these participants did not demonstrate changes
in
vertical jump performance when assessed during a different task.
Practitioners
should consider implementing feedback intervention programs to reduce peak
vGRF,
without worry of diminished vertical jump performance.
FAU - Ericksen, Hayley M
AU - Ericksen HM
FAU - Lefevre, Caitlin
AU - Lefevre C
FAU - Luc-Harkey, Brittney A
AU - Luc-Harkey BA
FAU - Thomas, Abbey C
AU - Thomas AC
FAU - Gribble, Phillip A
AU - Gribble PA
FAU - Pietrosimone, Brian
AU - Pietrosimone B
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - *Athletes
MH - Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletic Performance/*physiology
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - *Feedback, Physiological
MH - Female
MH - Healthy Volunteers
MH - Humans
MH - *Movement
MH - Weight-Bearing/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL prevention
OT - dynamic movement
OT - power
EDAT- 2018/10/10 06:00
MHDA- 2021/04/14 06:00
CRDT- 2018/10/10 06:00
PHST- 2018/04/16 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2018/08/07 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2018/08/27 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2018/10/10 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/04/14 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/10/10 06:00 [entrez]
AID - jsr.2018-0140 [pii]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.2018-0140 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2019 Nov 1;28(8):866-870. doi: 10.1123/jsr.2018-0140.
PMID- 15827359
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050909
LR - 20220408
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 33
IP - 6
DP - 2005 Jun
TI - Instruction of jump-landing technique using videotape feedback: altering
lower
extremity motion patterns.
PG - 831-42
AB - BACKGROUND: Anterior cruciate ligament injury prevention programs have used
videotapes of jump-landing technique as a key instructional component to
improve
landing performance. HYPOTHESIS: All videotape feedback model groups will
increase knee flexion angles at initial contact and overall knee flexion
motion
and decrease peak vertical ground reaction forces and peak proximal anterior
tibial shear forces to a greater extent than will a nonfeedback group. The
secondary hypothesis is that the videotape feedback using the combination of
the
expert and self models will create the greatest change in each variable.
STUDY
DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: Knee kinematics and kinetics of
college-aged recreational athletes randomly placed in 3 different videotape
feedback model groups (expert only, self only, combination of expert and
self)
and a nonfeedback group were collected while participants performed a
basketball
jump-landing task on 3 testing occasions. RESULTS: All feedback groups
significantly increased knee angular displacement flexion angles [F(6,70) =
8.03,
P = .001] and decreased peak vertical ground reaction forces [F(6,78) = 2.68,
P =
.021] during performance and retention tests. The self and combination groups
significantly increased knee angular displacement flexion angles more than
the
control group did; the expert model group did not change significantly more
than
the control group did. All feedback groups and the nonfeedback group
significantly reduced peak vertical forces across performance and retention
tests. There were no statistically significant changes in knee flexion angle
at
initial ground contact (P = .111) and peak proximal anterior tibial shear
forces
(P = .509) for both testing sessions for each group. CONCLUSION: The use of
self
or combination videotape feedback is most useful for increasing knee angular
displacement flexion angles and reducing peak vertical forces during landing.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The use of self or combination modeling is more effective
than is expert-only modeling for the implementation of instructional programs
aimed at reducing the risk of jump-landing anterior cruciate ligament
injuries.
FAU - Oñate, James A
AU - Oñate JA
AD - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina,
USA.
jonate@odu.edu
FAU - Guskiewicz, Kevin M
AU - Guskiewicz KM
FAU - Marshall, Stephen W
AU - Marshall SW
FAU - Giuliani, Carol
AU - Giuliani C
FAU - Yu, Bing
AU - Yu B
FAU - Garrett, William E
AU - Garrett WE
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20050412
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Feedback
MH - Humans
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - North Carolina
MH - *Psychomotor Performance
MH - Videotape Recording
MH - Wounds and Injuries/prevention & control
EDAT- 2005/04/14 09:00
MHDA- 2005/09/10 09:00
CRDT- 2005/04/14 09:00
PHST- 2005/04/14 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/09/10 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/04/14 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546504271499 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546504271499 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2005 Jun;33(6):831-42. doi: 10.1177/0363546504271499. Epub
2005
Apr 12.
PMID- 24850618
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160414
LR - 20220331
IS - 1473-0480 (Electronic)
IS - 0306-3674 (Linking)
VI - 48
IP - 19
DP - 2014 Oct
TI - Implementation of a neuromuscular training programme in female adolescent
football: 3-year follow-up study after a randomised controlled trial.
PG - 1425-30
LID - 10.1136/bjsports-2013-093298 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Neuromuscular training (NMT) has been shown to reduce anterior
cruciate ligament injury rates in highly structured clinical trials. However,
there is a paucity of studies that evaluate implementation of NMT programmes
in
sports. AIM: To evaluate the implementation of an NMT programme in female
adolescent football 3 years after a randomised controlled trial (RCT).
METHODS:
Cross-sectional follow-up after an RCT using the Reach, Effectiveness,
Adoption,
Implementation, and Maintenance Sports Setting Matrix (RE-AIM SSM) framework.
Questionnaires were sent to the Swedish Football Association (FA), to eight
district FAs and coaches (n=303) that participated in the RCT in 2009, and
coaches who did not participate in the RCT but were coaching female
adolescent
football teams during the 2012 season (n=496). RESULTS: Response rates were
100%
among the FAs, 57% among trial coaches and 36% among currently active
coaches.
The reach of the intervention was high, 99% of trial coaches (control group)
and
91% of current coaches were familiar with the programme. The adoption rate
was
74% among current coaches, but programme modifications were common among
coaches.
No district FA had formal policies regarding implementation, and 87% of
current
coaches reported no club routines for programme use. Maintenance was fairly
high;
82% of trial coaches from the intervention group and 68% from the control
group
still used the programme. CONCLUSIONS: Reach and adoption of the programme
was
high among coaches. However, this study identified low programme fidelity and
lack of formal policies for its implementation and use in clubs and district
FAs.
CI - Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where
not
already granted under a licence) please go to
http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.
FAU - Lindblom, Hanna
AU - Lindblom H
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-1533-6872
AD - Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping
University, Linköping, Sweden.
FAU - Waldén, Markus
AU - Waldén M
AD - Division of Community Medicine, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
FAU - Carlfjord, Siw
AU - Carlfjord S
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9116-8156
AD - Division of Community Medicine, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
FAU - Hägglund, Martin
AU - Hägglund M
AD - Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping
University, Linköping, Sweden.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20140521
PL - England
TA - Br J Sports Med
JT - British journal of sports medicine
JID - 0432520
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Cross-Sectional Studies
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Treatment Outcome
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - Adolescents
OT - Implementation
OT - Injury Prevention
OT - Soccer
EDAT- 2014/05/23 06:00
MHDA- 2016/04/15 06:00
CRDT- 2014/05/23 06:00
PHST- 2014/05/23 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/05/23 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/04/15 06:00 [medline]
AID - bjsports-2013-093298 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bjsports-2013-093298 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Br J Sports Med. 2014 Oct;48(19):1425-30. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2013-093298.
Epub
2014 May 21.
PMID- 16167266
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20051115
LR - 20221207
IS - 0932-0555 (Print)
IS - 0932-0555 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 3
DP - 2005 Sep
TI - [Subsequent treatment of surgically managed, fresh, anterior cruciate
ligament
ruptures--a randomized, prospective study].
PG - 134-9
AB - The prospective study examined two different postoperative treatments on 46
patients with acute and isolated disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament
(acl), who were treated with reconstruction and augmentation using the
semitendinosus-tendon. The patients were randomised and divided into two
groups
either to use a postoperative brace (Donjoy Ind.) set at full extension
(group A)
or to use the same brace set at a flexion of 20 degrees (group B) on the
first 3
days after surgery. All patients undertook a standard "accelerated"
rehabilitation protocol and were evaluated after 3, 6 and 12 months after
surgery. The results were as follow: the patients of group A reached the full
extension faster than group B without any loss of knee stability.
Postoperative
extension even led to an earlier return to work and sport activities. The
muscle
strength side-to-side difference (Cybex-measurement) was lower in group A.
The
severity and intensity of postoperative pain, swelling and giving-way was
reduced
in group A as was the risk of arthrofibrosis. Evaluated with the scoring
scales
of the "Orthopädische Arbeitsgruppe Knie" (OAK), the "International Knee
Documentation Committee" (IKDC), the Tegner activity score and the Lysholm
score,
the clinical outcome and activity-level were higher in group A than in group
B.
This prospective study shows, that immediate postoperative extension,
compared to
the postoperative flexion of 20 degrees, reduces the term of rehabilitation
and
optimizes the operative results after acl-reconstruction.
FAU - Pförringer, W
AU - Pförringer W
AD - w.pfoerringer@plus.cablesurf.de
FAU - Kremer, C
AU - Kremer C
LA - ger
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
TT - Die Nachbehandlung operativ versorgter frischer vorderer Kreuzbandrupturen--
eine
randomisierte prospektive Studie.
PL - Germany
TA - Sportverletz Sportschaden
JT - Sportverletzung Sportschaden : Organ der Gesellschaft fur
Orthopadisch-Traumatologische Sportmedizin
JID - 8904133
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*rehabilitation/*surgery
MH - Braces
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Immobilization/instrumentation/*methods
MH - Male
MH - Postoperative Care/instrumentation/*methods
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Plastic Surgery Procedures/*methods
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Rupture/rehabilitation/surgery
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2005/09/17 09:00
MHDA- 2005/11/16 09:00
CRDT- 2005/09/17 09:00
PHST- 2005/09/17 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/11/16 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/09/17 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1055/s-2005-858472 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Sportverletz Sportschaden. 2005 Sep;19(3):134-9. doi: 10.1055/s-2005-858472.
PMID- 17219226
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070613
LR - 20220331
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 15
IP - 4
DP - 2007 Apr
TI - Early versus late start of open kinetic chain quadriceps exercises after ACL
reconstruction with patellar tendon or hamstring grafts: a prospective
randomized
outcome study.
PG - 402-14
AB - The purpose of the present investigation was to evaluate physical outcome
after
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction with early versus late
initiation
of open kinetic chain (OKC) exercises for the quadriceps in patients operated
on
either patellar tendon or hamstring grafts. Sixty-eight patients, 36 males
and 32
females, with either patellar tendon graft (34 patients) or hamstring graft
(34
patients) were enrolled in this study. All patients were randomly allocated
to
either early (the 4th postoperative week) or late (the 12th postoperative
week)
start of OKC exercises for the quadriceps, resulting in four subgroups:
patellar
tendon reconstruction, early start (P4) or late start (P12) of OKC quadriceps
exercises, hamstring tendon reconstruction, early start (H4) or late start
(H12)
of quadriceps OKC exercises. Prior to surgery and 3, 5 and 7 months later,
assessments of range of motion (goniometer), anterior knee laxity (KT-1000),
postural sway (KAT 2000), thigh muscle torques (Kin-Com dynamometer) and
anterior
knee pain (anterior knee pain score) were evaluated. No significant group
differences were found in terms of range of motion 3, 5 and 7 months
postoperatively. The H4 group showed a significantly higher mean difference
of
laxity over time of 1.0 mm (CI: 0.18-1.86) than the P4 group (P=0.04). Within
the
same type of surgery, the H4 against the H12, the mean difference over time
was
1.2 mm (0.37-2.1) higher in the H4 group than in the H12 group (P=0.01).
There
were no significant group differences in terms of postural sway or anterior
knee
pain at the different test occasions. Significant differences in trends
(changes
over time) were found when comparing the four groups, for both quadriceps
muscle
torques (P<0.001) and hamstring muscle torques (P<0.001). All groups, except
the
P4 group, reached preoperative values of quadriceps muscle torques at the 7
months follow-up. In the H4 and the H12 groups, significantly lower hamstring
muscle torques at the 7 months follow-up compared with preoperative values
were
found. In conclusion, early start of OKC quadriceps exercises after hamstring
ACL
reconstruction resulted in significantly increased anterior knee laxity in
comparison with both late start and with early and late start after bone-
patellar
tendon-bone ACL reconstruction. Furthermore, the early introduction of OKC
exercises for quadriceps did not influence quadriceps muscle torques neither
in
patients operated on patellar tendon nor hamstring tendon grafts. On the
contrary, it appears as if the choice of graft affected the strength of the
specific muscle more than the type of exercises performed. Our results could
not
determine the appropriate time for starting OKC quadriceps exercises for
patients
who have undergone ACL reconstruction with hamstring tendon graft. Future
studies
of long-term results of anterior knee laxity and functional outcome are
needed.
FAU - Heijne, Annette
AU - Heijne A
AD - Section of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Department of Molecular Medicine
and
Surgery, Karolinska Institutet, 171 76, Stockholm, Sweden.
annette.heijne@ki.se
FAU - Werner, Suzanne
AU - Werner S
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20070112
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
EIN - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2007 Apr;15(4):472-3
EIN - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2007 Apr;15(4):472-3. PMID: 27520629
MH - Adult
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*rehabilitation
MH - Knee Injuries/*rehabilitation/surgery
MH - Male
MH - Muscle Strength
MH - Patellar Ligament/transplantation
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Statistics, Nonparametric
MH - *Tendon Transfer
MH - Time Factors
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2007/01/16 09:00
MHDA- 2007/06/15 09:00
CRDT- 2007/01/16 09:00
PHST- 2006/09/18 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2006/11/09 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2007/01/16 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/06/15 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2007/01/16 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-006-0246-z [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2007 Apr;15(4):402-14. doi:
10.1007/s00167-006-0246-z. Epub 2007 Jan 12.
PMID- 35107354
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220405
LR - 20221103
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 50
IP - 4
DP - 2022 Mar
TI - Comparative Outcomes Occur After Superficial Medial Collateral Ligament
Augmented
Repair vs Reconstruction: A Prospective Multicenter Randomized Controlled
Equivalence Trial.
PG - 968-976
LID - 10.1177/03635465211069373 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Although previous studies have reported good short-term results
for
superficial medial collateral ligament (sMCL) reconstruction, whether an
augmented MCL repair is clinically equivalent remains unclear.
PURPOSE/HYPOTHESIS: The purpose of this study was to compare clinical
outcomes
between randomized groups that underwent sMCL augmentation repair and sMCL
autograft reconstruction. The hypothesis was that there would be no
significant
differences in objective or subjective outcomes between groups. STUDY DESIGN:
Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. METHODS: Patients were
prospectively enrolled between 2013 and 2019 from 3 centers. Grade III sMCL
injuries were confirmed via stress radiography. Patients were randomized to
anatomic sMCL reconstruction versus augmented repair with surgical treatment,
determined after examination under anesthesia confirmed sMCL incompetence.
Postoperative visits occurred at 6 weeks and 6 months for repeat evaluation,
with
repeat stress radiography at final follow-up. Patient-reported outcome
measures
were obtained pre- and postoperatively at 6 months, 1 year, and final follow-
up.
The primary outcome measure was side-to-side difference on valgus stress
radiographs at a minimum follow-up of 1 year. The two 1-sided t test
procedure
was used to test clinical equivalence for side-to-side difference in valgus
gapping, and the Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare postoperative
patient-reported outcome measures between groups. RESULTS: A total of 54
patients
were prospectively enrolled into this study. Of these, 50 patients had 6-
month
stress radiograph data, while 40 had 1-year postoperative valgus stress
radiograph data. The mean (SD) patient age was 38.0 years (14.2), and body
mass
index was 25.0 (3.6). Preoperative valgus stress radiographs demonstrated
3.74 mm
(1.1 mm) of increased side-to-side gapping overall, while it was 4.10 mm
(1.46
mm) in the MCL augmentation group and 3.42 mm (0.55 mm) in the MCL
reconstruction
group. Postoperative valgus stress radiographs at an average of 6 months were
obtained in 50 patients after surgery, which showed 0.21 mm (0.81 mm) for the
MCL
augmentation group and 0.19 mm (0.67 mm) for the MCL reconstruction group (P
=
.940). At final follow-up (minimum 1 year), median (interquartile range)
Lysholm
scores were significantly higher in the reconstruction group (90 [83-99]) as
compared with the repair group (80 [67-92]) (P = .031). Final International
Knee
Documentation Committee (IKDC) scores were also significantly higher for the
reconstruction group (85 [68-89]) versus the repair group (72 [60-78] (P
= .039).
Postoperative Tegner scores were not significantly different between the
repair
group (5 [3.5-6]) and the reconstruction group (5.5 [4-7]) (P = .123).
Patient
satisfaction was also not significantly different between repair (7.5
[5.75-9.25]) and reconstruction groups (9.0 [7-10]) (P = .184). CONCLUSION:
This
study found no difference in objective outcomes between an sMCL augmentation
repair and a complete sMCL reconstruction at 1 year postoperatively,
indicating
equivalence between these procedures. Patient-reported clinical outcomes
favored
the reconstruction over a repair. In addition, this study demonstrated that
anatomic-based treatment of MCL tears with an early knee motion program had a
very low risk of graft attenuation and a low risk of arthrofibrosis.
FAU - LaPrade, Robert F
AU - LaPrade RF
AD - Twin Cities Orthopedics, Edina, Minnesota, USA.
AD - The Steadman Clinic, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - DePhillipo, Nicholas N
AU - DePhillipo NN
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8946-4028
AD - Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center, Oslo, Norway.
FAU - Dornan, Grant J
AU - Dornan GJ
AD - Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - Kennedy, Mitchell I
AU - Kennedy MI
AD - Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - Cram, Tyler R
AU - Cram TR
AD - The Steadman Clinic, Vail, Colorado, USA.
AD - Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA.
FAU - Dekker, Travis J
AU - Dekker TJ
AD - The Steadman Clinic, Vail, Colorado, USA.
AD - Eglin Air Force Base Orthopedics, United States Air Force, Fort Walton Beach,
Florida, USA.
FAU - Strauss, Marc J
AU - Strauss MJ
AD - Orthopaedic Clinic, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
FAU - Engebretsen, Lars
AU - Engebretsen L
AD - Orthopaedic Clinic, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
FAU - Lind, Martin
AU - Lind M
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7204-813X
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Multicenter Study
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220202
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2022 Oct;50(12):NP53-NP54. PMID: 36177756
CIN - Am J Sports Med. 2022 Oct;50(12):NP51-NP52. PMID: 36177757
MH - Adult
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery
MH - *Collateral Ligaments
MH - Humans
MH - *Joint Instability/surgery
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - *Medial Collateral Ligament, Knee/injuries/surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Radiography
MH - Treatment Outcome
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - MCL augmentation
OT - MCL reconstruction
OT - MCL repair
OT - medial collateral ligament
OT - randomized controlled trial
EDAT- 2022/02/03 06:00
MHDA- 2022/04/06 06:00
CRDT- 2022/02/02 12:13
PHST- 2022/02/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/04/06 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/02/02 12:13 [entrez]
AID - 10.1177/03635465211069373 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2022 Mar;50(4):968-976. doi: 10.1177/03635465211069373. Epub
2022 Feb 2.
PMID- 15531052
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050104
LR - 20061115
IS - 0268-0033 (Print)
IS - 0268-0033 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 10
DP - 2004 Dec
TI - Influence of gender on hip and knee mechanics during a randomly cued cutting
maneuver.
PG - 1022-31
AB - OBJECTIVE: To investigate gender differences in three-dimensional hip and
knee
joint mechanics in collegiate athletes during a randomly cued cutting
maneuver.
DESIGN: Three-dimensional kinematics and kinetics were collected on 24
collegiate
soccer players (12 females and 12 males) while each performed the cutting
maneuver. In order to create a randomly cued condition, subjects were
signaled by
a lighted target board that directed them to perform one of three tasks. Hip
and
knee joint mechanics were compared between genders using one-tailed t-tests.
BACKGROUND: Female athletes have an anterior cruciate ligament injury rate
that
is larger than their male counterparts. Gender differences in hip and knee
joint
mechanics during a randomly cued cutting maneuver have not been previously
reported. METHODS: Five randomly cued cutting trials were included in the
analysis. Selected peak hip and knee joint angles and moments were measured
during the first 40 degrees of knee flexion across the stance phase. RESULTS:
Females demonstrated significantly less peak hip abduction than did males.
Otherwise, there were no gender differences in selected peak hip and knee
joint
kinematics and moments. CONCLUSIONS: Male and female collegiate soccer
players
demonstrate similar hip and knee joint mechanics while performing a randomly
cued
cutting maneuver. RELEVANCE: Because it is known that females incur a greater
number of anterior cruciate ligament injuries than males, it is of interest
to
identify gender differences in lower extremity mechanics when performing
sport
specific tasks. Understanding of these differences will contribute to the
development of prevention training programs.
FAU - Pollard, Christine D
AU - Pollard CD
AD - Department of Exercise Science, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA,
USA.
cpollard@usc.edu
FAU - Davis, Irene McClay
AU - Davis IM
FAU - Hamill, Joseph
AU - Hamill J
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - England
TA - Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon)
JT - Clinical biomechanics (Bristol, Avon)
JID - 8611877
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Cues
MH - Data Collection/methods
MH - Female
MH - Hip Joint/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Muscle Contraction/*physiology
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Sex Factors
MH - Soccer/*physiology
MH - Torque
EDAT- 2004/11/09 09:00
MHDA- 2005/01/05 09:00
CRDT- 2004/11/09 09:00
PHST- 2003/10/24 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2004/07/26 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2004/11/09 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/01/05 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2004/11/09 09:00 [entrez]
AID - S0268-0033(04)00168-8 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2004.07.007 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon). 2004 Dec;19(10):1022-31. doi:
10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2004.07.007.
PMID- 25567541
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170427
LR - 20190319
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 9
DP - 2016 Sep
TI - Different intraoperative kinematics with comparable clinical outcomes of
ultracongruent and posterior stabilized mobile-bearing total knee
arthroplasty.
PG - 3036-3043
LID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3489-0 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: There remains no consensus as to whether mobile total knee
arthroplasty
(TKA) should use a posterior cruciate ligament-sacrificing ultracongruent
(UC) or
a posterior cruciate ligament-substituting posterior stabilized (PS)
prosthesis.
The purpose of this study was to assess intraoperative kinematics and
clinical
outcomes of UC and PS rotating platform mobile-bearing TKA. METHODS: In this
randomized controlled study, mobile UC TKA prostheses (n = 45) were compared
with
mobile PS TKA prostheses (n = 45) with regard to intraoperative kinematics
and
clinical outcomes. The passive kinematic study using intraoperative
navigation
system included anterior/posterior translation, varus/valgus alignment and
rotation of femur during flexion. The patients were clinically and
radiographically evaluated over a 3-year follow-up. RESULTS: Paradoxical
anterior
translation of the femur was 10.8 ± 5.2 mm in the UC knee from 0° to 82° of
knee
flexion and 8.7 ± 3.0 mm in the PS knee from 0° to 70° of knee flexion
(p = 0.027). Paradoxical internal rotation of the femur was 5.8° in the UC
knees
and 9.9° in the PS knees (p = 0.003). But, there was no significant
difference
between the groups in regard to the coronal alignment. There was no
significant
difference in the range of motion, KS knee scores, KS function scores, and
WOMAC
index scores. CONCLUSIONS: Despite different intraoperative kinematics
between
mobile UC and mobile PS TKA, neither design reproduced physiologic knee
kinematics and there was no difference in clinical outcomes between the two
groups. The clinical relevance of the study is that despite different
intraoperative kinematics, UC design can be a considerable alternative to PS
design in mobile-bearing TKA in respect of clinical outcomes. LEVEL OF
EVIDENCE:
II.
FAU - Kim, Tae Woo
AU - Kim TW
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hallym University Hospital, Chuncheon, 77,
Sakju-ro, Chuncheon-si, Gangwon-do, 200-704, Korea.
FAU - Lee, Sang Min
AU - Lee SM
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul Jaeil Hospital, 70, Jisan-ro,
Pyeongtaek-si, Gyeonggi-do, Korea.
FAU - Seong, Sang Cheol
AU - Seong SC
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul National University Bundang
Hospital,
82, Gumi-ro 173 Beon-gil, Bundang-gu, Seongnam-si, Gyeonggi-do, 464-707,
Korea.
FAU - Lee, Sahnghoon
AU - Lee S
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul National University Hospital, 101
Daehang-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, 110-744, Korea.
FAU - Jang, Jak
AU - Jang J
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Daehan Hospital, 301, Dobong-ro, Ganbuk-
gu,
Seoul, 132-703, Korea.
FAU - Lee, Myung Chul
AU - Lee MC
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul National University Hospital, 101
Daehang-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, 110-744, Korea. leemc@snu.ac.kr.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20150108
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/*instrumentation/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Intraoperative Period
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology/*surgery
MH - *Knee Prosthesis
MH - Male
MH - Osteoarthritis, Knee/*physiopathology/*surgery
MH - Posterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Prosthesis Design
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Rotation
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Clinical outcome
OT - Kinematics
OT - Posterior stabilized
OT - Total knee arthroplasty
OT - Ultracongruent
EDAT- 2015/01/09 06:00
MHDA- 2017/04/28 06:00
CRDT- 2015/01/09 06:00
PHST- 2014/04/25 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2014/12/12 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2015/01/09 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/01/09 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/04/28 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3489-0 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-014-3489-0 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2016 Sep;24(9):3036-3043. doi:
10.1007/s00167-014-3489-0. Epub 2015 Jan 8.
PMID- 33596734
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20211122
LR - 20211122
IS - 1522-1598 (Electronic)
IS - 0022-3077 (Linking)
VI - 125
IP - 4
DP - 2021 Apr 1
TI - Differences in brain structure and theta burst stimulation-induced plasticity
implicate the corticomotor system in loss of function after musculoskeletal
injury.
PG - 1006-1021
LID - 10.1152/jn.00689.2020 [doi]
AB - Traumatic musculoskeletal injury (MSI) may involve changes in corticomotor
structure and function, but direct evidence is needed. To determine the
corticomotor basis of MSI, we examined interactions among skeletomotor
function,
corticospinal excitability, corticomotor structure (cortical thickness and
white
matter microstructure), and intermittent theta burst stimulation (iTBS)-
induced
plasticity. Nine women with unilateral anterior cruciate ligament rupture
(ACL)
3.2 ± 1.1 yr prior to the study and 11 matched controls (CON) completed an MRI
session followed by an offline plasticity-probing protocol using a
randomized,
sham-controlled, double-blind, cross-over study design. iTBS was applied to
the
injured (ACL) or nondominant (CON) motor cortex leg representation (M1(LEG))
with
plasticity assessed based on changes in skeletomotor function and
corticospinal
excitability compared with sham iTBS. The results showed persistent loss of
function in the injured quadriceps, compensatory adaptations in the uninjured
quadriceps and both hamstrings, and injury-specific increases in
corticospinal
excitability. Injury was associated with lateralized reductions in
paracentral
lobule thickness, greater centrality of nonleg corticomotor regions, and
increased primary somatosensory cortex leg area inefficiency and
eccentricity.
Individual responses to iTBS were consistent with the principles of
homeostatic
metaplasticity; corresponded to injury-related differences in skeletomotor
function, corticospinal excitability, and corticomotor structure; and
suggested
that corticomotor adaptations involve both hemispheres. Moreover, iTBS
normalized
skeletomotor function and corticospinal excitability in ACL. The results of
this
investigation directly confirm corticomotor involvement in chronic loss of
function after traumatic MSI, emphasize the sensitivity of the corticomotor
system to skeletomotor events and behaviors, and raise the possibility that
brain-targeted therapies could improve recovery.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Traumatic
musculoskeletal injuries may involve adaptive changes in the brain that
contribute to loss of function. Our combination of neuroimaging and theta
burst
transcranial magnetic stimulation (iTBS) revealed distinct patterns of
iTBS-induced plasticity that normalized differences in muscle and brain
function
evident years after unilateral knee ligament rupture. Individual responses to
iTBS corresponded to injury-specific differences in brain structure and
physiological activity, depended on skeletomotor deficit severity, and
suggested
that corticomotor adaptations involve both hemispheres.
FAU - Flanagan, Shawn D
AU - Flanagan SD
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-6531-4567
AD - Department of Human Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Department of Sports Medicine and
Nutrition,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Proessl, Felix
AU - Proessl F
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9210-0222
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Department of Sports Medicine and
Nutrition,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Dunn-Lewis, Courtenay
AU - Dunn-Lewis C
AD - Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, School of Medicine, University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Sterczala, Adam J
AU - Sterczala AJ
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-0322-6836
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Department of Sports Medicine and
Nutrition,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Connaboy, Chris
AU - Connaboy C
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9031-2192
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Department of Sports Medicine and
Nutrition,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Canino, Maria C
AU - Canino MC
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Department of Sports Medicine and
Nutrition,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Beethe, Anne Z
AU - Beethe AZ
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Department of Sports Medicine and
Nutrition,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Eagle, Shawn R
AU - Eagle SR
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Department of Sports Medicine and
Nutrition,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
FAU - Szivak, Tunde K
AU - Szivak TK
AD - Department of Health Sciences, Merrimack College, North Andover,
Massachusetts.
FAU - Onate, James A
AU - Onate JA
AD - School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Medicine, The Ohio
State
University, Columbus, Ohio.
FAU - Volek, Jeff S
AU - Volek JS
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8702-0351
AD - Department of Human Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
FAU - Maresh, Carl M
AU - Maresh CM
AD - Department of Human Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
FAU - Kaeding, Christopher C
AU - Kaeding CC
AD - Sports Health and Performance Institute, Department of Orthopaedics, The Ohio
State University, Columbus, Ohio.
FAU - Kraemer, William J
AU - Kraemer WJ
AD - Department of Human Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20210217
PL - United States
TA - J Neurophysiol
JT - Journal of neurophysiology
JID - 0375404
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*physiopathology
MH - Cross-Over Studies
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Evoked Potentials, Motor/*physiology
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Motor Cortex/*physiopathology
MH - Musculoskeletal Diseases/*physiopathology
MH - Neuronal Plasticity/*physiology
MH - Pyramidal Tracts/*physiopathology
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/*injuries/*physiopathology
MH - Rupture/physiopathology
MH - Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - human motor cortex
OT - lower extremities
OT - musculoskeletal injury
OT - transcranial magnetic stimulation
OT - use-dependent plasticity
EDAT- 2021/02/19 06:00
MHDA- 2021/11/23 06:00
CRDT- 2021/02/18 05:43
PHST- 2021/02/19 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/11/23 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/02/18 05:43 [entrez]
AID - 10.1152/jn.00689.2020 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Neurophysiol. 2021 Apr 1;125(4):1006-1021. doi: 10.1152/jn.00689.2020. Epub
2021 Feb 17.
PMID- 18208432
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090723
LR - 20221207
IS - 1600-0838 (Electronic)
IS - 0905-7188 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 5
DP - 2008 Oct
TI - ST/G ACL reconstruction: double strand plus extra-articular sling vs double
bundle, randomized study at 3-year follow-up.
PG - 573-81
LID - 10.1111/j.1600-0838.2007.00697.x [doi]
AB - Several investigators have reported the presence of biomechanical, kinematic,
anatomic, fiber orientation patterns and biological differences between the
anteromedial bundle and the posterolateral bundle of ACL. The purpose of this
prospective randomized study was to compare the clinical, instrumental and X-
ray
outcome of two ACL reconstruction techniques with hamstring tendons: one with
a
single intra-articular bundle associated to an extra-articular sling, the
second
with a more anatomic double-bundle technique that reproduces better the
native
ACL function. From an initial group of 100 patients who underwent ACL
reconstruction, 72 patients (35 single bundle plus lateral plasty and 37
double
bundle) were evaluated with IKDC, Tegner score, KT2000 arthrometer, Activity
Rating Scale, Psychovitality Questionnaire and Ahlback radiographic score at
a
mean 3 years follow-up. Double-bundle group showed significantly better
results
regarding IKDC, ROM, Activity Rating Scale and time to return to sport. Also
KT
2000 showed significant differences in objective stability. The double-bundle
technique for ACL reconstruction described in this paper has demonstrated
significantly better subjective, objective and functional results compared
with a
double-stranded hamstrings plus extra-articular sling at a minimum 3-year
follow-up.
FAU - Zaffagnini, S
AU - Zaffagnini S
AD - Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institute, Biomechanics Laboratory, Bologna, Italy.
FAU - Bruni, D
AU - Bruni D
FAU - Russo, A
AU - Russo A
FAU - Takazawa, Y
AU - Takazawa Y
FAU - Lo Presti, M
AU - Lo Presti M
FAU - Giordano, G
AU - Giordano G
FAU - Marcacci, M
AU - Marcacci M
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20080114
PL - Denmark
TA - Scand J Med Sci Sports
JT - Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
JID - 9111504
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*surgery
MH - Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/*methods
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Plastic Surgery Procedures/methods
MH - Suture Techniques
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2008/01/23 09:00
MHDA- 2009/07/25 09:00
CRDT- 2008/01/23 09:00
PHST- 2008/01/23 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/07/25 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/01/23 09:00 [entrez]
AID - SMS697 [pii]
AID - 10.1111/j.1600-0838.2007.00697.x [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2008 Oct;18(5):573-81. doi:
10.1111/j.1600-0838.2007.00697.x. Epub 2008 Jan 14.
PMID- 35428952
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220704
LR - 20220706
IS - 1432-119X (Electronic)
IS - 0948-6143 (Linking)
VI - 158
IP - 1
DP - 2022 Jul
TI - Nestin and osteocrin mRNA increases in human semitendinosus myotendinous
junction
7 days after a single bout of eccentric exercise.
PG - 49-64
LID - 10.1007/s00418-022-02101-4 [doi]
AB - The myotendinous junction (MTJ), a specialized interface for force
transmission
between muscle and tendon, has a unique transcriptional activity and is
highly
susceptible to muscle strain injury. Eccentric exercise training is known to
reduce this risk of injury, but knowledge of the influence of exercise on the
MTJ
at the molecular and cellular levels is limited. In this study, 30 subjects
were
randomized to a single bout of eccentric exercise 1 week prior to tissue
sampling
(exercised) or no exercise (control). Samples were collected from the
semitendinosus as part of reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament
and
divided into fractions containing muscle, MTJ and tendon, respectively. The
concentrations of macrophages and satellite cells were counted, and the
expression of genes previously known to be active at the MTJ were analyzed by
real-time-quantitative PCR. An effect of the single bout of exercise was
found on
the expression of nestin (NES) and osteocrin (OSTN) mRNA in the MTJ and
tendon
fractions. Genes earlier identified at the MTJ (COL22A1, POSTN, ADAMTS8,
MNS1,
NCAM1) were confirmed to be expressed at a significantly higher level in the
MTJ
compared to muscle and tendon but were unaffected by exercise. In the
exercise
group a higher concentration of macrophages, but not of satellite cells, was
seen
in muscle close to the MTJ. The expression of NES and OSTN was higher in
human
semitendinosus MTJ 1 week after a single session of heavy eccentric exercise.
Based on these results, NES and OSTN could have a part in explaining how the
MTJ
adapts to eccentric exercise.
CI - © 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH
Germany,
part of Springer Nature.
FAU - Jakobsen, Jens R
AU - Jakobsen JR
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9346-1046
AD - Section for Sports Traumatology M51, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery M,
Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital,
Nielsine
Nielsens Vej 3, 2400 NV, Copenhagen, Denmark. jensjakobsendk@gmail.com.
FAU - Schjerling, Peter
AU - Schjerling P
AD - Institute of Sports Medicine Copenhagen, Department of Orthopedic Surgery,
Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital,
Copenhagen, Denmark.
AD - Center for Healthy Aging, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of
Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Kjær, Michael
AU - Kjær M
AD - Institute of Sports Medicine Copenhagen, Department of Orthopedic Surgery,
Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital,
Copenhagen, Denmark.
AD - Center for Healthy Aging, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of
Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Mackey, Abigail L
AU - Mackey AL
AD - Institute of Sports Medicine Copenhagen, Department of Orthopedic Surgery,
Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital,
Copenhagen, Denmark.
AD - Center for Healthy Aging, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of
Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
AD - Xlab, Center for Healthy Aging, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of
Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
FAU - Krogsgaard, Michael R
AU - Krogsgaard MR
AD - Section for Sports Traumatology M51, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery M,
Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital,
Nielsine
Nielsens Vej 3, 2400 NV, Copenhagen, Denmark.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220415
PL - Germany
TA - Histochem Cell Biol
JT - Histochemistry and cell biology
JID - 9506663
RN - 0 (Muscle Proteins)
RN - 0 (Nestin)
RN - 0 (OSTN protein, human)
RN - 0 (RNA, Messenger)
RN - 0 (Transcription Factors)
SB - IM
MH - *Exercise/physiology
MH - *Hamstring Muscles
MH - Humans
MH - *Muscle Proteins/genetics
MH - Muscle, Skeletal
MH - Muscles
MH - *Nestin/genetics
MH - RNA, Messenger/genetics
MH - Tendons/physiology
MH - *Transcription Factors/genetics
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Eccentric exercise
OT - Myotendinous junction
OT - Nordic hamstring
OT - Skeletal muscle
OT - mRNA
EDAT- 2022/04/17 06:00
MHDA- 2022/07/06 06:00
CRDT- 2022/04/16 05:28
PHST- 2022/03/20 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/04/17 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/07/06 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/04/16 05:28 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00418-022-02101-4 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00418-022-02101-4 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Histochem Cell Biol. 2022 Jul;158(1):49-64. doi: 10.1007/s00418-022-02101-4.
Epub
2022 Apr 15.
PMID- 23849907
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20150204
LR - 20161020
IS - 1878-1861 (Electronic)
IS - 1878-1861 (Linking)
VI - 17
IP - 4
DP - 2014 Jul
TI - Associations between lower limb muscle activation strategies and resultant
multi-planar knee kinetics during single leg landings.
PG - 408-13
LID - S1440-2440(13)00136-9 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.jsams.2013.05.010 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: Anterior cruciate ligament injury prevention programs purportedly
improve knee joint loading through beneficial modification of lower limb
neuromuscular control strategies and joint biomechanics, but little is known
about how these factors relate during single-legged landings. Thus, we
examined
the relationship between explicit lower limb muscular pre-activity patterns
and
knee joint biomechanics elicited during such landings. DESIGN: Randomized
controlled trial. METHODS: Thirty-five female athletes had 3D knee joint
biomechanics and lower limb EMG data recorded during a series of single-leg
landings. Regression analysis assessed the relationship between pre-activity
of
vastus lateralis, lateral hamstring and rectus femoris with peak knee flexion
angle and moment, and external anterior tibial shear force. Vastus lateralis,
lateral hamstring and vastus lateralis:lateral hasmtring co-contraction
assessed
the relationship with knee abduction angle and moment. RESULTS: Greater
pre-activity of rectus femoris predicted increased peak anterior tibial shear
force (R(2)=0.235, b=2.41 and P=0.003) and reduced knee flexion moment
(R(2)=0.131, b=-0.591, and P=0.032), while greater lateral hamstring
predicted
decreased peak knee flexion angle (R(2)=0.113, b=8.96 and P=0.048). No EMG
pre-activity parameters were predictors (P>0.05) for knee abduction angle and
moment. CONCLUSIONS: Current outcomes suggest reducing reliance on quadriceps
activation may be beneficial during single-legged landings. It also, however,
may
be required for adequate joint stability during such maneuvers. Further
research
is needed to determine if inadequate hamstring activation, rather than
elevated
quadriceps activation, leads to hazardous loading during single-legged
landings.
CI - Copyright © 2013 Sports Medicine Australia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All
rights
reserved.
FAU - Brown, T N
AU - Brown TN
AD - School of Kinesiology, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Electronic
address: tynbrown@umich.edu.
FAU - McLean, S G
AU - McLean SG
AD - School of Kinesiology, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
FAU - Palmieri-Smith, R M
AU - Palmieri-Smith RM
AD - School of Kinesiology, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20130710
PL - Australia
TA - J Sci Med Sport
JT - Journal of science and medicine in sport
JID - 9812598
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Electromyography
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Imaging, Three-Dimensional
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Muscle Contraction/*physiology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/physiology
MH - Rotation
MH - Tibia/physiology
MH - Video Recording
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Biomechanics
OT - EMG
OT - Knee
OT - Muscle activation
OT - Neuromechanics
EDAT- 2013/07/16 06:00
MHDA- 2015/02/05 06:00
CRDT- 2013/07/16 06:00
PHST- 2012/09/07 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2013/03/20 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2013/05/23 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2013/07/16 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/07/16 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2015/02/05 06:00 [medline]
AID - S1440-2440(13)00136-9 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.jsams.2013.05.010 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sci Med Sport. 2014 Jul;17(4):408-13. doi: 10.1016/j.jsams.2013.05.010.
Epub
2013 Jul 10.
PMID- 18193194
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20081007
LR - 20220321
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 16
IP - 3
DP - 2008 Mar
TI - Reconstruction of the ACL with a semitendinosus tendon graft: a prospective
randomized single blinded comparison of double-bundle versus single-bundle
technique in male athletes.
PG - 232-8
LID - 10.1007/s00167-007-0480-z [doi]
AB - Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction in double-bundle technique is
advocated to more closely restore the anatomy and function of the native
ligament
than conventional single-bundle technique. But up to now there are only a few
clinical investigations comparing both techniques in a prospective manner. We
hypothesized that double-bundle ACL reconstruction reveals superior clinical
and
subjective results compared to single-bundle technique in a high-demand
collective. A total of 50 male patients (mean age 29.4 years) were
prospectively
randomized consecutively into one of the two reconstruction techniques. Group
1
(SB) underwent a 4-stranded single-bundle reconstruction with a ST graft in
femoral position at 10:00 and 02:00 o'clock, respectively. In group 2 (DB),
reconstruction was performed by using a 2-stranded ST graft with double-
bundle,
four tunnel technique. Before surgery and at a 2 year follow-up (range 23-25
months) patients were evaluated by the same blinded observer. There was no
significant difference in the side-to-side anterior laxity-measurement with
the
KT-1000 between both groups. As evaluated by the pivot shift, no significant
correlation could be noted (Fisher exact test P = 0.098) between rotational
stability and any of the both reconstruction techniques. However, the
anterior
and rotational stability improved significantly at 2-year follow-up compared
to
preoperatively (P = 0.003) in both groups. The statistical analysis showed a
significant increase for the IKDC (subjective, objective) and the Lysholm
Score
at final follow-up among each single technique, while we found no significant
difference between the two reconstruction methods. On the basis of our
investigation, we conclude that reconstruction of the ACL by a double-bundle
ST
graft with an extracortical anchorage can achieve excellent clinical results.
But
in contrast to our initial hypothesis, we could not quote any significant
advantages by creating two independent bundles. Reconstruction of the
anterior
cruciate ligament in conventional single-bundle technique with a more
horizontal
femoral tunnel placement obtains comparable clinical results in the present
high-demand collective.
FAU - Streich, Nikolaus A
AU - Streich NA
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Sports Medicine, University of Heidelberg,
Schlierbacher Landstrasse 200a, 69118 Heidelberg, Germany.
nikolaus.streich@ok.uni-heidelberg.de
FAU - Friedrich, Kilian
AU - Friedrich K
FAU - Gotterbarm, Tobias
AU - Gotterbarm T
FAU - Schmitt, Holger
AU - Schmitt H
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20080112
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*surgery
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/*methods
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Transplantation, Autologous
MH - Transplants
EDAT- 2008/01/15 09:00
MHDA- 2008/10/08 09:00
CRDT- 2008/01/15 09:00
PHST- 2007/10/19 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2007/12/18 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2008/01/15 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/10/08 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/01/15 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-007-0480-z [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2008 Mar;16(3):232-8. doi:
10.1007/s00167-007-0480-z. Epub 2008 Jan 12.
PMID- 34436635
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220830
LR - 20220830
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 30
IP - 9
DP - 2022 Sep
TI - Increased posterior translation but similar clinical outcomes using
ultracongruent instead of posterior stabilized total knee arthroplasties in a
prospective randomized trial.
PG - 3041-3048
LID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06710-9 [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to compare the posterior tibial
translation
after ultracongruent (UC) and posterior-stabilized (PS) total knee
arthroplasty
(TKA) with two different UC with different heights in the anterior lip, and
two
different PS designs. This study also aimed to compare the range of motion
(ROM)
and outcomes scores after the use of these TKA models. It was hypothesised
less
posterior tibial translation after PS than after UC TKA, and less posterior
tibial translation with a higher anterior lip in the UC insert than with a
lower
one. METHODS: It was designed as a prospective randomized study of a group of
120
patients operated with a cemented TKA. To clarify the main purpose of the
study,
four groups were analysed using different polyethylene designs: Triathlon PS
insert in group one, Triathlon UC insert in group two, U2 PS insert in group
three and U2 UC insert in group four. One year after surgery, a forced
posterior
drawer with a Telos Stress applying 15 kg of force posteriorly on the
proximal
tibia at 90° of knee flexion was analysed in the lateral radiograph. Limb
alignment, tibial posterior slope and posterior condylar offset were also
studied. RESULTS: 30 patients were included in each group. The average age
was
73 years. There were 72.2% female and 27.8% male patients. There were no
significant differences in any demographic or radiographic studied variables,
preoperative range of motion (ROM) or preoperative Knee Society Scores (KSS)
among the different groups. One year after surgery, the average postoperative
ROM
and the postoperative KSS Knee and KSS Function scores improved in respect of
the
preoperative values in all the groups. There were no significant differences
in
the postoperative outcome scores among the different groups (p = n.s.).
Postoperative alignment of the limb, tibial posterior slope and posterior
condylar offset were similar in the 4 study groups (p = n.s.). The
postoperative
posterior tibial translation was different between groups: the PS groups
(groups
1 and 3) showed significant inferior values (p < 0.001) in respect of the UC
groups (groups 2 and 4). There were no differences between both groups of PS
models, but there was a significant increase in the posterior tibial
translation
of the Triathlon UC insert (11.2 mm SD 3.2) in respect of the U2 UC insert
(6.1 mm SD 4.5) (p = 0.004). CONCLUSIONS: UC inserts restrict the posterior
tibial translation after TKA less than PS inserts, but a design with a high
anterior lip in the polyethylene UC insert can better control the posterior
tibial translation than an insert with a small anterior lip. LEVEL OF
EVIDENCE:
Level I. Randomised controlled trial.
CI - © 2021. European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery, Arthroscopy
(ESSKA).
FAU - Hinarejos, Pedro
AU - Hinarejos P
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-7567-1317
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Parc de Salut Mar, Hospital de l'Esperança,
Sant Josep de la Muntanya 12, 08024, Barcelona, Spain.
Phinarejos@parcdesalutmar.cat.
AD - Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Phinarejos@parcdesalutmar.cat.
FAU - Leal-Blanquet, Joan
AU - Leal-Blanquet J
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hospital d'Igualada, Consorci Sanitari de
L'Anoia, Av. Catalunya, 11, 08700, Igualada Barcelona, Spain.
FAU - Fraile-Suari, Anna
AU - Fraile-Suari A
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hospital Sant Camil, Ronda Sant Camil S/N,
08810, Sant Pere de Ribes, Barcelona, Spain.
FAU - Sánchez-Soler, Juan
AU - Sánchez-Soler J
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Parc de Salut Mar, Hospital de l'Esperança,
Sant Josep de la Muntanya 12, 08024, Barcelona, Spain.
FAU - Torres-Claramunt, Raul
AU - Torres-Claramunt R
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Parc de Salut Mar, Hospital de l'Esperança,
Sant Josep de la Muntanya 12, 08024, Barcelona, Spain.
FAU - Monllau, Juan Carlos
AU - Monllau JC
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Parc de Salut Mar, Hospital de l'Esperança,
Sant Josep de la Muntanya 12, 08024, Barcelona, Spain.
AD - Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20210826
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - 9002-88-4 (Polyethylene)
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - *Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint
MH - *Knee Prosthesis
MH - Male
MH - *Osteoarthritis, Knee
MH - Polyethylene
MH - *Posterior Cruciate Ligament
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Prosthesis Design
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Insert
OT - Knee Society Score
OT - Posterior tibial translation
OT - Posterior-stabilized
OT - Total knee arthroplasty
OT - Ultracongruent
EDAT- 2021/08/27 06:00
MHDA- 2022/08/31 06:00
CRDT- 2021/08/26 12:32
PHST- 2021/06/18 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/08/14 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/08/27 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/08/31 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/08/26 12:32 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06710-9 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-021-06710-9 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2022 Sep;30(9):3041-3048. doi:
10.1007/s00167-021-06710-9. Epub 2021 Aug 26.
PMID- 16306502
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20060113
LR - 20220411
IS - 1473-0480 (Electronic)
IS - 0306-3674 (Print)
IS - 0306-3674 (Linking)
VI - 39
IP - 12
DP - 2005 Dec
TI - Neuromuscular and biomechanical characteristic changes in high school
athletes: a
plyometric versus basic resistance program.
PG - 932-8
AB - BACKGROUND: In order to improve neuromuscular and biomechanical
characteristic
deficits in female athletes, numerous injury prevention programs have been
developed and have successfully reduced the number of knee ligament injuries.
However, few have investigated the neuromuscular and biomechanical changes
following these training programs. It is also largely unknown what type of
program is better for improving the landing mechanics of female athletes.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effects of an 8 week plyometric and basic
resistance training program on neuromuscular and biomechanical
characteristics in
female athletes. METHODS: Twenty seven high school female athletes
participated
either in a plyometric or a basic resistance training program. Knee and hip
strength, landing mechanics, and muscle activity were recorded before and
after
the intervention programs. In the jump-landing task, subjects jumped as high
as
they could and landed on both feet. Electromyography (EMG) peak activation
time
and integrated EMG of thigh and hip muscles were recorded prior to
(preactive)
and subsequent to (reactive) foot contact. RESULTS: Both groups improved knee
extensor isokinetic strength and increased initial and peak knee and hip
flexion,
and time to peak knee flexion during the task. The peak preactive EMG of the
gluteus medius and integrated EMG for the gluteus medius during the preactive
and
reactive time periods were significantly greater for both groups.
CONCLUSIONS:
Basic training alone induced favourable neuromuscular and biomechanical
changes
in high school female athletes. The plyometric program may further be
utilised to
improve muscular activation patterns.
FAU - Lephart, S M
AU - Lephart SM
AD - Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA,
USA.
lephart@pitt.edu
FAU - Abt, J P
AU - Abt JP
FAU - Ferris, C M
AU - Ferris CM
FAU - Sell, T C
AU - Sell TC
FAU - Nagai, T
AU - Nagai T
FAU - Myers, J B
AU - Myers JB
FAU - Irrgang, J J
AU - Irrgang JJ
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - England
TA - Br J Sports Med
JT - British journal of sports medicine
JID - 0432520
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*physiology
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena/methods
MH - Electromyography/methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Isometric Contraction/physiology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - *Nervous System Physiological Phenomena
MH - Physical Education and Training/*methods
MH - Sports/*physiology
PMC - PMC1725089
EDAT- 2005/11/25 09:00
MHDA- 2006/01/18 09:00
CRDT- 2005/11/25 09:00
PHST- 2005/11/25 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/01/18 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/11/25 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 39/12/932 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bjsm.2005.019083 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Br J Sports Med. 2005 Dec;39(12):932-8. doi: 10.1136/bjsm.2005.019083.
PMID- 36113984
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230127
LR - 20230601
IS - 1475-5785 (Electronic)
IS - 1353-8047 (Print)
IS - 1353-8047 (Linking)
VI - 29
IP - 1
DP - 2023 Feb
TI - Concussion education for youth athletes using Pre-Game Safety Huddles: a
cluster-randomised controlled trial.
PG - 22-28
LID - 10.1136/ip-2022-044665 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: Determine whether Pre-Game Safety Huddles, a novel and low-
resource
approach to concussion education, increase the expected likelihood of
concussion
reporting for youth athletes. METHODS: A cluster-randomised trial compared
Safety
Huddles to usual care. Safety Huddles bring together athletes and coaches
from
both teams before the start of each game for coaches to briefly affirm the
importance of speaking up if a concussion is suspected. Participants were
athletes from 22 competitive community-based American football and girls and
boys
soccer teams (ages 9-14), and randomisation into intervention or control
occurred
at the level of the bracket (group of teams that compete against each other
during the regular season). The primary outcome was expected likelihood of
reporting concussion symptoms to the coach, measured via validated athlete
survey
at the beginning and end of the season. RESULTS: Of 343 eligible
participants,
339 (99%) completed baseline surveys and 303 (88%) completed surveys at
season
end. The mean (SD) age was 11.4 (1.1) years, 26% were female soccer athletes,
27%
were male soccer athletes and 47% were football athletes. In adjusted
analyses
accounting for baseline values and clustering by sport and team via random
effects, expected likelihood of concussion reporting at the end of the season
was
significantly higher in the intervention group compared to controls (mean
difference=0.49, 95% CI 0.11 to 0.88; Cohen's d=0.35). CONCLUSIONS AND
RELEVANCE:
Pre-Game Safety Huddles increased the expected likelihood of athletes
reporting
concussion symptoms. While further study is warranted, sport organisations
should
consider this approach a promising low-resource option for improving
concussion
safety in their setting. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04099329.
CI - © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and
permissions. Published by BMJ.
FAU - Kroshus, Emily
AU - Kroshus E
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7484-2601
AD - Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine,
Seattle,
Washington, USA ekroshus@u.washington.edu.
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Chrisman, Sara P D
AU - Chrisman SPD
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5373-7223
AD - Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine,
Seattle,
Washington, USA.
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Glang, Ann
AU - Glang A
AD - Center of Brain Injury, Research and Training, University of Oregon, Eugene,
Oregon, USA.
FAU - Hunt, Tamerah
AU - Hunt T
AD - Department of Health Sciences and Kinesiology, Georgia Southern University,
Statesboro, Georgia, USA.
FAU - Hays, Rachel
AU - Hays R
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Lowry, Sarah
AU - Lowry S
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Peterson, Alexis
AU - Peterson A
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-3033-0177
AD - National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease
Control
and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
FAU - Garrett, Kimberly
AU - Garrett K
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Ramshaw, Dane
AU - Ramshaw D
AD - Center of Brain Injury, Research and Training, University of Oregon, Eugene,
Oregon, USA.
FAU - Hafferty, Kiana
AU - Hafferty K
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Kinney, Erin
AU - Kinney E
AD - Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine, Portland, Oregon, USA.
FAU - Manzueta, Maria
AU - Manzueta M
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Steiner, Mary Kathleen
AU - Steiner MK
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Bollinger, Beth J
AU - Bollinger BJ
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
FAU - Chiampas, George
AU - Chiampas G
AD - United States Soccer Federation, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
FAU - Rivara, Frederick P
AU - Rivara FP
AD - Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine,
Seattle,
Washington, USA.
AD - Center for Child Health, Behavior and Development, Seattle Children's
Research
Institute, Seattle, Washington, USA.
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT04099329
GR - U01 CE002880/CE/NCIPC CDC HHS/United States
GR - U01CE002880/ACL/ACL HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
DEP - 20220916
PL - England
TA - Inj Prev
JT - Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and
Adolescent
Injury Prevention
JID - 9510056
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Female
MH - Adolescent
MH - Child
MH - *Athletic Injuries/epidemiology/prevention & control
MH - *Brain Concussion/epidemiology/prevention & control/diagnosis
MH - *Football/injuries
MH - *Soccer/injuries
MH - Athletes
PMC - PMC9877103
MID - NIHMS1839092
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Behavior Change
OT - Concussion
OT - Health Education
OT - Randomized Trial
OT - Recreation / Sports
COIS- Competing interests: None declared.
EDAT- 2022/09/17 06:00
MHDA- 2023/01/28 06:00
CRDT- 2022/09/16 21:13
PHST- 2022/05/28 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/08/21 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/09/17 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/01/28 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/09/16 21:13 [entrez]
AID - ip-2022-044665 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/ip-2022-044665 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Inj Prev. 2023 Feb;29(1):22-28. doi: 10.1136/ip-2022-044665. Epub 2022 Sep
16.
PMID- 22446676
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120810
LR - 20220330
IS - 1533-4287 (Electronic)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 26
IP - 4
DP - 2012 Apr
TI - Modifying spike jump landing biomechanics in female adolescent volleyball
athletes using video and verbal feedback.
PG - 1076-84
LID - 10.1519/JSC.0b013e31822e5876 [doi]
AB - Landing awkwardly from a jump is a common mechanism of injury for the
anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) of the knee. Augmented feedback, such as verbal or
visual
instruction, has been shown to cause an immediate, positive change in landing
biomechanics in a laboratory setting. No data exist on the longer term
effects of
feedback on jump landing biomechanics in a sports-specific setting. The
purpose
of this study was to explore whether providing video and verbal feedback to
adolescent (12-14 years old) female volleyball athletes would improve their
landing technique. Trunk and lower extremity kinematic variables were
measured in
19 participants before a feedback session was provided to the intervention
group
(IG). Follow-up kinematic measurements of the IG were taken immediately
postintervention, and again after 2 and 4 weeks. Two-way repeated measures
analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to compare the IG with a control group
(CG), who received no feedback. The IG (n = 10) demonstrated increased
maximal
hip and trunk flexion compared with the CG (n = 9) at week 4 (p ≤ 0.05). One-
way
repeated measures ANOVA was used to determine if changes were evident within
the
IG over time. Ankle dorsiflexion, right knee and hip flexion, and trunk
flexion
changed significantly (p ≤ 0.05) over the 4-week period. Augmented feedback
appeared to produce a positive change in landing biomechanics in adolescent
female volleyball athletes performing a sports-specific skill. Courtside
video
and verbal feedback may present a relatively simple, cost-effective method of
introducing one component of a comprehensive ACL injury prevention program at
a
young age.
FAU - Parsons, Joanne L
AU - Parsons JL
AD - Applied Health Sciences Program, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba,
Canada. umparso3@cc.umanitoba.ca
FAU - Alexander, Marion J L
AU - Alexander MJ
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Athletes
MH - Biofeedback, Psychology/*methods
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Child
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Lower Extremity/physiology
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - *Video Recording
MH - Volleyball/*physiology
EDAT- 2012/03/27 06:00
MHDA- 2012/08/11 06:00
CRDT- 2012/03/27 06:00
PHST- 2012/03/27 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/03/27 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/08/11 06:00 [medline]
AID - 00124278-201204000-00027 [pii]
AID - 10.1519/JSC.0b013e31822e5876 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2012 Apr;26(4):1076-84. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0b013e31822e5876.
PMID- 19545453
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090821
LR - 20220331
IS - 1471-2474 (Electronic)
IS - 1471-2474 (Linking)
VI - 10
DP - 2009 Jun 23
TI - Preventing knee injuries in adolescent female football players - design of a
cluster randomized controlled trial [NCT00894595].
PG - 75
LID - 10.1186/1471-2474-10-75 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Knee injuries in football are common regardless of age, gender or
playing level, but adolescent females seem to have the highest risk. The
consequences after severe knee injury, for example anterior cruciate ligament
(ACL) injury, are well-known, but less is known about knee injury prevention.
We
have designed a cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the
effect
of a warm-up program aimed at preventing acute knee injury in adolescent
female
football. METHODS: In this cluster randomized trial 516 teams (309 clusters)
in
eight regional football districts in Sweden with female players aged 13-17
years
were randomized into an intervention group (260 teams) or a control group
(256
teams). The teams in the intervention group were instructed to do a
structured
warm-up program at two training sessions per week throughout the 2009
competitive
season (April to October) and those in the control group were informed to
train
and play as usual. Sixty-eight sports physical therapists are assigned to the
clubs to assist both groups in data collection and to examine the players'
acute
knee injuries during the study period. Three different forms are used in the
trial: (1) baseline player data form collected at the start of the trial, (2)
computer-based registration form collected every month, on which one of the
coaches/team leaders documents individual player exposure, and (3) injury
report
form on which the study therapists report acute knee injuries resulting in
time
loss from training or match play. The primary outcome is the incidence of ACL
injury and the secondary outcomes are the incidence of any acute knee injury
(except contusion) and incidence of severe knee injury (defined as injury
resulting in absence of more than 4 weeks). Outcome measures are assessed
after
the end of the 2009 season. DISCUSSION: Prevention of knee injury is
beneficial
for players, clubs, insurance companies, and society. If the warm-up program
is
proven to be effective in reducing the incidence of knee injury, it can have
a
major impact by reducing the future knee injury burden in female football as
well
as the negative long-term disabilities associated with knee injury. TRIAL
REGISTRATION: NCT00894595.
FAU - Hägglund, Martin
AU - Hägglund M
AD - Department of Medical and Health Sciences, Linköping University, 581 83
Linköping, Sweden. martin.hagglund@liu.se
FAU - Waldén, Markus
AU - Waldén M
FAU - Atroshi, Isam
AU - Atroshi I
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT00894595
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20090623
PL - England
TA - BMC Musculoskelet Disord
JT - BMC musculoskeletal disorders
JID - 100968565
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Age Distribution
MH - Age Factors
MH - Athletic Injuries/epidemiology/*prevention & control
MH - Cluster Analysis
MH - Exercise/physiology
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/epidemiology/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/anatomy & histology/physiology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/anatomy & histology/physiology
MH - Outcome Assessment, Health Care/methods
MH - Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic/*methods
MH - Research Design/standards
MH - Sex Characteristics
MH - Sex Distribution
MH - Sex Factors
MH - Soccer/*standards
MH - Sweden/epidemiology
MH - Treatment Outcome
PMC - PMC2711921
EDAT- 2009/06/24 09:00
MHDA- 2009/08/22 09:00
CRDT- 2009/06/24 09:00
PHST- 2009/06/05 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2009/06/23 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2009/06/24 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/06/24 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/08/22 09:00 [medline]
AID - 1471-2474-10-75 [pii]
AID - 10.1186/1471-2474-10-75 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2009 Jun 23;10:75. doi: 10.1186/1471-2474-10-75.
PMID- 28799030
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180720
LR - 20220409
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 26
IP - 3
DP - 2018 Mar
TI - Transfer of improved movement technique after receiving verbal external focus
and
video instruction.
PG - 955-962
LID - 10.1007/s00167-017-4671-y [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: It is unknown how movement patterns that are learned carry over to
the
field. The objective was to determine whether training during a jump-landing
task
would transfer to lower extremity kinematics and kinetics during sidestep
cutting. METHODS: Forty healthy athletes were assigned to the verbal internal
focus (IF, n = 10), verbal external focus (EF, n = 10), video (VI, n = 10) or
control (CTRL, n = 10) group. A jump-landing task was performed as baseline
followed by training blocks (TR1 and TR2) and a post-test. Group-specific
instructions were given in TR1 and TR2. In addition, participants in the IF,
EF
and VI groups were free to ask for feedback after every jump during TR1 and
TR2.
Retention was tested after 1 week. Transfer of learned skill was determined
by
having participants perform a 45° unanticipated sidestep cutting task. 3D
hip,
knee and ankle kinematics and kinetics were the main outcome measures.
RESULTS:
During sidestep cutting, the VI group showed greater hip flexion ROM compared
to
the EF and IF groups (p < 0.001). The EF (p < 0.036) and VI (p < 0.004)
groups
had greater knee flexion ROM compared to the IF group. CONCLUSIONS: Improved
jump-landing technique carried over to sidestep cutting when stimulating an
external attentional focus combined with self-controlled feedback. Transfer
to
more sport-specific skills may demonstrate potential to reduce injuries on
the
field. Clinicians and practitioners are encouraged to apply instructions that
stimulate an external focus of attention, of which visual instructions seem
to be
very powerful. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II.
FAU - Benjaminse, Anne
AU - Benjaminse A
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands. a.benjaminse@umcg.nl.
AD - School of Sport Studies, Hanze University Groningen, Zernikeplein 17, 9747
AS,
Groningen, The Netherlands. a.benjaminse@umcg.nl.
FAU - Welling, Wouter
AU - Welling W
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands.
AD - Medisch Centrum Zuid, Sportlaan 2-1, 9728 PH, Groningen, The Netherlands.
FAU - Otten, Bert
AU - Otten B
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands.
FAU - Gokeler, Alli
AU - Gokeler A
AD - Center for Human Movement Science, University Medical Center Groningen,
University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The
Netherlands.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20170810
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Athletes/*psychology
MH - Biofeedback, Psychology
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/*methods
MH - Exercise Test/methods/*psychology
MH - Female
MH - Healthy Volunteers
MH - Humans
MH - Knowledge of Results, Psychological
MH - Learning
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - *Movement/physiology
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Retention, Psychology
MH - *Task Performance and Analysis
MH - Video Recording
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC5847206
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Motor learning
OT - Movement technique
OT - Self-controlled feedback
OT - Transfer
COIS- CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have no conflicts of interest that are
directly
relevant to the content of this article. FUNDING: No financial assistance has
been received for this project. ETHICAL APPROVAL: All procedures performed in
studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical
standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with
the
1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical
standards.
EDAT- 2017/08/12 06:00
MHDA- 2018/07/22 06:00
CRDT- 2017/08/12 06:00
PHST- 2017/01/26 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/08/01 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/08/12 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/07/22 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2017/08/12 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-017-4671-y [pii]
AID - 4671 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-017-4671-y [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2018 Mar;26(3):955-962. doi:
10.1007/s00167-017-4671-y. Epub 2017 Aug 10.
PMID- 23371471
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20130823
LR - 20220411
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Print)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 41
IP - 3
DP - 2013 Mar
TI - Augmented feedback supports skill transfer and reduces high-risk injury
landing
mechanics: a double-blind, randomized controlled laboratory study.
PG - 669-77
LID - 10.1177/0363546512472977 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: There is a current need to produce a simple, yet effective method
for
screening and targeting possible deficiencies related to increased anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) injury risk. HYPOTHESIS: Frontal plane knee angle
(FPKA)
during a drop vertical jump will decrease upon implementing augmented
feedback
into a standardized sport training program. STUDY DESIGN: Controlled
laboratory
study. METHODS: Thirty-seven female participants (mean ± SD: age, 14.7 ± 1.5
years; height, 160.9 ± 6.8 cm; weight, 54.5 ± 7.2 kg) were trained over 8
weeks.
During each session, each participant received standardized training
consisting
of strength training, plyometrics, and conditioning. They were also
videotaped
running on a treadmill at a standardized speed and performing a repeated tuck
jump for 10 seconds. Study participants were randomized into 2 groups and
received augmented feedback on either their jumping (AF) or sprinting (CTRL)
form. Average (mean of 3 trials) and most extreme (trial with greatest knee
abduction) FPKA were calculated from 2-dimensional video captured during
performance of the drop vertical jump. RESULTS: After testing, a main effect
of
time was noted, with the AF group reducing their FPKA average by 37.9% over
the 3
trials while the CTRL group demonstrated a 26.7% reduction average across the
3
trials (P < .05). Conversely, in the most extreme drop vertical jump trial, a
significant time-by-group interaction was noted (P < .05). The AF group
reduced
their most extreme FPKA by 6.9° (pretest, 18.4° ± 12.3°; posttest, 11.4° ±
10.1°)
on their right leg and 6.5° (pretest, 16.3° ± 14.5°; posttest, 9.8° ± 10.7°)
on
their left leg, which represented a 37.7% and 40.1% reduction in FPKA,
respectively. In the CTRL group, no similar changes were noted in the right
(pretest, 16.9° ± 14.3°; posttest, 14.0° ± 12.3°) or left leg (pretest, 9.8°
±
11.1°; posttest, 7.2° ± 9.2°) after training. CONCLUSION: Providing athletes
with
augmented feedback on deficits identified by the tuck jump assessment has a
positive effect on their biomechanics during a different drop vertical jump
task
that is related to increased ACL injury risk. The ability of the augmented
feedback to support the transfer of skills and injury risk factor reductions
across different tasks provides exciting new evidence related to how
neuromuscular training may ultimately cross over into retained biomechanics
that
reduce ACL injuries during sport. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The tuck jump
assessment's
ease of use makes it a timely and economically favorable method to support
ACL
prevention strategies in young girls.
FAU - Myer, Gregory D
AU - Myer GD
AD - Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA.
greg.myer@cchmc.org
FAU - Stroube, Benjamin W
AU - Stroube BW
FAU - DiCesare, Christopher A
AU - DiCesare CA
FAU - Brent, Jensen L
AU - Brent JL
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
FAU - Heidt, Robert S Jr
AU - Heidt RS Jr
FAU - Hewett, Timothy E
AU - Hewett TE
LA - eng
GR - R01 AR049735/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01-AR055563/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01 AR055563/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01-AR049735/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01-AR056259/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01 AR056259/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20130131
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - *Feedback
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - *Physical Education and Training
MH - Video Recording
PMC - PMC4166501
MID - NIHMS623712
EDAT- 2013/02/02 06:00
MHDA- 2013/08/24 06:00
CRDT- 2013/02/02 06:00
PHST- 2013/02/02 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/02/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2013/08/24 06:00 [medline]
AID - 0363546512472977 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546512472977 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2013 Mar;41(3):669-77. doi: 10.1177/0363546512472977. Epub
2013
Jan 31.
PMID- 19561368
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090804
LR - 20220410
IS - 1056-6716 (Print)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 2
DP - 2009 May
TI - Psychological benefits of virtual reality for patients in rehabilitation
therapy.
PG - 258-68
AB - CONTEXT: Whether virtual rehabilitation is beneficial has not been
determined.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the psychological benefits of virtual reality in
rehabilitation. DESIGN: An experimental group underwent therapy with a
virtual-reality-based exercise bike, and a control group underwent the
therapy
without virtual-reality equipment. SETTING: Hospital laboratory. PATIENTS: 30
patients suffering from spinal-cord injury. INTERVENTION: A designed
rehabilitation therapy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Endurance, Borg's
rating-of-perceived-exertion scale, the Activation-Deactivation Adjective
Check
List (AD-ACL), and the Simulator Sickness Questionnaire. RESULTS: The
differences
between the experimental and control groups were significant for AD-ACL
calmness
and tension. CONCLUSION: A virtual-reality-based rehabilitation program can
ease
patients' tension and induce calm.
FAU - Chen, Chih-Hung
AU - Chen CH
AD - Department of Mechanical Engineering, National Central University, Chung-Li
32054, Taiwan.
FAU - Jeng, Ming-Chang
AU - Jeng MC
FAU - Fung, Chin-Ping
AU - Fung CP
FAU - Doong, Ji-Liang
AU - Doong JL
FAU - Chuang, Tien-Yow
AU - Chuang TY
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Aged
MH - Aged, 80 and over
MH - *Bicycling
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Physical Endurance
MH - Spinal Cord Injuries/*psychology/*rehabilitation
MH - *Therapy, Computer-Assisted
MH - *User-Computer Interface
EDAT- 2009/06/30 09:00
MHDA- 2009/08/06 09:00
CRDT- 2009/06/30 09:00
PHST- 2009/06/30 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/06/30 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/08/06 09:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.18.2.258 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2009 May;18(2):258-68. doi: 10.1123/jsr.18.2.258.
PMID- 23238301
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20130829
LR - 20220330
IS - 1543-3072 (Electronic)
IS - 1056-6716 (Print)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 22
IP - 1
DP - 2013 Feb
TI - Effects of task-specific augmented feedback on deficit modification during
performance of the tuck-jump exercise.
PG - 7-18
AB - CONTEXT: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are prevalent in female
athletes. Specific factors have possible links to increasing a female
athlete's
chances of suffering an ACL injury. However, it is unclear if augmented
feedback
may be able to decrease possible risk factors. OBJECTIVE: To compare the
effects
of task-specific feedback on a repeated tuck-jump maneuver. DESIGN: Double-
blind
randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Sports-medicine biodynamics center.
PATIENTS: 37 female subjects (14.7 ± 1.5 y, 160.9 ± 6.8 cm, 54.5 ± 7.2 kg).
INTERVENTION: All athletes received standard off-season training consisting
of
strength training, plyometrics, and conditioning. They were also videotaped
during each session while running on a treadmill at a standardized speed (8
miles/h) and while performing a repeated tuck-jump maneuver for 10 s. The
augmented feedback group (AF) received feedback on deficiencies present in a
10-s
tuck jump, while the control group (CTRL) received feedback on 10-s treadmill
running. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Outcome measurements of tuck-jump deficits
were
scored by a blinded rater to determine the effects of group (CTRL vs AF) and
time
(pre- vs posttesting) on changes in measured deficits. RESULTS: A significant
interaction of time by group was noted with the task-specific feedback
training
(P = .03). The AF group reduced deficits measured during the tuck-jump
assessment
by 23.6%, while the CTRL training reduced deficits by 10.6%. CONCLUSIONS: The
results of the current study indicate that task-specific feedback is
effective
for reducing biomechanical risk factors associated with ACL injury. The data
also
indicate that specific components of the tuck-jump assessment are potentially
more modifiable than others.
FAU - Stroube, Benjamin W
AU - Stroube BW
AD - Div of Sports Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
FAU - Myer, Gregory D
AU - Myer GD
FAU - Brent, Jensen L
AU - Brent JL
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
FAU - Heidt, Robert S Jr
AU - Heidt RS Jr
FAU - Hewett, Timothy E
AU - Hewett TE
LA - eng
GR - R01-AR05563/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01 AR049735/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01 AR055563/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01-AR049735/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01-AR056259/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
GR - R01 AR056259/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
DEP - 20121211
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena/physiology
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Exercise Test/methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Psychomotor Performance/*physiology
MH - Risk Assessment
MH - United States
MH - *Video Recording
PMC - PMC4168972
MID - NIHMS627257
EDAT- 2012/12/15 06:00
MHDA- 2013/08/30 06:00
CRDT- 2012/12/15 06:00
PHST- 2012/12/15 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/12/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2013/08/30 06:00 [medline]
AID - 2012-0031 [pii]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.22.1.7 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2013 Feb;22(1):7-18. doi: 10.1123/jsr.22.1.7. Epub 2012 Dec
11.
PMID- 22344064
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120912
LR - 20161125
IS - 1533-4287 (Electronic)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 26
IP - 5
DP - 2012 May
TI - The effect of short-term resistance training on hip and knee kinematics
during
vertical drop jumps.
PG - 1257-64
LID - 10.1519/JSC.0b013e31824f2386 [doi]
AB - The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of a weight-bearing
free
weight resistance training program alone on knee flexion, hip flexion, and
knee
valgus during unilateral and bilateral drop jump tasks. Twenty-nine young
adult
females with previous athletic experience were randomly divided into a
control (n
= 16) and a resistance training (n = 13) groups. The resistance training
group
completed 8 weeks of lower extremity, weight-bearing exercises using free
weights, whereas the control group did not train. A pre- and posttest was
conducted to measure knee valgus, knee flexion, and hip flexion during
unilateral
(30 cm) and bilateral (60 cm) vertical drop jumps for maximum height. Joint
angles were determined using 3-dimensional electromagnetic tracking sensors
(MotionMonitor; Innovative Sports Training, Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). Initial
training intensity for the bilateral squat was 50% of the subject's 1
repetition
maximum (RM), which increased 5% each week to 85% during the final week. Sets
and
repetitions ranged from 2 to 4 and from 4 to 12, respectively. The training
loads
for all other exercises (lunge, step-up, unilateral squat, and Romanian
deadlift)
increased from 15RM to 6RM from the initial to the final week. A repeated
measures analysis of variance was used to determine differences in the hip
and
knee joint angles. No significant differences for knee valgus and hip flexion
measures were found between the groups after training; however, knee flexion
angle significantly increased in the training group from the pretest (77.2 ±
4.1°) to posttest (83.2 ± 3.7°) during the bilateral drop jump. No
significant
changes occurred during the unilateral drop jump. Bilateral measures for knee
flexion, hip flexion, and knee valgus were significantly (p < 0.05) greater
than
the unilateral measures during the drop jump task, which indicate an
increased
risk for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury during unilateral drop
jumps.
The data support that the strength and conditioning specialist can implement
resistance training alone during a short-term training period to reduce the
risk
of ACL injury by increasing knee flexion during a bilateral drop jump task.
Increased knee flexion angles after resistance training may indicate a
reduced
risk for knee injury from improved neuromuscular control, resulting in a
softer
landing.
FAU - McCurdy, Kevin
AU - McCurdy K
AD - Department of Health and Human Performance, Texas State University, San
Marcos,
Texas, USA. km55@txstate.edu
FAU - Walker, John
AU - Walker J
FAU - Saxe, Joseph
AU - Saxe J
FAU - Woods, Jonathan
AU - Woods J
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Hip Joint/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - *Resistance Training
MH - Time Factors
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2012/02/22 06:00
MHDA- 2012/09/13 06:00
CRDT- 2012/02/21 06:00
PHST- 2012/02/21 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/02/22 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/09/13 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1519/JSC.0b013e31824f2386 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2012 May;26(5):1257-64. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0b013e31824f2386.
PMID- 28162913
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180305
LR - 20180305
IS - 1878-1861 (Electronic)
IS - 1878-1861 (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 9
DP - 2017 Sep
TI - Coach-led preventive training program in youth soccer players improves
movement
technique.
PG - 861-866
LID - S1440-2440(17)30265-7 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.jsams.2017.01.235 [doi]
AB - Long-term implementation of preventive training programs (PTP) in youth sport
requires coach involvement. However, the optimal training of coaches to
effectively implement a PTP remains unknown. It is also unknown if the
benefits
of PTP can be enhanced with multiple sport seasons of exposure. OBJECTIVES:
To
evaluate the influence of prior PTP exposure on movement technique in youth
soccer players after completing a coach-led PTP. DESIGN: Cluster-randomized
controlled trial. METHODS: Twelve youth soccer teams (n=89; age range 8-14
years)
were divided into groups with (Experience (EXP); 6 teams [n=18 females, n=25
males]) and without (Novice (NOV); 6 teams [n=30 females, n=16 males])
previous
professional-led PTP experience. The coaches and players of the EXP teams
were
exposed to an eight-week professional-led PTP before the coach-led PTP. EXP
and
NOV coaches attended the educational workshop prior to implementing the
coach-led
PTP. The Landing Error Scoring System (LESS) was used to evaluate movement
technique. RESULTS: Both groups improved LESS scores over time (mean
difference±SD [post-pre]=-0.8±0.2, 95%CI [-1.2, -0.4], p=0.0001). Of the 64
participants classified as high risk for injury (LESS ≥5) prior to PTP
implementation, a greater proportion of EXP (n=14) compared to NOV (n=7)
participants changed risk classification from high to low (LESSΔ≥1 and LESS
<5;
p=0.03). CONCLUSIONS: Our PTP enhanced movement technique regardless of PTP
experience, but the benefits of the PTP impacted a proportionally greater
number
of players with previous PTP experience supporting continued PTP
implementation.
Coaches effectively implemented an exercise-based PTP after attending a
training
workshop regardless of previous PTP experience.
CI - Copyright © 2017 Sports Medicine Australia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All
rights
reserved.
FAU - Pryor, J Luke
AU - Pryor JL
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, USA; Department of
Kinesiology, California State University, Fresno, USA. Electronic address:
lukepryor@csufresno.edu.
FAU - Root, Hayley J
AU - Root HJ
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, USA.
FAU - Vandermark, Lesley W
AU - Vandermark LW
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, USA.
FAU - Pryor, Riana R
AU - Pryor RR
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, USA; Department of
Kinesiology, California State University, Fresno, USA.
FAU - Martinez, Jessica C
AU - Martinez JC
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, USA.
FAU - Trojian, Thomas H
AU - Trojian TH
AD - College of Medicine, Drexel University, USA.
FAU - Denegar, Craig R
AU - Denegar CR
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, USA.
FAU - DiStefano, Lindsay J
AU - DiStefano LJ
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20170124
PL - Australia
TA - J Sci Med Sport
JT - Journal of science and medicine in sport
JID - 9812598
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Athletes
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Child
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Mentoring
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods
MH - Soccer/*injuries/physiology
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - Injury prevention
OT - Landing Error Scoring System
OT - Pediatric sports medicine
EDAT- 2017/02/07 06:00
MHDA- 2018/03/06 06:00
CRDT- 2017/02/07 06:00
PHST- 2016/05/19 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2016/12/06 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2017/01/02 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/02/07 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/03/06 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2017/02/07 06:00 [entrez]
AID - S1440-2440(17)30265-7 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.jsams.2017.01.235 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sci Med Sport. 2017 Sep;20(9):861-866. doi: 10.1016/j.jsams.2017.01.235.
Epub
2017 Jan 24.
PMID- 12544159
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20030516
LR - 20191106
IS - 1050-642X (Print)
IS - 1050-642X (Linking)
VI - 13
IP - 1
DP - 2003 Jan
TI - The effects of home interferential therapy on post-operative pain, edema, and
range of motion of the knee.
PG - 16-20
AB - OBJECTIVE: We studied the effects of home interferential current therapy
(IFC) on
postoperative pain, range of motion, and edema in subjects undergoing
anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction, menisectomy, or knee chondroplasty.
DESIGN: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled prospective study.
SETTING:
A tertiary care outpatient orthopaedic clinic/ambulatory surgery center.
SUBJECTS
OR PARTICIPANTS: Eighty-seven subjects were separated into three groups based
on
their type of knee surgery and within each group randomized into a treatment
or
placebo group. INTERVENTIONS: All subjects received home IFC units. Subjects
randomized to treatment group received a working IFC unit. Placebo subjects
received units that were previously set to deliver no current. MAIN OUTCOME
MEASUREMENTS: Post-operative edema at 24, 48, and 72 hours, and weeks 1-8;
range
of motion at 1, 3, 6, and 9 weeks; pain immediately after surgery, at 24, 48,
and
72 hours, and weeks 1-7; and amount of pain medication taken at days 1-10
were
compared between treatment and placebo groups. RESULTS: All IFC subjects
reported
significantly less pain and had significantly greater range of motion at all
post-operative time points. ACL and menisectomy IFC subjects experienced
significantly less edema at all time points, while chondroplasty subjects
experienced significantly less edema until 4 weeks postoperatively.
CONCLUSIONS:
These findings indicate that home IFC may help reduce pain, pain medication
taken, and swelling while increasing range of motion in patients undergoing
knee
surgery. This could result in quicker return to activities of daily living
and
athletic activities.
FAU - Jarit, Gregg J
AU - Jarit GJ
AD - Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic, Los Angeles, California 90045, USA.
FAU - Mohr, Karen J
AU - Mohr KJ
FAU - Waller, Robert
AU - Waller R
FAU - Glousman, Ronald E
AU - Glousman RE
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Clin J Sport Med
JT - Clinical journal of sport medicine : official journal of the Canadian Academy
of
Sport Medicine
JID - 9103300
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Edema/*prevention & control
MH - *Electric Stimulation Therapy
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/surgery
MH - *Knee Joint/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Menisci, Tibial/surgery
MH - *Orthopedic Procedures
MH - Pain, Postoperative/*prevention & control
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - *Range of Motion, Articular
EDAT- 2003/01/25 04:00
MHDA- 2003/05/17 05:00
CRDT- 2003/01/25 04:00
PHST- 2003/01/25 04:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2003/05/17 05:00 [medline]
PHST- 2003/01/25 04:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1097/00042752-200301000-00004 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin J Sport Med. 2003 Jan;13(1):16-20. doi: 10.1097/00042752-200301000-
00004.
PMID- 31629326
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20210526
LR - 20210526
IS - 1543-3072 (Electronic)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 29
IP - 6
DP - 2020 Aug 1
TI - Effect of the FIFA 11+ on Landing Patterns and Baseline Movement Errors in
Elite
Male Youth Soccer Players.
PG -730-737
LID -jsr.2018-0374 [pii]
LID -10.1123/jsr.2018-0374 [doi]
AB -CONTEXT: There is no evidence regarding the effect of the FIFA 11+ on landing
kinematics in male soccer players, and few studies exist regarding the
evaluating
progress of interventions based on the initial biomechanical profile.
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the effect of the FIFA 11+ program on landing patterns in
soccer
players classified as at low or high risk for noncontact anterior cruciate
ligament injuries. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Field-based
functional movement screening performed at the soccer field. PARTICIPANTS: A
total of 24 elite male youth soccer players participated in this study.
INTERVENTION: The intervention group performed the FIFA 11+ program 3 times
per
week for 8 weeks, whereas the control group performed their regular warm-up
program. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Before and after the intervention, all
participants were assessed for landing mechanics using the Landing Error
Scoring
System. Pretraining Landing Error Scoring System scores were used to
determine
risk groups. RESULTS: The FIFA 11+ group had greater improvement than the
control
group in terms of improving the landing pattern; there was a significant
intergroup difference (F1,20 = 28.86, P < .001, ηp2=.591). Soccer players
categorized as being at high risk displayed greater improvement from the FIFA
11+
program than those at low risk (P = .03). However, there was no significant
difference in the proportion of risk category following the routine warm-up
program (P = 1.000). CONCLUSIONS: The present study provides evidence of the
usefulness of the FIFA 11+ program for reducing risk factors associated with
noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries. The authors' results also
suggest
that soccer players with the higher risk profile would benefit more than
those
with lower risk profiles and that targeting them may improve the efficacy of
the
FIFA 11+ program.
FAU - Akbari, Hadi
AU - Akbari H
FAU - Sahebozamani, Mansour
AU - Sahebozamani M
FAU - Daneshjoo, Ablolhamid
AU - Daneshjoo A
FAU - Amiri-Khorasani, Mohammadtaghi
AU - Amiri-Khorasani M
FAU - Shimokochi, Yohei
AU - Shimokochi Y
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20191018
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - *Soccer
MH - *Warm-Up Exercise
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Landing Error Scoring System
OT - anterior cruciate ligament injury
OT - landing biomechanics
OT - risk profile
OT - warm-up program
EDAT- 2019/10/20 06:00
MHDA- 2021/05/27 06:00
CRDT- 2019/10/20 06:00
PHST- 2018/10/09 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2019/05/15 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2019/05/20 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2019/10/20 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2021/05/27 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2019/10/20 06:00 [entrez]
AID - jsr.2018-0374 [pii]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.2018-0374 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2019 Oct 18;29(6):730-737. doi: 10.1123/jsr.2018-0374. Print
2020 Aug 1.
PMID- 35499093
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230426
LR - 20230513
IS - 1941-0921 (Electronic)
IS - 1941-7381 (Print)
IS - 1941-0921 (Linking)
VI - 15
IP - 3
DP - 2023 May
TI - A Controlled Trial of the Effects of Neuromuscular Training on Physical
Performance in Male and Female High School Athletes.
PG - 386-396
LID - 10.1177/19417381221089917 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Neuromuscular training (NMT) has demonstrated efficacy as an
intervention to decrease the risk of anterior cruciate ligament injuries and
improve sports performance. The effect of this training on the mechanisms
that
contribute to improved physical performance has not been well defined.
HYPOTHESIS: Athletes in the NMT group will have better mechanisms of
fundamental
movements and agility tests that may contribute to improved sports
performance.
STUDY DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level 2. METHODS:
Eight high school teams (111 athletes, 53% male, mean age 16 years)
participated,
with half performing NMT. Physical performance was measured using the dorsaVi
ViPerform system, a US Food and Drug Administration-cleared wireless sensor
system. Agility was assessed using a timed 3-cone test. Independent sample t
tests were used to compare differences between the intervention and control
groups. RESULTS: Matched pre- and postseason data were collected from 74
athletes
after excluding athletes with injury and those lost to follow-up. Significant
improvements were observed in the NMT group for loading/landing speed ratios
during a single-leg hop test (right lower extremity = -0.19 [-0.37, 0.03], P
=
0.03 and left lower extremity = -0.27 [-0.50, -0.03], P = 0.03). The control
group had lower ground reaction forces compared with the NMT group (P <
0.02),
while significant improvements were found in the NMT group for initial peak
acceleration (P < 0.02) and cadence (P = 0.01) during a straight-line
acceleration/deceleration test. For the 3-cone agility test, the postseason
time
decreased compared with preseason in the NMT group, whereas the time for the
control group increased (-0.37 s vs 0.14 s, P < 0.00). CONCLUSION: The
results
demonstrate that NMT administered by sports medicine clinicians can
significantly
improve some physical performance of fundamental movements in high school
athletes. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Coaches should be trained to effectively
deliver
NMT in order to improve sports performance.
FAU - Ling, Daphne I
AU - Ling DI
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-4415-2471
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York.
AD - Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medical College, New
York.
FAU - Janosky, Joseph
AU - Janosky J
AD - Sports Safety Program, Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special
Surgery,
New York.
FAU - Schneider, Brandon
AU - Schneider B
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York.
FAU - Russomano, James
AU - Russomano J
FAU - Boyle, Caroline
AU - Boyle C
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York.
FAU - Kinderknecht, James
AU - Kinderknecht J
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York.
FAU - Marx, Robert G
AU - Marx RG
AD - Sports Medicine Institute, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York.
AD - Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220501
PL - United States
TA - Sports Health
JT - Sports health
JID - 101518422
SB - IM
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Female
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Athletic Injuries
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Athletes
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Lower Extremity
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
PMC - PMC10170228
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - ACL
OT - biomechanics
OT - injury prevention
OT - neuromuscular training
COIS- The following authors declared potential conflicts of interest: R.G.M.
received
personal fees support from Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Journal of Bone
and
Joint Surgery Evidence Based Orthopedics, Springer and Demos Health, and
Mend.
EDAT- 2022/05/03 06:00
MHDA- 2023/04/26 06:41
CRDT- 2022/05/02 07:18
PHST- 2023/04/26 06:41 [medline]
PHST- 2022/05/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/05/02 07:18 [entrez]
AID - 10.1177_19417381221089917 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/19417381221089917 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Sports Health. 2023 May;15(3):386-396. doi: 10.1177/19417381221089917. Epub
2022
May 1.
PMID- 21253706
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110922
LR - 20221207
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 5
DP - 2011 May
TI - The use of a non-benzodiazepine hypnotic sleep-aid (Zolpidem) in patients
undergoing ACL reconstruction: a randomized controlled clinical trial.
PG - 787-91
LID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1368-x [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: Previous studies have addressed post-operative pain management after
ACL
reconstruction by examining the use of intra-articular analgesia and/or
modification of anesthesia techniques. To our knowledge, however, no previous
studies have evaluated the effect of zolpidem on post-operative narcotic
requirements, pain, and fatigue in patients undergoing outpatient
arthroscopic
ACL reconstruction. The purpose of this prospective, blinded, randomized,
controlled clinical study was to evaluate the effect of zolpidem on
post-operative narcotic requirements, pain, and fatigue in patients
undergoing
outpatient arthroscopic ACL reconstruction. METHODS: Twenty-nine patients
undergoing arthroscopic ACL reconstruction were randomized to a treatment
group
or placebo group. Both groups received post-operative
hydrocodone/acetaminophen
bitartrate (Vicodin ES). Patients in the treatment group received a single
dose
of zolpidem for the first seven post-operative nights. Patients in the
placebo
group received a gelatin capsule similar in appearance to zolpidem. The
amount of
Vicodin used in each group, the amount of post-operative pain, and the amount
of
post-operative fatigue were analyzed. RESULTS: Following ACL reconstruction,
a
28% reduction was seen in the total amount of narcotic consumed with zolpidem
(P = 0.047) when compared to placebo. There were no significant differences
in
post-operative pain or fatigue levels between zolpidem and placebo.
CONCLUSION:
Adding zolpidem to the post-operative medication regimen after arthroscopic
ACL
reconstruction helps to lower the amount of narcotic pain medication required
for
adequate analgesia. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Randomized controlled clinical trial,
Level I.
FAU - Tompkins, Marc
AU - Tompkins M
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Alpert Brown Medical School/Rhode Island
Hospital,
593 Eddy Street, Providence, RI 02903, USA. tompkinsm@hotmail.com
FAU - Plante, Matthew
AU - Plante M
FAU - Monchik, Keith
AU - Monchik K
FAU - Fleming, Braden
AU - Fleming B
FAU - Fadale, Paul
AU - Fadale P
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20110121
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - 0 (Analgesics, Opioid)
RN - 0 (Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal)
RN - 0 (Drug Combinations)
RN - 0 (Hypnotics and Sedatives)
RN - 0 (Placebos)
RN - 0 (Pyridines)
RN - 0 (acetaminophen, hydrocodone drug combination)
RN - 362O9ITL9D (Acetaminophen)
RN - 6YKS4Y3WQ7 (Hydrocodone)
RN - 7K383OQI23 (Zolpidem)
RN - WK2XYI10QM (Ibuprofen)
SB - IM
MH - Acetaminophen/*administration & dosage
MH - Adult
MH - Analgesics, Opioid/*administration & dosage
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/*administration & dosage
MH - Arthroscopy
MH - Drug Combinations
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Hydrocodone/*administration & dosage
MH - Hypnotics and Sedatives/*therapeutic use
MH - Ibuprofen/*administration & dosage
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Pain Measurement
MH - Pain, Postoperative/*prevention & control
MH - Placebos
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Pyridines/*therapeutic use
MH - *Plastic Surgery Procedures
MH - Surveys and Questionnaires
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Zolpidem
EDAT- 2011/01/22 06:00
MHDA- 2011/09/23 06:00
CRDT- 2011/01/22 06:00
PHST- 2010/10/10 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2010/12/13 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2011/01/22 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/01/22 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/09/23 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1368-x [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2011 May;19(5):787-91. doi:
10.1007/s00167-010-1368-x. Epub 2011 Jan 21.
PMID- 20668835
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110624
LR - 20221207
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 3
DP - 2011 Mar
TI - Single-bundle patellar tendon versus non-anatomical double-bundle hamstrings
ACL
reconstruction: a prospective randomized study at 8-year minimum follow-up.
PG - 390-7
LID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1225-y [doi]
AB - PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to compare subjective, objective and
radiographic outcome of the lateralized single-bundle bone-patellar tendon-
bone
autograft with a non-anatomical double-bundle hamstring tendons autograft
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction technique at long-term
follow-up.
METHODS: Seventy-nine non-consecutive randomized patients (42 men; 37 women)
with
unilateral ACL insufficiency were prospectively evaluated, before and after
ACL
reconstruction by means of the above-mentioned techniques, with a minimum
follow-up of 8 years (range 8-10 years; mean 8.6 years). In the double-bundle
hamstrings technique, we used one tibial and one femoral tunnel combined with
one
"over-the-top" passage, cortical staple's fixation and we left intact
hamstrings'
tibial insertion. Patients were evaluated subjectively and objectively, using
IKDC score, Tegner level, manual maximum displacement test with KT-2000™
arthrometer. Radiographic evaluation was performed according to IKDC grading
system, and re-intervention rate for meniscal lesions was also recorded.
RESULTS:
The subjective and objective IKDC were similar in both groups while double-
bundle
hamstrings group showed significantly higher Tegner level (P = 0.0007),
higher
passive range of motion recovery (P = 0.0014), faster sport resumption
(P = 0.0052), lower glide pivot-shift phenomenon (P = 0.0302) and lower
re-intervention rate (P = 0.0116) compared with patellar tendon group.
Radiographic evaluation showed significant lower objective degenerative
changes
in double-bundle hamstrings group at final follow-up (P = 0.0056).
CONCLUSION:
Although both techniques provide satisfactory results, double-bundle ACL
reconstruction shows better functional results, with a faster return to sport
activity, a lower re-operation rate and lower degenerative knee changes.
FAU - Zaffagnini, Stefano
AU - Zaffagnini S
AD - 3rd Orthopaedic and Traumatology Clinic, Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institute,
Bologna
University, Bologna, Italy. s.zaffagnini@biomec.ior.it
FAU - Bruni, Danilo
AU - Bruni D
FAU - Marcheggiani Muccioli, Giulio Maria
AU - Marcheggiani Muccioli GM
FAU - Bonanzinga, Tommaso
AU - Bonanzinga T
FAU - Lopomo, Nicola
AU - Lopomo N
FAU - Bignozzi, Simone
AU - Bignozzi S
FAU - Marcacci, Maurilio
AU - Marcacci M
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20100729
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy/methods
MH - Chi-Square Distribution
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*prevention & control
MH - Knee Injuries/diagnostic imaging/surgery
MH - Male
MH - Pain Measurement
MH - Patellar Ligament/*transplantation
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Radiography
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
MH - Plastic Surgery Procedures/adverse effects/*methods
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Reference Values
MH - Risk Assessment
MH - Statistics, Nonparametric
MH - Tendons/transplantation
MH - Time Factors
MH - Transplantation, Autologous
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2010/07/30 06:00
MHDA- 2011/06/28 06:00
CRDT- 2010/07/30 06:00
PHST- 2009/12/28 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2010/07/12 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2010/07/30 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2010/07/30 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/06/28 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1225-y [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2011 Mar;19(3):390-7. doi:
10.1007/s00167-010-1225-y. Epub 2010 Jul 29.
PMID- 16328464
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20061121
LR - 20181113
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 14
IP - 6
DP - 2006 Jun
TI - Benefits of active motion for joint position sense.
PG - 564-70
AB - Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) ruptures lead to a proprioceptive deficit
and
therefore joint position sense. This study examined whether active motion is
better suited than passive motion to address this deficit. Sixty patients
with
ACL rupture were prospectively randomised into two groups [continuous active
motion (CAM)/continuous passive motion (CPM)]. All patients had an ACL
reconstruction. An angle reproduction test was used to assess the
proprioceptive
deficit. The relevant examinations were performed before surgery (pre-op
evaluation) and after the seventh postoperative day. No preoperative
difference
was found between the two groups. After postoperative treatment, the deficit
was
reduced in both groups. Significantly better results were, however, obtained
in
the CAM group (CPM, 4.2+/-1.6 degrees; CAM, 1.9+/-1.2 degrees; P<0.001).
During
the first postoperative week, a CAM device produced a significantly greater
reduction in the proprioceptive deficit and should be the first choice in
immediately postoperative rehabilitation after ACL replacement.
FAU - Friemert, B
AU - Friemert B
AD - Department of Surgery, German Armed Forces Hospital, Oberer Eselsberg 40,
89081,
Ulm, Germany. dr.benediktfriemert@dr-friemert.de
FAU - Bach, C
AU - Bach C
FAU - Schwarz, W
AU - Schwarz W
FAU - Gerngross, H
AU - Gerngross H
FAU - Schmidt, R
AU - Schmidt R
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20051123
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/physiopathology
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*physiopathology/rehabilitation
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Motion Therapy, Continuous Passive/instrumentation
MH - Proprioception/*physiology
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/physiology
EDAT- 2005/12/06 09:00
MHDA- 2006/12/09 09:00
CRDT- 2005/12/06 09:00
PHST- 2005/04/18 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2005/06/30 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2005/12/06 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/12/09 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/12/06 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-005-0004-7 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2006 Jun;14(6):564-70. doi:
10.1007/s00167-005-0004-7. Epub 2005 Nov 23.
PMID- 36528004
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230126
LR - 20230202
IS - 1873-1600 (Electronic)
IS - 1466-853X (Linking)
VI - 59
DP - 2023 Jan
TI - Effect of an overhead goal on landing error scoring system and jump height
measures.
PG - 115-121
LID - S1466-853X(22)00150-X [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.ptsp.2022.11.005 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: Compare overall Landing Error Scoring System (LESS) scores, risk
categorisation, specific LESS errors, and double-leg jump-landing jump
heights
between overhead goal and no goal conditions. DESIGN: Randomised cross-over.
SETTING: Laboratory. PARTICIPANTS: 76 (51% male). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
Participants landed from a 30-cm box to 50% of their body height and
immediately
jumped vertically for maximum height. Participants completed three trials
under
two random-ordered conditions: with and without overhead goal. Group-level
mean
LESS scores, risk categorisation (5-error threshold), specific landing
errors,
and jump heights were compared between conditions. RESULTS: Mean LESS scores
were
greater (0.3 errors, p < 0.001) with the overhead goal, but this small
difference
was not clinically meaningful. Similarly, although the number of high-risk
participants was greater with the overhead goal (p = 0.039), the 9.2%
difference
was trivial. Participants jumped 2.7 cm higher with the overhead goal
(p < 0.001)
without affecting the occurrence of any specific LESS errors. DISCUSSION:
Performing the LESS with an overhead goal enhances sport specificity and
elicits
greater vertical jump performances with minimal change in landing errors and
injury-risk categorisation. Adding an overhead goal to LESS might enhance its
suitability for injury risk screening, although the predictive value of LESS
with
an overhead goal needs confirmation.
CI - Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
FAU - Hébert-Losier, Kim
AU - Hébert-Losier K
AD - Division of Health, Engineering, Computing and Science, Te Huataki Waiora
School
of Health, University of Waikato, Adams Centre for High Performance, 52 Miro
Street, 3116, Tauranga, New Zealand. Electronic address:
https://twitter.com/KimHebertLosier.
FAU - Boswell-Smith, Caleb
AU - Boswell-Smith C
AD - Division of Health, Engineering, Computing and Science, Te Huataki Waiora
School
of Health, University of Waikato, Adams Centre for High Performance, 52 Miro
Street, 3116, Tauranga, New Zealand.
FAU - Hanzlíková, Ivana
AU - Hanzlíková I
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Physical Culture, Palacký University
Olomouc, Třída Míru 177, Olomouc, 771 11, Czech Republic. Electronic address:
https://twitter.com/HanzlikovaIvana.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20221124
PL - England
TA - Phys Ther Sport
JT - Physical therapy in sport : official journal of the Association of Chartered
Physiotherapists in Sports Medicine
JID - 100940513
SB - IM
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Knee Joint
MH - Movement
MH - *Sports
MH - Cross-Over Studies
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Anterior cruciate ligament
OT - Injury risk
OT - Jump-landing biomechanics
OT - Movement screen
COIS- Declaration of competing interest None declared.
EDAT- 2022/12/18 06:00
MHDA- 2023/01/25 06:00
CRDT- 2022/12/17 18:34
PHST- 2022/03/23 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/11/19 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2022/11/21 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2022/12/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/01/25 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2022/12/17 18:34 [entrez]
AID - S1466-853X(22)00150-X [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.ptsp.2022.11.005 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Phys Ther Sport. 2023 Jan;59:115-121. doi: 10.1016/j.ptsp.2022.11.005. Epub
2022
Nov 24.
PMID- 17149647
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070613
LR - 20221207
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 15
IP - 4
DP - 2007 Apr
TI - The effect of accelerated, brace free, rehabilitation on bone tunnel
enlargement
after ACL reconstruction using hamstring tendons: a CT study.
PG - 365-71
AB - The mechanism of bone tunnel enlargement following anterior cruciate ligament
(ACL) reconstruction is not yet clearly understood. Many authors hypothesized
that aggressive rehabilitation protocols may be a potential factor for bone
tunnel enlargement, especially in reconstructions performed with hamstrings
autograft. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of a brace
free
rehabilitation on the tunnel enlargement after ACL reconstruction using
doubled
semitendinosus and gracilis tendons (DGST): our hypothesis was that early
post-operative knee motion increase the diameters of the tibial and femoral
bone
tunnels. Forty-five consecutive patients undergoing ACL reconstruction for
chronic ACL deficiency were selected. All patients were operated by the same
surgeon using autologous DGST and the same fixation devices. Patients with
associated ligaments injuries and or severe chondral damage were excluded.
The
patients were randomly assigned to enter the control group (group A, standard
post-operative rehabilitation) and the study group (group B, brace free
accelerated rehabilitation). A CT scan was used to exactly determine the
diameters of both femoral and tibial tunnels at various levels of lateral
femoral
condyle and proximal tibia, using a previously described method [17].
Measurements were done by an independent radiologist in a blinded fashion the
day
after the operation and at a mean follow-up of 10 months (range 9-11).
Statistical analysis was performed using paired t-test. The mean femoral
tunnel
diameter increased significantly from 9.04 +/- 0.05 (post-operative) to 9.30
+/-
0.8 mm (follow-up) in group A and from 9.04 +/- 0.03 to 9.94 +/- 1.12 mm in
group
B. The mean tibial tunnel diameter increased significantly from 9.03 +/- 0.04
to
10.01 +/- 0.80 mm in group A and from 9.04 +/- 0.03 to 10.60 +/- 0.78 mm in
group
B. The increase in femoral and tunnel diameters observed in the study group
was
significantly higher than that observed in the control group. Our results
suggest
that bone tunnel enlargement after ACL reconstruction using hamstrings
autograft
can be increased by an accelerated, brace free, rehabilitation protocol.
FAU - Vadalà, Antonio
AU - Vadalà A
AD - Orthopaedic Unit and Kirk Kilgour Sports Injury Centre, S. Andrea Hospital,
University of Rome La Sapienza, Via Grottarossa 1065, Rome, Italy.
FAU - Iorio, Raffaele
AU - Iorio R
FAU - De Carli, Angelo
AU - De Carli A
FAU - Argento, Giuseppe
AU - Argento G
FAU - Di Sanzo, Vincenzo
AU - Di Sanzo V
FAU - Conteduca, Fabio
AU - Conteduca F
FAU - Ferretti, Andrea
AU - Ferretti A
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20061206
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Femur/*diagnostic imaging/pathology/surgery
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/diagnostic imaging/*rehabilitation/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Plastic Surgery Procedures/*methods
MH - *Tendon Transfer
MH - Tibia/*diagnostic imaging/pathology/surgery
MH - *Tomography, X-Ray Computed
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2006/12/07 09:00
MHDA- 2007/06/15 09:00
CRDT- 2006/12/07 09:00
PHST- 2006/05/24 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2006/09/18 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2006/12/07 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/06/15 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/12/07 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-006-0219-2 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2007 Apr;15(4):365-71. doi:
10.1007/s00167-006-0219-2. Epub 2006 Dec 6.
PMID- 22064608
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120529
LR - 20220408
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 40
IP - 2
DP - 2012 Feb
TI - Retention of movement pattern changes after a lower extremity injury
prevention
program is affected by program duration.
PG - 300-6
LID - 10.1177/0363546511425474 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Changes in movement patterns have been repeatedly observed
immediately after completing a lower extremity injury prevention program.
However, it is not known if movement pattern changes are maintained after
discontinuing the training program. HYPOTHESIS: The ability to maintain
movement
pattern changes after training has ceased may be influenced by the program's
duration. The authors hypothesized that among individuals who completed
either a
3-month or 9-month training program and who demonstrated immediate movement
pattern changes, only those who completed the 9-month training program would
maintain movement pattern changes after a 3-month period of no longer
performing
the exercises. STUDY DESIGN: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2. METHODS: A
total
of 140 youth soccer athletes from 15 separate teams volunteered to
participate.
Athletes' movement patterns were assessed using the Landing Error Scoring
System
(LESS) at pretest, posttest, and 3 months after ceasing the program
(retention
test). Eighty-four of the original 140 participants demonstrated improvements
in
their LESS scores between pretest and posttest (change in LESS score >0) and
were
included in the final analyses for this study (n = 84; 20 boys and 64 girls;
mean
age, 14 ± 2 years; age range, 11-17 years). Teams performed 3-month
(short-duration group) and 9-month (extended-duration group) injury
prevention
programs. The exercises performed were identical for both groups. Teams
performed
the programs as part of their normal warm-up routine. RESULTS: Although both
groups improved their total LESS scores from pretest to posttest, only the
extended-duration training group retained their improvements 3 months after
ceasing the injury prevention program (F(2,137) = 3.38; P = .04). CONCLUSION:
Results suggest that training duration may be an important factor to consider
when designing injury prevention programs that facilitate long-term changes
in
movement control.
FAU - Padua, Darin A
AU - Padua DA
AD - Department of Exercise and Sports Science, Sports Medicine Research
Laboratory,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 27599, USA. dpadua@email.unc.edu
FAU - DiStefano, Lindsay J
AU - DiStefano LJ
FAU - Marshall, Stephen W
AU - Marshall SW
FAU - Beutler, Anthony I
AU - Beutler AI
FAU - de la Motte, Sarah J
AU - de la Motte SJ
FAU - DiStefano, Michael J
AU - DiStefano MJ
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20111107
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Child
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Exercise
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/etiology/*prevention & control
MH - Male
MH - Motor Skills
MH - *Movement
MH - Physical Education and Training/*methods
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Time Factors
EDAT- 2011/11/09 06:00
MHDA- 2012/05/30 06:00
CRDT- 2011/11/09 06:00
PHST- 2011/11/09 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/11/09 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/05/30 06:00 [medline]
AID - 0363546511425474 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546511425474 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2012 Feb;40(2):300-6. doi: 10.1177/0363546511425474. Epub
2011
Nov 7.
PMID- 25563677
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20160128
LR - 20220330
IS - 1533-4287 (Electronic)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 29
IP - 7
DP - 2015 Jul
TI - The Effects of Plyometric Type Neuromuscular Training on Postural Control
Performance of Male Team Basketball Players.
PG - 1870-5
LID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000000832 [doi]
AB - Anterior cruciate ligament injuries are common in basketball athletes; common
preventive programs for decreasing these injures may be enhancing postural
control (PC) or balance with plyometric training. This study investigated the
efficiency of plyometric training program within basketball practice to
improve
PC performance in young basketball players. Sixteen players were recruited
and
assigned either to a plyometric + basketball training group (PT) or
basketball
training group (BT). All players trained twice per week, but the PT + BT
followed
a 6-week plyometric program implemented within basketball practice, whereas
the
BT followed regular practice. The star excursion balance test (SEBT) at 8
directions (anterior, A; anteromedial, AM; anterolateral, AL; medial, M;
lateral,
L; posterior, P; posteromedial, PM; and posterolateral, PL) was measured
before
and after the 6-week period. The PT group induced significant improvement (p
≤
0.05) and small to moderate effect size in the SEBT (A = 0.95, AM = 0.62, AL
=
0.61, M = 0.36, L = 0.47, P = 0.27, PM = 0.25, PL = 0.24). No significant
improvements were found in the BT group. Also, there were significant
differences
between groups in all directions except PM and PL. An integrated plyometric
program within the regular basketball practice can lead to significant
improvements in SEBT and consequently PC. It can be recommended that strength
and
conditioning professionals use PT to enhance the athletes' joint awareness
and PC
to reduce possible future injuries in the lower extremity.
FAU - Asadi, Abbas
AU - Asadi A
AD - 1Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, Payame Noor University,
Iran; 2Masterde Futbol Lab, Faculty of Sport, University Pablo de Olavide,
Sevilla, Spain; and 3Department of Exercise Physiology, Faculty of Physical
Education and Sport Sciences, University of Guilan, Rasht, Iran.
FAU - Saez de Villarreal, Eduardo
AU - Saez de Villarreal E
FAU - Arazi, Hamid
AU - Arazi H
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - Basketball/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Plyometric Exercise/*methods
MH - Postural Balance/*physiology
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2015/01/08 06:00
MHDA- 2016/01/29 06:00
CRDT- 2015/01/08 06:00
PHST- 2015/01/08 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2015/01/08 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2016/01/29 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1519/JSC.0000000000000832 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2015 Jul;29(7):1870-5. doi:
10.1519/JSC.0000000000000832.
PMID- 16465537
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070109
LR - 20181113
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 14
IP - 8
DP - 2006 Aug
TI - Prospective randomized clinical comparison of femoral transfixation versus
bioscrew fixation in hamstring tendon ACL reconstruction--a preliminary
report.
PG - 730-8
AB - PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to clinically evaluate hamstring tendon
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)-reconstruction using femoral fixation with
bioresorbable interference screws and with a bioresorbable transfixation
device.
HYPOTHESIS: The ACL-reconstruction using the transfixation device at the
femoral
side leads to less knee laxity and therefore to a better clinical outcome for
the
patient. TYPE OF STUDY: Prospective randomized clinical outcome study.
METHODS:
From February 2002 to December 2002, a total of 68 patients with hamstring
ACL
reconstruction using a femoral fixation once with TransFix (n=38; m:22 and
f:16;
median age=28.5 range 15-47) and the second with bioscrew (BS) (n=30; m:20,
f:10;
median age=25.5 range 13-61) completed the follow-up period. Patients in each
group got a clinical assessment at 3, 6, and 12 months after surgery. The
measurement of anterior translation of the tibia has been performed using the
Rolimeter device. RESULTS: No significant differences in the knee laxity
testing
using the Rolimeter device were seen between both groups and over time within
these groups. Ninety percent of all patients had functionally normal or near
normal International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) knee ligament
ratings.
The TF-group included 17 grade A, 19 grade B, and 2 grade C knees, and the
BS-group had 12 grade A, 13 grade B, and 5 grade C knees. The IKDC rating,
the
OAK-score, the Tegner-activity-score, and the Lysholm-score did not show
significant differences between the TF-group and the BS-group. CONCLUSION: We
disproved our hypothesis that the transfixation technique leads to less
laxity
and therefore to a better clinical outcome when compared to the use of BS.
The
clinical results in this study clarified that this technique is an effective
and
safe method for femoral hamstring fixation in ACL-reconstruction. However,
this
technique revealed no advantage compared to the bioscrew fixation technique
within the short-term follow-up.
FAU - Rose, Tim
AU - Rose T
AD - Department of Trauma and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Leipzig,
Leipzig,
Germany. tim.rose@lrz.tu-muenchen.de
FAU - Hepp, Pierre
AU - Hepp P
FAU - Venus, Julia
AU - Venus J
FAU - Stockmar, Christoph
AU - Stockmar C
FAU - Josten, Christoph
AU - Josten C
FAU - Lill, Helmut
AU - Lill H
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20060208
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - *Absorbable Implants
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Femur/*surgery
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - *Orthopedic Fixation Devices
MH - Postoperative Care
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2006/02/09 09:00
MHDA- 2007/01/11 09:00
CRDT- 2006/02/09 09:00
PHST- 2005/03/22 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2005/07/05 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2006/02/09 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/01/11 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/02/09 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-006-0034-9 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2006 Aug;14(8):730-8. doi:
10.1007/s00167-006-0034-9. Epub 2006 Feb 8.
PMID- 16917926
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20061207
LR - 20220408
IS - 0736-0266 (Print)
IS - 0736-0266 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 11
DP - 2006 Nov
TI - The effect of protein and carbohydrate supplementation on strength training
outcome of rehabilitation in ACL patients.
PG - 2114-23
AB - Patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury experience atrophy and
weakening of the extensor as well as the hamstrings muscles at the injured
leg.
Especially, the weakness of the quadriceps muscle has been ascribed to hamper
daily physical tasks. The purpose of the present study was therefore to
investigate if nutrient supplementation during 12 weeks of conservative
rehabilitation strength training could enhance hypertrophy and strength of
the
quadriceps muscle in ACL-injured patients. Twenty-six ACL-injured men and
women
were included and randomly distributed into three supplementation groups:
Protein+Carbohydrate (PC), Isocaloric-Carbohydrate (IC), or Placebo (PL),
ingesting the supplementation immediately after each of 36 training sessions.
Determined from images of thigh cross-sections (magnetic resonance imaging)
the
hypertrophy of the quadriceps muscle differed significantly between groups at
the
distal part, with the PC group demonstrating the largest hypertrophy. Peak
torque
of the quadriceps muscle at constant velocity 60 degrees.s-1 was
significantly
elevated in the PC group only, and the time to reach peak torque tended to
decrease as well only in the PC group. The results from this study
demonstrate
that restoration of the distal vasti muscle mass and knee extension muscle
strength with resistance training is promoted further by protein-containing
nutrient supplementation immediately after single exercise sessions. Thus,
exercise-related protein supplementation may seem important for surgery-
related
rehabilitation of skeletal muscle.
CI - Copyright (c) 2006 Orthopaedic Research Society.
FAU - Holm, L
AU - Holm L
AD - Institute of Sports Medicine, Copenhagen, Bispebjerg Hospital, Bispebjerg
Bakke
23, Bldg. 8, 1st, 2400 København NV, Copenhagen, Denmark. 1h17@bbh.hosp.dk
FAU - Esmarck, B
AU - Esmarck B
FAU - Mizuno, M
AU - Mizuno M
FAU - Hansen, H
AU - Hansen H
FAU - Suetta, C
AU - Suetta C
FAU - Hölmich, P
AU - Hölmich P
FAU - Krogsgaard, M
AU - Krogsgaard M
FAU - Kjaer, M
AU - Kjaer M
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - J Orthop Res
JT - Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic
Research Society
JID - 8404726
RN - 0 (Dietary Carbohydrates)
RN - 0 (Dietary Proteins)
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Dietary Carbohydrates/*administration & dosage
MH - Dietary Proteins/*administration & dosage
MH - Dietary Supplements
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/physiopathology/*therapy
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Quadriceps Muscle/pathology/physiopathology
MH - *Weight Lifting
EDAT- 2006/08/19 09:00
MHDA- 2006/12/09 09:00
CRDT- 2006/08/19 09:00
PHST- 2006/08/19 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/12/09 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/08/19 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1002/jor.20147 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Orthop Res. 2006 Nov;24(11):2114-23. doi: 10.1002/jor.20147.
PMID- 31042140
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20190513
LR - 20190513
IS - 1752-6116 (Electronic)
IS - 1476-3141 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 2
DP - 2019 Apr
TI - Training rugby athletes with an external attentional focus promotes more
automatic adaptions in landing forces.
PG - 163-173
LID - 10.1080/14763141.2019.1584237 [doi]
AB - Training to reduce landing forces is a common component of anterior cruciate
ligament injury prevention programmes. The purpose of this study was to
compare
the effects of training incorporating instructions promoting an internal
versus
external attentional focus on landing forces in adolescent rugby athletes.
Twenty-two rugby athletes were randomly allocated to groups that received
instructions promoting an internal versus an external focus during a two week
training programme. Landing forces were recorded before and after completion
of
the programme. During follow-up testing, landings were performed with and
without
a secondary cognitive task. Both groups exhibited a similar reduction in
landing
forces following training for trials performed without the secondary
cognitive
task. However, the groups responded differently when the secondary cognitive
task
was imposed. Athletes who were trained with an internal focus demonstrated a
prominent increase in landing forces for trials that included the secondary
cognitive task (vs. trials performed without the secondary cognitive task),
whereas the secondary cognitive task had minimal influence for athletes who
were
trained with an external focus. It appears that training with an external
focus
may promote adaptations in landing mechanics that can be implemented more
automatically.
FAU - Widenhoefer, Tricia Lee
AU - Widenhoefer TL
AD - a Rinker-Ross School of Health Sciences , Trine University , Fort Wayne ,
IN ,
USA.
FAU - Miller, Taylor Matthew
AU - Miller TM
AD - a Rinker-Ross School of Health Sciences , Trine University , Fort Wayne ,
IN ,
USA.
FAU - Weigand, Mark Steven
AU - Weigand MS
AD - a Rinker-Ross School of Health Sciences , Trine University , Fort Wayne ,
IN ,
USA.
FAU - Watkins, Emily Ann
AU - Watkins EA
AD - a Rinker-Ross School of Health Sciences , Trine University , Fort Wayne ,
IN ,
USA.
FAU - Almonroeder, Thomas Gus
AU - Almonroeder TG
AD - a Rinker-Ross School of Health Sciences , Trine University , Fort Wayne ,
IN ,
USA.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - England
TA - Sports Biomech
JT - Sports biomechanics
JID - 101151352
SB - IM
MH - *Adaptation, Physiological
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/prevention & control
MH - *Attention
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Cognition
MH - Female
MH - Football/*physiology/*psychology
MH - Humans
MH - Lower Extremity/*physiology
MH - Male
MH - Movement
MH - Physical Conditioning, Human/*methods
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Motor learning
OT - anterior cruciate ligament injuries
OT - biomechanics
EDAT- 2019/05/02 06:00
MHDA- 2019/05/14 06:00
CRDT- 2019/05/02 06:00
PHST- 2019/05/02 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2019/05/02 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2019/05/14 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1080/14763141.2019.1584237 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Sports Biomech. 2019 Apr;18(2):163-173. doi: 10.1080/14763141.2019.1584237.
PMID- 22065184
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20111227
LR - 20220411
IS - 1538-3628 (Electronic)
IS - 1072-4710 (Linking)
VI - 165
IP - 11
DP - 2011 Nov
TI - Effect of neuromuscular warm-up on injuries in female soccer and basketball
athletes in urban public high schools: cluster randomized controlled trial.
PG - 1033-40
LID - 10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.168 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To determine the effectiveness of coach-led neuromuscular warm-up
on
reducing lower extremity (LE) injuries in female athletes in a mixed-
ethnicity,
predominantly low-income, urban population. DESIGN: Cluster randomized
controlled
trial. SETTING: Chicago public high schools. PARTICIPANTS: Of 258 coaches
invited
to participate, 95 (36.8%) enrolled (1558 athletes). Ninety coaches and 1492
athletes completed the study. INTERVENTIONS: We randomized schools to
intervention and control groups. We trained intervention coaches to implement
a
20-minute neuromuscular warm-up. Control coaches used their usual warm-up.
MAIN
OUTCOME MEASURES: Coach compliance was tracked by self-report and direct
observation. Coaches reported weekly athlete exposures (AEs) and LE injuries
causing a missed practice or game. Research assistants interviewed injured
athletes. Injury rates were compared between the control and intervention
groups
using χ(2) and Fisher exact tests. Significance was set at P < .05. Poisson
regression analysis adjusted for clustering and covariates in an athlete
subset
reporting personal information (n = 855; 57.3%). RESULTS: There were 28 023
intervention AEs and 22 925 control AEs. Intervention coaches used prescribed
warm-up in 1425 of 1773 practices (80.4%). Intervention athletes had lower
rates
per 1000 AEs of gradual-onset LE injuries (0.43 vs 1.22, P < .01), acute-
onset
noncontact LE injuries (0.71 vs 1.61, P < .01), noncontact ankle sprains
(0.25 vs
0.74, P = .01), and LE injuries treated surgically (0 vs 0.17, P = .04).
Regression analysis showed significant incidence rate ratios for acute-onset
noncontact LE injuries (0.33; 95% CI, 0.17-0.61), noncontact ankle sprains
(0.38;
95% CI, 0.15-0.98), noncontact knee sprains (0.30; 95% CI, 0.10-0.86), and
noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries (0.20; 95% CI, 0.04-0.95).
CONCLUSION: Coach-led neuromuscular warm-up reduces noncontact LE injuries in
female high school soccer and basketball athletes from a mixed-ethnicity,
predominantly low-income, urban population. TRIAL REGISTRATION
CLINICALTRIALS.ORG
IDENTIFIER: NCT01092286.
FAU - LaBella, Cynthia R
AU - LaBella CR
AD - Department of Pediatrics, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
clabella@childrensmemorial.org
FAU - Huxford, Michael R
AU - Huxford MR
FAU - Grissom, Joe
AU - Grissom J
FAU - Kim, Kwang-Youn
AU - Kim KY
FAU - Peng, Jie
AU - Peng J
FAU - Christoffel, Katherine Kaufer
AU - Christoffel KK
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT01092286
PT - Journal Article
PT - Multicenter Study
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med
JT - Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine
JID - 9422751
SB - IM
EIN - Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2012 Jan;166(1):73
CIN - Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2011 Nov;165(11):1049-50. PMID: 22065188
MH - Adolescent
MH - Ankle Injuries/prevention & control
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Basketball/*injuries
MH - Chicago
MH - *Exercise
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/prevention & control
MH - *Lower Extremity
MH - Poverty Areas
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Sprains and Strains/prevention & control
MH - Urban Population
EDAT- 2011/11/09 06:00
MHDA- 2011/12/28 06:00
CRDT- 2011/11/09 06:00
PHST- 2011/11/09 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/11/09 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/12/28 06:00 [medline]
AID - 165/11/1033 [pii]
AID - 10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.168 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2011 Nov;165(11):1033-40. doi:
10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.168.
PMID- 15013599
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20040510
LR - 20061115
IS - 0168-6054 (Print)
IS - 0168-6054 (Linking)
VI - 47
IP - 2
DP - 2004 Mar
TI - [Comparison of two electrical stimulation protocols on quadriceps muscle
after
anterior cruciate ligament surgery. Feasability study].
PG - 56-63
AB - OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the feasibility of a study comparing the effects of
two
protocols of electrical stimulation of the quadriceps femoris after anterior
cruciate ligament surgery. MATERIAL: Seven sportsmen with a mean age of 26
yrs
were randomly grouped in two: a 20 Hz stimulated group (4 patients) and a 80
Hz
stimulated group (3 patients). After surgery all patients received electrical
stimulation of the quadriceps femoris, five days a week, for 12 weeks, and
had a
standard program of voluntary contractions. The main outcome assessed before
and
three months after surgery were: quadriceps and hamstring peak torque at 90,
180
and 240 degrees /second, maximal isometric quadriceps at 75 degrees of
flexion
and muscle and subcutaneous fat volumes of the thigh using MRI. RESULTS:
After 12
weeks of rehabilitation, the thigh muscle volume deficit of the operated limb
was
between 3 and 9% in the 20 Hz stimulated group and between 1 and 2% in the 80
Hz
stimulated group. Quadriceps peak torque deficit was less than 30% except for
two
patients in the 20 Hz stimulated group. Maximal isometric quadriceps deficit
of
the operated limb was higher than 30% except for two patients in the 20 Hz
stimulated group. CONCLUSION: The study showed that comparison of two
protocols
of electrical stimulation of the quadriceps femoris after anterior cruciate
ligament surgery is possible if stimulation period is not more than four
weeks.
FAU - Laborde, A
AU - Laborde A
AD - Service des explorations fonctionnelles respiratoires et sportives, hôpital
G.-Montpied, CHU de Clermont-Ferrand, BP 69, 63003 Clermont-Ferrand cedex 01,
France. alexandre.laborde@free.fr
FAU - Rebai, H
AU - Rebai H
FAU -
Coudeyre, L
AU -
Coudeyre L
FAU -
Boisgard, S
AU -
Boisgard S
FAU -
Eyssette, M
AU -
Eyssette M
FAU -
Coudert, J
AU -
Coudert J
LA -
fre
PT -
Clinical Trial
PT -
Comparative Study
PT -
English Abstract
PT -
Journal Article
PT -
Randomized Controlled Trial
TT -
Etude comparative de deux protocoles d'électrostimulation du quadriceps après
chirurgie du ligament croisé antérieur. Etude de faisabilité.
PL - Netherlands
TA - Ann Readapt Med Phys
JT - Annales de readaptation et de medecine physique : revue scientifique de la
Societe francaise de reeducation fonctionnelle de readaptation et de medecine
physique
JID - 8701687
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Exercise Therapy
MH - Feasibility Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Isometric Contraction
MH - Male
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiopathology
MH - Muscular Atrophy/*prevention & control
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/*rehabilitation
MH - *Postoperative Care
MH - Postoperative Complications/*prevention & control
MH - Sports
MH - Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation/*methods
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2004/03/12 05:00
MHDA- 2004/05/11 05:00
CRDT- 2004/03/12 05:00
PHST- 2003/02/20 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2003/09/23 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2004/03/12 05:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2004/05/11 05:00 [medline]
PHST- 2004/03/12 05:00 [entrez]
AID - S0168605403002897 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.annrmp.2003.09.007 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Ann Readapt Med Phys. 2004 Mar;47(2):56-63. doi:
10.1016/j.annrmp.2003.09.007.
PMID- 37280245
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230620
LR - 20230620
IS - 2045-2322 (Electronic)
IS - 2045-2322 (Linking)
VI - 13
IP - 1
DP - 2023 Jun 6
TI - Effects of a 4-week plyometric training on activity patterns during different
phases of one-leg drop jump with focus on jump height.
PG - 9192
LID - 10.1038/s41598-023-36461-1 [doi]
LID - 9192
AB - Athletic women have shown a higher risk of ACL injury during jump landing
compared to men. Plyometric training can be an alternative way to minimize
the
risk of knee injuries via the changed muscle activity patterns. Hence, the
aim of
this study was to determine the effects of a 4-week plyometric training
program
on the muscle activity pattern in different phases of one-leg drop jump in
active
girls. Active girls were randomly allocated into 2 groups (Plyometric
training = 10, Control group = 10) where the plyometric training group (PTG)
performed 60 min exercises, 2 sessions/1 week for 4 weeks while the control
group
(CG) had their daily activity. In the pre to post test, the sEMG was recorded
from the Rectus Femoris (RF), Biceps Femoris (BF), Medial Gastrocnemius
(GaM),
and Tibialis Anterior (TA) muscles of the dominant leg during the Preparatory
phase (PP), Contact Phase (CP), Flight Phase (FP) of one-leg drop jump.
Electromyography variables (Signal amplitude, Maximum activity, Time to peak
(TTP), Onset and activity time and Order muscle activity) and Ergo jump
variables
(Time of preparatory phase (TPP), Time of contact phase (TCP), Time of flight
(jump height) phase (TFP), and Explosive power were analyzed. The Univariate
ANCOVA test showed a significant difference between the two groups in
Activity
Time, whilst adjusting for pre-test as a Covariate, only in TA muscle
(F((1,17)) = 5.09, p = 0.038, η(2) = 0.230). In PTG. TA (- 15%), GaM (- 19%), and
BF muscles (- 9%) started their activity earlier while there was no
significant
difference between the two groups at the Onset time. TTP of RF was
significantly
different between the 2 groups only in the PR phase (0.216 ± 0.07 vs
0.153 ± 0.09 s) (p = 0.049, 95% CI = 0.001, 0.127). Results of the present study
suggest that a 4-week plyometric training can improve the stability of leg
joints
via earlier recruitment of muscles and change activity patterns in lower limb
muscles. It also recommends that the preparatory phase before landing be
considered an important stage in preventing sports injuries in a training
program.
CI - © 2023. The Author(s).
FAU - Ahmadabadi, Somayeh
AU - Ahmadabadi S
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-2051-7202
AD - Department of Physical Education and Sports Sciences, Farhangian University,
Tehran, Iran. s.ahmadabadi@cfu.ac.ir.
FAU - Rjabi, Hamid
AU - Rjabi H
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-3276-1598
AD - Department of Exercise Physiology, Faculty of Physical Education and Sports
Sciences, Kharazmi University, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Gharakhanlou, Reza
AU - Gharakhanlou R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9184-7757
AD - Department of Physical Education and Sports Sciences, Faculty of Humanities,
Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Talebian, Saeed
AU - Talebian S
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-4945-8085
AD - Department of Physiotherapy, School of Rehabilitation, Tehran University of
Medical Sciences (TUMS), Tehran, Iran.
FAU - Basereh, Aref
AU - Basereh A
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-9274-479X
AD - Department of Physical Education and Sports Sciences, Kharazmi University,
Tehran, Iran.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20230606
PL - England
TA - Sci Rep
JT - Scientific reports
JID - 101563288
SB - IM
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Electromyography
MH - *Leg/physiology
MH - Lower Extremity/physiology
MH - Muscle Strength/physiology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/physiology
MH - *Plyometric Exercise
PMC - PMC10244407
COIS- The authors declare no competing interests.
EDAT- 2023/06/07 01:07
MHDA- 2023/06/08 06:42
CRDT- 2023/06/06 23:18
PHST- 2023/03/15 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2023/06/04 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2023/06/08 06:42 [medline]
PHST- 2023/06/07 01:07 [pubmed]
PHST- 2023/06/06 23:18 [entrez]
AID - 10.1038/s41598-023-36461-1 [pii]
AID - 36461 [pii]
AID - 10.1038/s41598-023-36461-1 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Sci Rep. 2023 Jun 6;13(1):9192. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-36461-1.
PMID- 16097553
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050816
LR - 20190516
IS - 1745-3674 (Print)
IS - 1745-3674 (Linking)
VI - 76
IP - 2
DP - 2005 Apr
TI - Changed gait pattern in patients with total knee arthroplasty but minimal
influence of tibial insert design: gait analysis during level walking in 39
TKR
patients and 18 healthy controls.
PG - 253-60
AB - INTRODUCTION: Previous radiostereometric studies have revealed abnormal
anterior-posterior translation of the femur in patients operated with AMK
(DePuy,
Johnson and Johnson, Leeds, UK) total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Based on these
observations, we hypothesized that patients with TKA have an abnormal gait
pattern, and that there are differences in kinematics depending on the design
of
the tibial joint area. METHOD: We used a gait analysis system to evaluate the
influence of joint area design on the kinematics of the hip and knee during
level
walking. 39 TKA patients (42 knees) and 18 healthy age-matched controls were
studied. Patients with 5 degrees varus/valgus alignment or less were
randomized
to receive either a relatively flat or a concave tibial insert with retention
of
the posterior cruciate ligament. Patients who had more than 5 degrees
varus-valgus alignment and/or extension defect of 10 degrees or more were
randomized to receive the concave or a posterior-stabilized tibial component
with
resection of the posterior cruciate ligament. RESULTS: Patients with TKA
tended
to have less hip and knee extension and decreased knee and hip extension
moment
than controls. They also tended to walk more slowly. TKA altered the gait
pattern, but choice of implant design had little influence. INTERPRETATION:
In
patients with a similar degree of degenerative joint disease and within the
limits of the constraints offered by the prostheses under study, the choice
of
joint area constraint has little influence on the gait pattern.
FAU - Saari, Tuuli
AU - Saari T
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Sahlgrenska University Hospital and Göteborg
University, Göteborg, Sweden. tuuli.saari@vgregion.se
FAU - Tranberg, Roy
AU - Tranberg R
FAU - Zügner, Roland
AU - Zügner R
FAU - Uvehammer, Johan
AU - Uvehammer J
FAU - Kärrholm, Johan
AU - Kärrholm J
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - Sweden
TA - Acta Orthop
JT - Acta orthopaedica
JID - 101231512
SB - IM
MH - Aged
MH - *Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/adverse effects/methods
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - *Gait/physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Prosthesis
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Prosthesis Design
MH - Tibia
MH - *Walking/physiology
EDAT- 2005/08/16 09:00
MHDA- 2005/08/17 09:00
CRDT- 2005/08/16 09:00
PHST- 2005/08/16 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/08/17 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/08/16 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1080/00016470510030661 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Acta Orthop. 2005 Apr;76(2):253-60. doi: 10.1080/00016470510030661.
PMID- 31376516
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20200218
LR - 20200218
IS - 1872-7573 (Electronic)
IS - 0378-8741 (Linking)
VI - 245
DP - 2019 Dec 5
TI - The effects of Jilin sika Deer's (Cervus dybowski) tendon liquid
supplementation
on endurance drop jumps performance, biochemistry profile of free boxing
players.
PG - 112119
LID - S0378-8741(19)32054-9 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.jep.2019.112119 [doi]
AB - ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE: Risk of anterior cruciate ligament is a
persistent and severe problem in athletes owing to strenuous exercise-induced
lower-body injury. Tendon of deer liquid (TD) a familiar traditional Chinese
medicine, has been used for strengthening the bones and muscles. AIM OF THE
STUDY: In this study, we seek to demonstrate the application of TD in
improving
endurance exercise performance and reducing the risk of endurance training
injury
for free boxing players. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixteen male free boxing
players
were randomly assigned to the TD and placebo groups. Body composition,
clinical
biochemistry profiles, kinematic and physiology exercise tests were evaluated
at
2 time points - pre-supplementation (pre-) and after 6 weeks post-
supplementation
(post-). RESULTS: TD group exhibited significant increase in levels of serum
total protein (TP) compared to the placebo group after a 6-week
supplementation.
Following the treadmill test, serum glucose and maximal oxygen consumption
(VO(2)
max) levels were increased in the TD group. In the endurance test consisting
of
200 counts of drop vertical jumps (DVJs), subjects in the TD group also
showed an
increase in vertical jump height and reduced risk of musculoskeletal system
injuries. CONCLUSIONS: TD supplementation leads to better physiological
adaptation in free boxing players and has the potential for use as a nutrient
supplement toward a variety of benefits for endurance athletes.
CI - Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
FAU - Wang, I-Lin
AU - Wang IL
AD - Health Technology College, Jilin Sport University, Changchun, 130022, Jilin,
China. Electronic address: ilin.wang@hotmail.com.
FAU - Hsiao, Chien-Yu
AU - Hsiao CY
AD - Department of Nutrition and Health Sciences, Chang Gung University of Science
and
Technology, Taoyuan, 33301, Taiwan; Research Center for Industry of Human
Ecology
and Research Center for Chinese Herbal Medicine, College of Human Ecology,
Chang
Gung University of Science and Technology, Taoyuan, 33301, Taiwan; Aesthetic
Medical Center, Department of Dermatology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital,
Taoyuan,
33301, Taiwan. Electronic address: mozart@gw.cgust.edu.tw.
FAU - Shen, Jiayu
AU - Shen J
AD - Health Technology College, Jilin Sport University, Changchun, 130022, Jilin,
China. Electronic address: wjysjy51212@gmail.com.
FAU - Wang, Yanmei
AU - Wang Y
AD - Changchun Sci-Tech University, Changchun, 130600, Jilin, China; Jilin Sino-
ROK
Institute of Animal Science, 130600, Jilin, China. Electronic address:
jyjszx@cstu.edu.cn.
FAU - Huang, Chi-Chang
AU - Huang CC
AD - Graduate Institute of Sports Science, National Taiwan Sport University,
Taoyuan,
33301, Taiwan. Electronic address: john5523@ntsu.edu.tw.
FAU - Chen, Yi-Ming
AU - Chen YM
AD - Health Technology College, Jilin Sport University, Changchun, 130022, Jilin,
China. Electronic address: 1021302@ntsu.edu.tw.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20190731
PL - Ireland
TA - J Ethnopharmacol
JT - Journal of ethnopharmacology
JID - 7903310
RN - 0 (Blood Glucose)
RN - 0 (Blood Proteins)
RN - 0 (Complex Mixtures)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Animals
MH - Blood Glucose/drug effects
MH - Blood Proteins/analysis
MH - Boxing/*physiology
MH - Complex Mixtures/*pharmacology
MH - *Deer
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Medicine, Chinese Traditional
MH - Oxygen Consumption
MH - Physical Endurance/*drug effects
MH - *Tendons
MH - Young Adult
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Clinical biochemistry
OT - Drop vertical jumps (DVJs)
OT - Endurance exercise performance
OT - Maximal oxygen consumption
OT - Tendon of deer liquid (TD)
EDAT- 2019/08/04 06:00
MHDA- 2020/02/19 06:00
CRDT- 2019/08/04 06:00
PHST- 2019/05/23 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2019/07/15 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2019/07/23 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2019/08/04 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2020/02/19 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2019/08/04 06:00 [entrez]
AID - S0378-8741(19)32054-9 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.jep.2019.112119 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Ethnopharmacol. 2019 Dec 5;245:112119. doi: 10.1016/j.jep.2019.112119. Epub
2019 Jul 31.
PMID- 29781156
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20181116
LR - 20181116
IS - 1532-950X (Electronic)
IS - 0161-3499 (Linking)
VI - 47
IP - 5
DP - 2018 Jul
TI - Effects of low-intensity pulsed ultrasound on radiographic healing of tibial
plateau leveling osteotomies in dogs: a prospective, randomized, double-
blinded
study.
PG - 614-622
LID - 10.1111/vsu.12798 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To determine the influence of low-intensity pulsed ultrasound
(LIPUS)
on radiographic healing and limb function after uncomplicated, stable
osteotomies
in dogs. STUDY DESIGN: In vivo, prospective, randomized, double-blinded,
placebo-control study. SAMPLE POPULATION: Fifty client-owned dogs. METHODS:
Fifty
client-owned dogs with naturally occurring unilateral cranial cruciate
ligament
rupture were enrolled prior to tibial plateau leveling osteotomy. Dogs were
assigned to an active (LIPUS) treatment group or a placebo control (SHAM)
treatment group via block randomization on the basis of age, weight, and
affected
limb. Dogs in the LIPUS treatment group underwent LIPUS treatments for 20
minutes
daily: 1.5-MHZ ultrasound wave pulsed at 1 kHZ with a 20% duty cycle at an
intensity of 30 mW/cm(2) for the duration of the study (12 weeks).
Radiographic
evaluation was performed at 4, 8, 10, and 12 weeks postoperatively to
evaluate
bone healing. Limb function was assessed with temporal-spatial gait analysis
preoperatively and at 4, 8, and 12 weeks postoperatively by using a
pressure-sensitive walkway system. RESULTS: Both groups had significant
improvement in radiographic score and limb use over time. However, there was
no
significant difference in radiographic bone healing, or limb use as measured
by
objective gait analysis detected between the LIPUS treatment group and SHAM
treatment group at any point in the study. CONCLUSION: LIPUS treatment did
not
improve healing in this stable osteotomy model. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: This
study
does not provide evidence to support the clinical application of LIPUS to
stimulate the healing of stable, uncomplicated osteotomies to accelerate bone
healing.
CI - © 2018 The American College of Veterinary Surgeons.
FAU - Kieves, Nina R
AU - Kieves NR
AD - Veterinary Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Group, Annapolis Junction,
Maryland.
FAU - Canapp, Sherman O
AU - Canapp SO
AD - Veterinary Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Group, Annapolis Junction,
Maryland.
FAU - Lotsikas, Peter J
AU - Lotsikas PJ
AD - Veterinary Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Group, Annapolis Junction,
Maryland.
FAU - Christopher, Scott A
AU - Christopher SA
AD - Veterinary Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Group, Annapolis Junction,
Maryland.
FAU - Leasure, Christopher S
AU - Leasure CS
AD - Veterinary Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Group, Annapolis Junction,
Maryland.
FAU - Canapp, Debra
AU - Canapp D
AD - Veterinary Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Group, Annapolis Junction,
Maryland.
FAU - Gavin, Patrick R
AU - Gavin PR
AD - MR Vets, Inc, Sagle, Idaho.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20180520
PL - United States
TA - Vet Surg
JT - Veterinary surgery : VS
JID - 8113214
SB - IM
MH - Animals
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries/surgery/*veterinary
MH - Dogs/*injuries/surgery
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Female
MH - *Gait
MH - Male
MH - Osteotomy/*veterinary
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Tibia/*surgery
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Ultrasonic Therapy/veterinary
MH - Ultrasonic Waves
MH - Wound Healing
EDAT- 2018/05/22 06:00
MHDA- 2018/11/18 06:00
CRDT- 2018/05/22 06:00
PHST- 2015/06/15 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/12/01 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2018/02/07 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2018/05/22 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/11/18 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2018/05/22 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1111/vsu.12798 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Vet Surg. 2018 Jul;47(5):614-622. doi: 10.1111/vsu.12798. Epub 2018 May 20.
PMID- 16686562
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20061109
LR - 20220318
IS - 1064-8011 (Print)
IS - 1064-8011 (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 2
DP - 2006 May
TI - The effects of plyometric vs. dynamic stabilization and balance training on
power, balance, and landing force in female athletes.
PG - 345-53
AB - Neuromuscular training protocols that include both plyometrics and dynamic
balance exercises can significantly improve biomechanics and neuromuscular
performance and reduce anterior cruciate ligament injury risk in female
athletes.
The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of plyometrics (PLYO)
versus
dynamic stabilization and balance training (BAL) on power, balance, strength,
and
landing force in female athletes. Either PLYO or BAL were included as a
component
of a dynamic neuromuscular training regimen that reduced measures related to
ACL
injury and increased measures of performance. Nineteen high school female
athletes participated in training 3 times a week for 7 weeks. The PLYO (n =
8)
group did not receive any dynamic balance exercises and the BAL (n = 11)
group
did not receive any maximum effort jumps during training. Pretraining vs.
posttraining measures of impact force and standard deviation of center of
pressure (COP) were recorded during a single leg hop and hold. Subjects were
also
tested for training effects in strength (isokinetic and isoinertial) and
power
(vertical jump). The percent change from pretest to posttest in vertical
ground
reaction force was significantly different between the BAL and PLYO groups on
the
dominant side (p < 0.05). Both groups decreased their standard deviation of
center of pressure (COP) during hop landings in the medial/lateral direction
on
their dominant side, which equalized pretested side to side differences. Both
groups increased hamstrings strength and vertical jump. The results of this
study
suggest that both PLYO and BAL training are effective at increasing measures
of
neuromuscular power and control. A combination of PLYO and BAL training may
further maximize the effectiveness of preseason training for female athletes.
FAU - Myer, Gregory D
AU - Myer GD
AD - Cincinnati Children's Hospital Research Foundation Sports Medicine
Biodynamics
Center and Human Performance Laboratory, Cincinnati, Ohio 45229, USA.
greg.myer@cchmc.org
FAU - Ford, Kevin R
AU - Ford KR
FAU - Brent, Jensen L
AU - Brent JL
FAU - Hewett, Timothy E
AU - Hewett TE
LA - eng
GR - R01-AR049735-01A1/AR/NIAMS NIH HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PL - United States
TA - J Strength Cond Res
JT - Journal of strength and conditioning research
JID - 9415084
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Lower Extremity/physiology
MH - Muscle, Skeletal/*physiology
MH - Physical Education and Training/*methods
MH - Proprioception/*physiology
MH - Sports/*physiology
EDAT- 2006/05/12 09:00
MHDA- 2006/11/11 09:00
CRDT- 2006/05/12 09:00
PHST- 2006/05/12 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2006/11/11 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/05/12 09:00 [entrez]
AID - R-17955 [pii]
AID - 10.1519/R-17955.1 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Strength Cond Res. 2006 May;20(2):345-53. doi: 10.1519/R-17955.1.
PMID- 34688506
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220304
LR - 20230102
IS - 0736-4679 (Print)
IS - 0736-4679 (Linking)
VI - 62
IP - 1
DP - 2022 Jan
TI - Translating Violence Prevention Programs from Research to Practice:
SafERteens
Implementation in an Urban Emergency Department.
PG - 109-124
LID - S0736-4679(21)00719-8 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.jemermed.2021.09.003 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Youth violence is a leading cause of adolescent mortality,
underscoring the need to integrate evidence-based violence prevention
programs
into routine emergency department (ED) care. OBJECTIVES: To examine the
translation of the SafERteens program into clinical care. METHODS: Hospital
staff
provided input on implementation facilitators/barriers to inform toolkit
development. Implementation was piloted in a four-arm
effectiveness-implementation trial, with youth (ages 14-18 years) screening
positive for past 3-month aggression randomized to either SafERteens
(delivered
remotely or in-person) or enhanced usual care (EUC; remote or in-person),
with
follow-up at post-test and 3 months. During maintenance, ED staff continued
in-person SafERteens delivery and external facilitation was provided.
Outcomes
were measured using the RE-AIM implementation framework. RESULTS: SafERteens
completion rates were 77.6% (52/67) for remote and 49.1% (27/55) for in-
person
delivery. In addition to high acceptability ratings (e.g., helpfulness),
post-test data demonstrated increased self-efficacy to avoid fighting among
patients receiving remote (incidence rate ratio [IRR] 1.22, 95% confidence
interval [CI] 1.09-1.36) and in-person (IRR 1.23, 95% CI 1.12-1.36)
SafERteens,
as well as decreased pro-violence attitudes among patients receiving remote
(IRR
0.83, 95% CI 0.75-0.91) and in-person (IRR 0.87, 95% CI 0.77-0.99) SafERteens
when compared with their respective EUC groups. At 3 months, youth receiving
remote SafERteens reported less non-partner aggression (IRR 0.52, 95% CI
0.31-0.87, Cohen's d -0.39) and violence consequences (IRR 0.47, 95% CI
0.22-1.00, Cohen's d -0.49) compared with remote EUC; no differences were
noted
for in-person SafERteens delivery. Barriers to implementation maintenance
included limited staff availability and a lack of reimbursement codes.
CONCLUSIONS: Implementing behavioral interventions such as SafERteens into
routine ED care is feasible using remote delivery. Policymakers should
consider
reimbursement for violence prevention services to sustain long-term
implementation.
CI - Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
FAU - Carter, Patrick M
AU - Carter PM
AD - University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Department
of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan; Youth Violence Prevention Center; Department of Health
Behavior/Health
Education, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor,
Michigan.
FAU - Cunningham, Rebecca M
AU - Cunningham RM
AD - University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Department
of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan; Youth Violence Prevention Center; Department of Health
Behavior/Health
Education, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor,
Michigan;
Department of Emergency Medicine, Hurley Medical Center, Flint, Michigan.
FAU - Eisman, Andria B
AU - Eisman AB
AD - Youth Violence Prevention Center; Department of Health Behavior/Health
Education,
University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Division
of
Kinesiology, Health and Sport Studies, College of Education, Wayne State
University, Detroit, Michigan.
FAU - Resnicow, Ken
AU - Resnicow K
AD - Department of Health Behavior/Health Education, University of Michigan School
of
Public Health, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
FAU - Roche, Jessica S
AU - Roche JS
AD - University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Department
of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan.
FAU - Cole, Jennifer Tang
AU - Cole JT
AD - University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Department
of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan.
FAU - Goldstick, Jason
AU - Goldstick J
AD - University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Department
of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan.
FAU - Kilbourne, Amy M
AU - Kilbourne AM
AD - Health Services Research and Development Service, Veterans Health
Administration,
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Washington, DC; Department of Learning
Health Sciences.
FAU - Walton, Maureen A
AU - Walton MA
AD - University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan;
Addiction
Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann
Arbor, Michigan.
LA - eng
GR - K23 DA039341/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United States
GR - R49 CE002099/CE/NCIPC CDC HHS/United States
GR - R49 CE003085/CE/NCIPC CDC HHS/United States
GR - R49CE002099/ACL/ACL HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20211028
PL - United States
TA - J Emerg Med
JT - The Journal of emergency medicine
JID - 8412174
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Aggression
MH - Behavior Therapy
MH - *Emergency Medical Services
MH - Emergency Service, Hospital
MH - Humans
MH - *Violence/prevention & control
PMC - PMC8810595
MID - NIHMS1741236
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - emergency departments
OT - implementation
OT - translation
OT - youth violence
COIS- No conflict of interest: All authors (PC, RC, AE, KR, JR, JC JG, AK, MW)
report
no conflict of interest. Declaration of interests The authors declare that
they
have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that
could
have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
EDAT- 2021/10/25 06:00
MHDA- 2022/03/05 06:00
CRDT- 2021/10/24 20:28
PHST- 2021/05/13 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/08/06 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2021/09/11 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/10/25 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/03/05 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/10/24 20:28 [entrez]
AID - S0736-4679(21)00719-8 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.jemermed.2021.09.003 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Emerg Med. 2022 Jan;62(1):109-124. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2021.09.003.
Epub
2021 Oct 28.
PMID- 14740155
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20041019
LR - 20181113
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 12
IP - 3
DP - 2004 May
TI - BTB ACL reconstruction: femoral nerve block has no advantage over
intraarticular
local anaesthetic infiltration.
PG - 180-3
AB - Fifty patients were randomly recruited to receive either femoral nerve block
(0.375% Bupivacaine) or an intraarticular local anaesthetic injection for
pain
control for arthroscopically-assisted ACL reconstruction. Both groups were
evenly
matched for age ( t-test p >0.05). Tourniquet time did not differ
significantly
between the groups ( t-test p=0.24). The VAS pain levels were not
significantly
different at 4 h and the first morning postoperatively in both groups.
Femoral
block (Median VAS: 20 & 18.5) did not confer a significant advantage (Mann
Whitney U test p =0.36, 0.67) over intraarticular injection of bupivacaine
(Median VAS: 18 & 20). There was no correlation between tourniquet time and
postoperative pain ( r=0.19, 0.08). All patients but one were discharged home
on
the first postoperative morning. Our study demonstrates that pain levels can
be
sufficiently controlled by intraarticular infiltration of bupivacaine coupled
with oral analgesia. The level of pain relief achieved could allow this
procedure
to be performed in a day surgery setting.
FAU - Mehdi, S A
AU - Mehdi SA
AD - Department of Orthopaedics, Western Infirmary, Glasgow, Scotland, UK.
s.mehdi@virgin.net
FAU - Dalton, D J N
AU - Dalton DJ
FAU - Sivarajan, V
AU - Sivarajan V
FAU - Leach, W J
AU - Leach WJ
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20040123
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - 0 (Anesthetics, Local)
RN - Y8335394RO (Bupivacaine)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - *Anesthesia, Local
MH - Anesthetics, Local/administration & dosage
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Arthroscopy/adverse effects
MH - Bupivacaine/administration & dosage
MH - *Femoral Nerve
MH - Humans
MH - *Nerve Block
MH - Pain Measurement
MH - Pain, Postoperative/etiology/*prevention & control
MH - Patella/transplantation
MH - Patellar Ligament/transplantation
MH - Tibia/transplantation
EDAT- 2004/01/24 05:00
MHDA- 2004/10/20 09:00
CRDT- 2004/01/24 05:00
PHST- 2003/03/01 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2003/09/12 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2004/01/24 05:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2004/10/20 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2004/01/24 05:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-003-0464-6 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2004 May;12(3):180-3. doi:
10.1007/s00167-003-0464-6. Epub 2004 Jan 23.
PMID- 24184850
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20151019
LR - 20220316
IS - 1536-3724 (Electronic)
IS - 1050-642X (Print)
IS - 1050-642X (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 2
DP - 2014 Mar
TI - Effect of a novel movement strategy in decreasing ACL risk factors in female
adolescent soccer players: a randomized controlled trial.
PG - 134-41
LID - 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000014 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of a novel movement strategy incorporated
within a soccer warm-up on biomechanical risk factors for anterior cruciate
ligament injury during 3 sport-specific movement tasks. DESIGN: Single-blind,
randomized controlled clinical trial. SETTING: Laboratory setting.
PARTICIPANTS:
Twenty top-tier female teenage soccer players. INTERVENTIONS: Subjects were
randomized to the Core Position and Control movement strategy (Core-PAC)
warm-up
or standard warm-up, which took place before their regular soccer practice
over a
6-week period. The Core-PAC focuses on getting the centre of mass closer to
the
plant foot or base of support. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Peak knee flexion angle
and
abduction moments during a side-hop (SH), side-cut, and unanticipated side-
cut
task after the 6 weeks with (intervention group only) and without a reminder
to
use the Core-PAC strategy. RESULTS: The Core-PAC group increased peak flexion
angles during the SH task [mean difference = 6.2 degrees; 95% confidence
interval
(CI), 1.9-10.5 degrees; effect size = 1.01; P = 0.034] after the 6-week warm-
up
program without a reminder. In addition, the Core-PAC group demonstrated
increased knee flexion angles for the side-cut (mean difference = 8.5
degrees;
95% CI, 4.8-12.2 degrees; ES = 2.02; P = 0.001) and SH (mean difference =
10.0
degrees; 95% CI, 5.7-14.3 degrees; ES = 1.66; P = 0.001) task after a
reminder.
No changes in abduction moments were found. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this
study suggest that the Core-PAC may be one method of modifying high-risk
soccer-specific movements and can be implemented within a practical, team-
based
soccer warm-up. The results should be interpreted with caution because of the
small sample size.
FAU - Celebrini, Richard G
AU - Celebrini RG
AD - *Graduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University
of
British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Departments of
†Physical
Therapy; and ‡Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, Faculty of
Medicine,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;
§Department
of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Victoria,
Australia;
¶Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon,
Saskatoon, Canada; and ‖Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
FAU - Eng, Janice J
AU - Eng JJ
FAU - Miller, William C
AU - Miller WC
FAU - Ekegren, Christina L
AU - Ekegren CL
FAU - Johnston, James D
AU - Johnston JD
FAU - Depew, Thomas A
AU - Depew TA
FAU - Macintyre, Donna L
AU - Macintyre DL
LA - eng
GR - 63617-1/Canadian Institutes of Health Research/Canada
GR - MSH 63617/CAPMC/CIHR/Canada
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PL - United States
TA - Clin J Sport Med
JT - Clinical journal of sport medicine : official journal of the Canadian Academy
of
Sport Medicine
JID - 9103300
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - *Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology
MH - Movement/*physiology
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Single-Blind Method
MH - Soccer/*injuries
MH - Warm-Up Exercise/physiology
PMC - PMC4485475
MID - CAMS4834
OID - NLM: CAMS4834
COIS- Conflicts of Interest: None.
EDAT- 2013/11/05 06:00
MHDA- 2015/10/20 06:00
CRDT- 2013/11/05 06:00
PHST- 2013/11/05 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/11/05 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2015/10/20 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000014 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Clin J Sport Med. 2014 Mar;24(2):134-41. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000014.
PMID- 16858558
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20070315
LR - 20220408
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 14
IP - 12
DP - 2006 Dec
TI - Arthroscopic meniscal repair: a comparative study between three different
surgical techniques.
PG - 1232-7
AB - The purpose of this prospective study was to evaluate and compare the results
of
arthroscopic meniscal repair using three different techniques. Between
January
2002 and March 2004, 57 patients who met the inclusion criteria underwent an
arthroscopic meniscal repair. The outside-in technique was used in 17
patients
(group A), the inside-out in 20 patients (group B), while the rest of the 20
patients (group C) were managed by the all-inside technique using the Mitek
RapidLoc soft tissue anchor (Mitek Surgical Products, Westwood, MA, USA).
Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction was performed in 29 patients
(51%). The criteria for clinical success included absence of joint line
tenderness, locking, swelling, and a negative McMurray test. The minimum
follow-up was one year for all groups. The mean follow-up was 23 months for
group
A, 22 months for group B, and 22 months for group C. All meniscal repairs
were
considered healed according to our criteria in group A, while 19 out of 20
repairs (95%) healed in group B. Finally 7 of 20 repairs (35%) were
considered
failures in group C and this difference was statistically significant in
comparison with other groups. The time required for meniscal repair averaged
38.5
min for group A, 18.1 min for group B, and 13.6 min for group C. Operation
time
for meniscal repair in group A was statistically longer in comparison with
other
groups. There were no significant differences among the three groups
concerning
complications. According to our results, arhtroscopic meniscal repair with
the
inside-out technique seems to be superior in comparison with the other
methods
because it offers a high rate of meniscus healing without prolonged operation
time.
FAU - Hantes, Michael E
AU - Hantes ME
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Medical School, University of Thessalia,
University Hospital of Larissa, 20 Ipsilantou Str, 41223 Larissa, Greece.
hantesmi@otenet.gr
FAU - Zachos, Vasilios C
AU - Zachos VC
FAU - Varitimidis, Sokratis E
AU - Varitimidis SE
FAU - Dailiana, Zoe H
AU - Dailiana ZH
FAU - Karachalios, Theophilos
AU - Karachalios T
FAU - Malizos, Konstantinos N
AU - Malizos KN
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20060721
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Analysis of Variance
MH - Arthroscopy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*surgery
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Menisci, Tibial/*surgery
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Suture Techniques/instrumentation
MH - Treatment Outcome
EDAT- 2006/07/22 09:00
MHDA- 2007/03/16 09:00
CRDT- 2006/07/22 09:00
PHST- 2005/10/26 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2005/11/16 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2006/07/22 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2007/03/16 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2006/07/22 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-006-0094-x [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2006 Dec;14(12):1232-7. doi:
10.1007/s00167-006-0094-x. Epub 2006 Jul 21.
PMID- 19557391
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20100513
LR - 20220321
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 18
IP - 1
DP - 2010 Jan
TI - Double-bundle versus single-bundle ACL reconstruction using the horizontal
femoral position: a prospective, randomized study.
PG - 32-6
LID - 10.1007/s00167-009-0844-7 [doi]
AB - The aim of this study was to evaluate whether anterior cruciate ligament
(ACL)
reconstruction using the double bundle technique (DB) improves stability in
the
knee compared with the single bundle technique (SB) with the femoral tunnel
in a
more horizontal position (2 or 10 o'clock). We conducted a randomized,
prospective study. Forty patients were randomized to the DB group (20
patients)
and the SB group (20 patients). Four-stranded semitendinosus and gracilis
autologous grafts were used in the SB group and in the DB group the
conventional
four tunnel technique was carried out using the same tendons. The IKDC
complete
form was used for the preoperative evaluation, and in the follow-up the IKDC
subjective knee evaluation form, IKDC current health assessment form and IKDC
knee examination form were used. Anteroposterior (AP) laxity was evaluated by
standardised and forced radiology in all patients. No significant
preoperative
between-group differences were found. During the follow-up, no differences
were
found between groups, except for significant between-group differences (P <
0.05)
between the preoperative and postoperative evaluations. The IKDC index also
showed significant differences in the 2-year follow-up. Median scores
increased
from 48 (range 41-54) to 81 (range 75-87) (P = 0.01) in the SB group and from
52
(range 46-58) to 80 (range 72-88) (P = 0.02) in the DB group. There were no
significant differences between the groups in terms of functional scores. In
conclusion, the 2 and 10 o'clock placements showed no significant differences
between SB and DB techniques in the pivot-shift test, manual and radiological
anterior posterior laxity and IKDC scores. However, significant between-group
differences were found between the preoperative and postoperative
evaluations.
FAU - Sastre, Sergi
AU - Sastre S
AD - Knee Surgery Unit, Orthopaedic Surgery Service, Hospital Clinic, University
of
Barcelona, C/Villarroel 170, 08036, Barcelona, Spain. ssastre@clinic.ub.es
FAU - Popescu, Dragos
AU - Popescu D
FAU - Núñez, Montserrat
AU - Núñez M
FAU - Pomes, Jaume
AU - Pomes J
FAU - Tomas, Xavier
AU - Tomas X
FAU - Peidro, Lluis
AU - Peidro L
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20090626
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy/methods
MH - Female
MH - Femur/surgery
MH - Humans
MH - Joint Instability/*physiopathology
MH - Knee Joint/*physiopathology/surgery
MH - Male
MH - Orthopedic Procedures/*methods/rehabilitation
MH - Range of Motion, Articular
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Severity of Illness Index
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Tibia/surgery
MH - Transplantation, Autologous
EDAT- 2009/06/27 09:00
MHDA- 2010/05/14 06:00
CRDT- 2009/06/27 09:00
PHST- 2008/09/04 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2009/06/03 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2009/06/27 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2009/06/27 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2010/05/14 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-009-0844-7 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2010 Jan;18(1):32-6. doi:
10.1007/s00167-009-0844-7. Epub 2009 Jun 26.
PMID- 22203049
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20130226
LR - 20211021
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 20
IP - 10
DP - 2012 Oct
TI - No effect on performance tests from a neuromuscular warm-up programme in
youth
female football: a randomised controlled trial.
PG - 2116-23
AB - PURPOSE: The objective of the present randomised controlled trial was to
study
the effect of a neuromuscular warm-up programme on performance tests in youth
female football. METHODS: Four youth female football teams with players aged
12-16 years were randomised into an intervention group and control group. The
intervention was a 15-min neuromuscular warm-up programme carried out twice a
week during the 11-week study period. Baseline and follow-up measurements of
performance were made indoors and included the star excursion balance test, a
countermovement jump test, a triple-hop for distance test, a modified
Illinois
agility test, and 10- and 20-m sprint tests. RESULTS: Fifty-two players
(intervention 28; control 24) took part in baseline measurements, and after
dropout, 41 players (intervention 23; control 18) were included for analysis.
Minor positive changes were seen in the control group compared to the
intervention group for a sub-score of the star excursion balance test (P <
0.05)
and in the modified Illinois agility test (P < 0.05). No improvement was seen
in
the intervention group from baseline to follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: The study
showed
that a neuromuscular warm-up programme carried out during 11 weeks did not
improve performance in youth female football. This could indicate that the
programme does not contain sufficient stimulus to improve performance. A low
player attendance at training sessions, and low specificity between exercises
in
the warm-up programme and the evaluated performance tests may also contribute
to
the lack of effect. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: I.
FAU - Lindblom, Hanna
AU - Lindblom H
AD - Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Medical and Health Sciences,
Linköping
University, 581 83, Linköping, Sweden. lindblom.hanna@bredband.net
FAU - Waldén, Markus
AU - Waldén M
FAU - Hägglund, Martin
AU - Hägglund M
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20111228
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Performance/*physiology
MH - Child
MH - Exercise/*physiology
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Single-Blind Method
MH - Soccer/injuries/*physiology
EDAT- 2011/12/29 06:00
MHDA- 2013/02/27 06:00
CRDT- 2011/12/29 06:00
PHST- 2011/10/15 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2011/12/15 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2011/12/29 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/12/29 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2013/02/27 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-011-1846-9 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2012 Oct;20(10):2116-23. doi:
10.1007/s00167-011-1846-9. Epub 2011 Dec 28.
PMID- 28241830
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180119
LR - 20230731
IS - 1475-2875 (Electronic)
IS - 1475-2875 (Linking)
VI - 16
IP - 1
DP - 2017 Feb 28
TI - Acceptability of insecticide-treated clothing for malaria prevention among
migrant rubber tappers in Myanmar: a cluster-randomized non-inferiority
crossover
trial.
PG - 92
LID - 10.1186/s12936-017-1737-8 [doi]
LID - 92
AB - BACKGROUND: Insecticide-treated clothing (ITC) has long been used for
military
and outdoor recreational purposes and there is substantial evidence to show
that
it can protect against arthropod biting. As a complementary vector control
measure, ITC could be used to address outdoor transmission of malaria,
particularly among mobile and migrant populations and night-time workers such
as
rubber tappers, who may be beyond the reach of core interventions. However,
more
information is required on acceptability and preferences of target groups
towards
ITC to understand whether it could be a viable strategy in Myanmar. METHODS:
A
cluster-randomized, double-blind, non-inferiority crossover trial was
performed
to determine acceptability of ITC versus identical, untreated clothing (NTC)
among migrant rubber tappers. The study took place between January and May
2015
with 234 participants in 16 clusters in Thanbyuzayat Township, Mon State,
Myanmar. Participants were randomly assigned to the order of clothing
distribution and followed up at 2, 4 and 6 week intervals. Acceptability was
assessed through structured questionnaires, focus group discussions and in-
depth
interviews. A cluster-level non-inferiority analysis was conducted using
STATA,
while qualitative data were digitally recorded, transcribed and content-
analysed
to identify patterns and themes, and managed thematically in Excel 2010(®).
RESULTS: Acceptability of both types of clothing was high. ITC was deduced to
be
non-inferior to NTC for seven out of eight indicators regarding perceptions
(looks nice, is durable, is pleasant to wear for nighttime work, reduces
mosquito
bites, would recommend the clothing, would buy the clothing, like the
clothing
overall). A high proportion of respondents reported that the clothing reduced
mosquito bites (ITC-98%; NTC-94%). Clothing was worn regularly (about 11
times in
the previous two weeks). The most common reasons for not wearing the clothing
every night were that it was being washed or dried, or the participant did
not go
to work. CONCLUSIONS: The high level of acceptability suggests that ITC could
be
an appropriate strategy for personal protection amongst migrant rubber
tappers in
outdoor transmission settings in Myanmar. However, more research is needed
into
the feasibility and protective efficacy of ITC before it can be considered
for
wider roll-out. Trial registration Clinical trials ACTRN12615000432516.
FAU - Crawshaw, Alison F
AU - Crawshaw AF
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-0450-7258
AD - Malaria Consortium Myanmar, 37/B Thiri Mingalar Street, Kamayut Township,
Yangon,
Myanmar. crawsali@gmail.com.
FAU - Maung, Thae Maung
AU - Maung TM
AD - Department of Medical Research, Ministry of Health and Sports, No. 5, Ziwaka
Road, Dagon Township, Yangon, Myanmar.
FAU - Shafique, Muhammad
AU - Shafique M
AD - Malaria Consortium Asia, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University,
Santasiri Sommani Building, 8th Floor, 420/6 Rajavidhi Road, Bangkok, 10400,
Thailand.
FAU - Sint, Nyan
AU - Sint N
AD - Vector Borne Diseases Control (National Malaria Control Programme), Mon State
Public Health Department, Ministry of Health and Sports, Science School
Street,
Bo Gone Quarter, Mawlamyine, Mon State, Myanmar.
FAU - Nicholas, Sarala
AU - Nicholas S
AD - Malaria Consortium, 56 Leonard Street, London, EC2A 4LT, UK.
FAU - Li, Michelle S
AU - Li MS
AD - Malaria Consortium, 56 Leonard Street, London, EC2A 4LT, UK.
FAU - Roca-Feltrer, Arantxa
AU - Roca-Feltrer A
AD - Malaria Consortium, 56 Leonard Street, London, EC2A 4LT, UK.
FAU - Hii, Jeffrey
AU - Hii J
AD - Malaria Consortium Asia, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University,
Santasiri Sommani Building, 8th Floor, 420/6 Rajavidhi Road, Bangkok, 10400,
Thailand.
LA - eng
SI - ANZCTR/ACTRN12615000432516
GR - U01GH001006/ACL/ACL HHS/United States
GR - U01 GH001006/GH/CGH CDC HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20170228
PL - England
TA - Malar J
JT - Malaria journal
JID - 101139802
RN - 0 (Insecticides)
RN - 9006-04-6 (Rubber)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Clothing/*psychology
MH - Cluster Analysis
MH - Cross-Over Studies
MH - Double-Blind Method
MH - Extraction and Processing Industry
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Insecticide-Treated Bednets/*statistics & numerical data
MH - *Insecticides
MH - Malaria/*prevention & control
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - *Mosquito Control
MH - Myanmar
MH - Occupational Diseases/*prevention & control
MH - Protective Clothing/statistics & numerical data
MH - Rubber
MH - Transients and Migrants/*statistics & numerical data
MH - Young Adult
PMC - PMC5329906
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Acceptability
OT - Insecticide-treated clothing
OT - Outdoor transmission
OT - Personal protection
OT - Rubber tappers
EDAT- 2017/03/01 06:00
MHDA- 2018/01/20 06:00
CRDT- 2017/03/01 06:00
PHST- 2016/12/02 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2017/02/15 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2017/03/01 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2017/03/01 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/01/20 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1186/s12936-017-1737-8 [pii]
AID - 1737 [pii]
AID - 10.1186/s12936-017-1737-8 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Malar J. 2017 Feb 28;16(1):92. doi: 10.1186/s12936-017-1737-8.
PMID- 35688444
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20230710
LR - 20230726
IS - 1938-2480 (Electronic)
IS - 1538-8506 (Linking)
VI - 36
IP - 10
DP - 2023 Aug
TI - Prospective Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial Comparing Hyperosmolar
Saline to
Standard Isotonic Irrigation Fluid for Arthroscopic Knee Surgery: Initial
Clinical Outcomes.
PG - 1087-1094
LID - 10.1055/s-0042-1749655 [doi]
AB - Numerous in vitro studies suggest higher osmolarity irrigation fluids
potentiate
a chondroprotective environment, and a recent clinical study using
hyperosmolar
saline for shoulder arthroscopy reported potential clinical advantages. This
prospective randomized double-blind controlled clinical trial was designed to
assess initial clinical outcomes associated with use of a hyperosmolar
irrigation
solution in patients undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery. With institutional
review board approval and informed consent, patients scheduled for
arthroscopic
knee surgery were randomized to surgery with either isotonic lactated
Ringer's
(273 mOsm/L) or hyperosmolar saline (593 mOsm/L) irrigation solution.
Outcomes
included perioperative blood pressure, knee girth, visual analogue scale
(VAS)
pain scores, and narcotic pain medication consumption. Forty-six patients
underwent arthroscopic knee surgery with isotonic (n = 23) or hyperosmolar
(n = 23) irrigation fluids. There were 11 males and 12 females (mean age = 44.0
years) in the isotonic cohort and 8 males and 15 females (mean age = 40.2
years)
in the hyperosmolar cohort. There were no significant differences with
respect to
surgical duration (pump time) or amount of irrigation fluid used between the
two
cohorts. There were no significant differences with respect to change in knee
girth, blood pressure, or VAS pain scores. However, patients treated with
hyperosmolar saline consumed less narcotic medication on postoperative day 3
(4.0 ± 7.6 vs. 15.5 ± 17.4 mg, p = 0.01). The results of this randomized clinical
trial suggest that a hyperosmolar irrigation solution is safe and relatively
inexpensive for use in patients undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery and
contributes to a reduction in initial postoperative narcotic pain medication
consumption. A hyperosmolar saline irrigation fluid was not associated with
any
detrimental effects on the execution of the surgical procedure, postoperative
pain, or periarticular fluid extravasation. Taken together with previous
basic
science, translational, and clinical studies, hyperosmolar saline irrigation
fluid is promising alternative to traditional isotonic irrigation fluids for
knee
arthroscopy. This study is a prospective trial and reflects level of evidence
I.
CI - Thieme. All rights reserved.
FAU - Oladeji, Lasun O
AU - Oladeji LO
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Thompson Laboratory for Regenerative
Orthopaedics, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Missouri, Columbia,
Missouri.
FAU - Stannard, James P
AU - Stannard JP
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8467-6494
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Thompson Laboratory for Regenerative
Orthopaedics, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Missouri, Columbia,
Missouri.
FAU - Smith, Matthew J
AU - Smith MJ
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Thompson Laboratory for Regenerative
Orthopaedics, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Missouri, Columbia,
Missouri.
FAU - Ma, Richard
AU - Ma R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-8088-5686
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Thompson Laboratory for Regenerative
Orthopaedics, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Missouri, Columbia,
Missouri.
FAU - Skelley, Nathan W
AU - Skelley NW
AD - Sanford Health Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, University of South Dakota
Medical Center, Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
FAU - Sherman, Seth L
AU - Sherman SL
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, Redwood City,
California.
FAU - Cook, James L
AU - Cook JL
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-0862-995X
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Thompson Laboratory for Regenerative
Orthopaedics, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri.
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Missouri, Columbia,
Missouri.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20220610
PL - Germany
TA - J Knee Surg
JT - The journal of knee surgery
JID - 101137599
RN - 0 (Saline Solution)
RN - 0 (Narcotics)
SB - IM
MH - Male
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Adult
MH - *Arthroscopy/methods
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - *Saline Solution/therapeutic use
MH - Pain, Postoperative
MH - Narcotics
COIS- J.L.C. reports grants and personal fees from Arthrex, Inc., personal fees
from
Bioventus, grants from Coulter Foundation, grants from DePuy Synthes, grants
from
GE Healthcare, other from Journal of Knee Surgery, grants from Merial, other
from
Midwest Transplant Network, grants, personal fees and other from
Musculoskeletal
Transplant Network, grants from National Institutes of Health (NIAMS &
NICHD),
grants from Purina, personal fees and other from Thieme, personal fees from
Trupanion, grants from U.S. Department of Defense, outside the submitted
work.
J.P.S. reports other from American Orthopaedic Association, other from AO
Foundation, other from AO North America, grants and personal fees from
Arthrex,
Inc., grants from Coulter Foundation, personal fees from DePuy Synthes, other
from Journal of Knee Surgery, other from Mid-America Orthopaedic Association,
grants from National Institutes of Health (NIAMS & NICHD), personal fees from
Orthopedic Designs North America, personal fees from Smith & Nephew, other
from
Thieme, grants from U.S. Department of Defense, outside the submitted work.
M.J.S. reports grants and personal fees from Arthrex, Inc., grants and
personal
fees from DePuy Synthes, personal fees from Ignite Orthopedics, grants from
Wright Medical Technology, Inc., outside the submitted work. R.M. reports
other
from American Orthopaedic Association, other from American Orthopaedic
Society
for Sports Medicine, grants from Cartiheal, other from Journal of Bone and
Joint
Surgery AM, grants from Moximed, other from Orthopaedic Research Society,
other
from Rugby Research Injury Prevention Group, outside the submitted work.
S.L.S.
reports other from ACL Study Group, other from American Orthopaedic Society
for
Sports Medicine, grants and personal fees from Arthrex, Inc., other from
Arthroscopy, other from Arthroscopy Association of North America, personal
fees
from Ceterix Orthopaedics, personal fees from CONMED Linvatex, personal fees
from
Flexion Therapeutics, personal fees from GLG Consulting, other from
International
Cartilage Restoration & Joint Preservation Society, other from International
Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery, and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine,
personal
fees from JRF Ortho, personal fees from Linvatec, personal fees from Moximed,
personal fees from Olympus, personal fees from RTI Surgical, personal fees
from
Smith & Nephew, personal fees from Vericel, outside the submitted work.
EDAT- 2022/06/11 06:00
MHDA- 2023/07/10 06:42
CRDT- 2022/06/10 20:02
PHST- 2023/07/10 06:42 [medline]
PHST- 2022/06/11 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/06/10 20:02 [entrez]
AID - 10.1055/s-0042-1749655 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Knee Surg. 2023 Aug;36(10):1087-1094. doi: 10.1055/s-0042-1749655. Epub
2022
Jun 10.
PMID- 25348013
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20150709
LR - 20190107
IS - 1745-6215 (Electronic)
IS - 1745-6215 (Linking)
VI - 15
DP - 2014 Oct 27
TI - The COMmunity of Practice And Safety Support (COMPASS) Total Worker Health™
study
among home care workers: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
PG - 411
LID - 10.1186/1745-6215-15-411 [doi]
LID - 411
AB - BACKGROUND: Home care workers are a high-risk group for injury and illness.
Their
unique work structure presents challenges to delivering a program to enhance
their health and safety. No randomized controlled trials have assessed the
impact
of a Total Worker Health™ program designed for their needs. METHODS/DESIGN:
The
COMPASS (COMmunity of Practice And Safety Support) study is a cluster
randomized
trial being implemented among Oregon's unionized home care workers.
Partnering
with the Oregon Home Care Commission allowed recruiting 10 pairs of home care
worker groups with 8 participants per group (n = 160) for balanced
randomization
of groups to intervention and control conditions. Physiologic and survey
evaluation of all participants will be at enrollment, 6 months and 12 months.
Primary outcomes are to increase health promoting (for example, healthy
nutrition
and regular physical activity) and health protecting (that is, safety)
behaviors.
In addition to assessing outcomes adjusted for the hierarchical design,
mediation
analyses will be used to deconstruct and confirm the program's theoretical
underpinnings and intervention processes. Intervention groups will
participate in
a series of monthly 2-hour meetings designed as ritualized, scripted peer-led
sessions to increase knowledge, practice skills and build support for healthy
actions. Self-monitoring and individual and team level goals are included to
augment change. Because generalizability, reach and achieving dissemination
are
priorities, following initial wave findings, a second wave of COMPASS groups
will
be recruited and enrolled with tailoring of the program to align with
existing
Home Care Commission educational offerings. Outcomes, process and mediation
of
those tailored groups will be compared with the original wave's findings.
DISCUSSION: The COMPASS trial will assess a novel program to enhance the
safety
and health of a vulnerable, rapidly expanding group of isolated caregivers,
whose
critical work allows independent living of frail seniors and the disabled.
TRIAL
REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02113371, first registered 11
March 2014.
FAU - Olson, Ryan
AU - Olson R
FAU - Elliot, Diane
AU - Elliot D
AD - Division of Health Promotion & Sports Medicine, Oregon Health & Science
University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, L606, Portland, OR 97239-3098,
USA.
elliotd@ohsu.edu.
FAU - Hess, Jennifer
AU - Hess J
FAU - Thompson, Sharon
AU - Thompson S
FAU - Luther, Kristy
AU - Luther K
FAU - Wipfli, Brad
AU - Wipfli B
FAU - Wright, Robert
AU - Wright R
FAU - Buckmaster, Annie Mancini
AU - Buckmaster AM
LA - eng
SI - ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT02113371
GR - U19OH010154/ACL HHS/United States
GR - U19OH010154/OH/NIOSH CDC HHS/United States
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20141027
PL - England
TA - Trials
JT - Trials
JID - 101263253
SB - IM
MH - Attitude of Health Personnel
MH - Health Behavior
MH - Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
MH - Health Promotion
MH - Health Status
MH - *Home Care Services
MH - Home Health Aides/*education/psychology
MH - Humans
MH - Inservice Training/*methods
MH - Occupational Health/*education
MH - Occupational Injuries/*prevention & control
MH - Oregon
MH - Peer Group
MH - Quality of Life
MH - *Research Design
MH - Risk Assessment
MH - Risk Factors
MH - Time Factors
MH - Workforce
PMC - PMC4226848
EDAT- 2014/10/29 06:00
MHDA- 2015/07/15 06:00
CRDT- 2014/10/29 06:00
PHST- 2014/06/24 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2014/09/25 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2014/10/29 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2014/10/29 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2015/07/15 06:00 [medline]
AID - 1745-6215-15-411 [pii]
AID - 2281 [pii]
AID - 10.1186/1745-6215-15-411 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - Trials. 2014 Oct 27;15:411. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-15-411.
PMID- 18192495
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20080522
LR - 20161124
IS - 1552-3365 (Electronic)
IS - 0363-5465 (Linking)
VI - 36
IP - 4
DP - 2008 Apr
TI - Absorption of dexamethasone sodium phosphate in human connective tissue using
iontophoresis.
PG - 753-9
LID - 10.1177/0363546507311597 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Iontophoresis ostensibly facilitates the delivery of medications
through the skin to underlying tissues using a direct electrical current.
Dexamethasone is the most commonly used medication with iontophoresis to
treat a
variety of connective tissue disorders. HYPOTHESIS: Iontophoresis will
facilitate
the absorption of dexamethasone into connective tissue compared with
diffusion.
STUDY DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study. METHODS: Twenty-nine adults
undergoing
anterior cruciate ligament reconstructive surgery using the
semitendinosus/gracilis autograft were randomly assigned to either a true
iontophoresis (TI) or sham iontophoresis (SI). In the TI group, a 40-mA/min
dose
of iontophoresis using a 0.4% (4 mg/mL) solution of dexamethasone was used
targeting the semitendinosus tendon just before surgery. The SI group
underwent
the same treatment, but the machine was not turned on. Tissue was extracted
within 4 hours of treatment and analyzed for dexamethasone. In addition, 2
control samples were sent to the laboratory for analysis. RESULTS: There was
a
statistically significant difference in dexamethasone concentrations between
the
groups (P = .0216). Of the 16 samples in the TI group, 8 had measurable
amounts
of dexamethasone, with an average concentration of 2.906 ng/g of tendon
tissue.
In the SI group, 1 of the 13 samples had measurable amounts of dexamethasone
with
an average concentration of 0.205 ng/g of tendon tissue. The control samples
contained no dexamethasone. CONCLUSION: Iontophoresis facilitates the
transmission of dexamethasone to connective tissues in humans. CLINICAL
RELEVANCE: Iontophoresis can deliver dexamethasone to connective tissues in
humans.
FAU - Gurney, A Burke
AU - Gurney AB
AD - University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Department of Orthopaedics and
Rehabilitation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA. bgurney@salud.unm.edu
FAU - Wascher, Daniel C
AU - Wascher DC
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20080111
PL - United States
TA - Am J Sports Med
JT - The American journal of sports medicine
JID - 7609541
RN - 0 (Anti-Inflammatory Agents)
RN - 2BP70L44PR (dexamethasone 21-phosphate)
RN - 7S5I7G3JQL (Dexamethasone)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - Anti-Inflammatory Agents/*administration & dosage/metabolism
MH - Connective Tissue/*physiology
MH - Dexamethasone/administration & dosage/*analogs & derivatives/metabolism
MH - Humans
MH - *Iontophoresis/instrumentation
MH - New Mexico
MH - *Skin Absorption
MH - Tendons/transplantation
EDAT- 2008/01/15 09:00
MHDA- 2008/05/23 09:00
CRDT- 2008/01/15 09:00
PHST- 2008/01/15 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2008/05/23 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2008/01/15 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 0363546507311597 [pii]
AID - 10.1177/0363546507311597 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Am J Sports Med. 2008 Apr;36(4):753-9. doi: 10.1177/0363546507311597. Epub
2008
Jan 11.
PMID- 23117286
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20140121
LR - 20191112
IS - 1543-3072 (Electronic)
IS - 1056-6716 (Linking)
VI - 22
IP - 2
DP - 2013 May
TI - Incidence of decreased hip range of motion in youth soccer players and
response
to a stretching program: a randomized clinical trial.
PG - 100-7
AB - CONTEXT: After years of focusing on the management of anterior cruciate
ligament
(ACL) injuries, the most common soccer-related injuries, the orthopedic
community
has concluded that soccer players have a wide range of variation in joint
biomechanics and has thus started to focus research efforts on the
morphological
factors that might contribute to ACL trauma. One such factor is decreased
hip-rotation range of motion (ROM), which may be due to compensatory
musculoskeletal changes occurring in response to longstanding soccer practice
since childhood. OBJECTIVE: This study sought to assess decreased hip
rotation
and the influence of stretching exercises on the behavior of the hip joint in
players of the youth soccer categories of a Brazilian soccer team. DESIGN:
Randomized clinical trial. SETTING: University hospital. PATIENTS: 262 male
soccer players. INTERVENTIONS: Subjects were randomly allocated into 2
groups-control or a stretching program. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Subjects were
reassessed after 12 wk. RESULTS: The findings suggest that hip-rotation ROM
decreases over the years in soccer players. In the study sample, adherence to
a
stretching program improved only external hip-rotation ROM in the nondominant
limb. CONCLUSION: Playing soccer can restrict rotation ROM of the hip, and
adherence to stretching exercises may decrease the harmful effects on the hip
joints.
FAU - de Castro, Jacqueline Vieira
AU - de Castro JV
AD - School of Medicine, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre,
Brazil.
FAU - Machado, Karina Costa
AU - Machado KC
FAU - Scaramussa, Kelly
AU - Scaramussa K
FAU - Gomes, João Luiz Ellera
AU - Gomes JL
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20121030
PL - United States
TA - J Sport Rehabil
JT - Journal of sport rehabilitation
JID - 9206500
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Child
MH - Hip Joint/*physiopathology
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries/etiology
MH - Male
MH - *Muscle Stretching Exercises
MH - Range of Motion, Articular/*physiology
MH - Rotation
MH - Soccer/injuries/*physiology
EDAT- 2012/11/03 06:00
MHDA- 2014/01/22 06:00
CRDT- 2012/11/03 06:00
PHST- 2012/11/03 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/11/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/01/22 06:00 [medline]
AID - 2012-0036 [pii]
AID - 10.1123/jsr.22.2.100 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Sport Rehabil. 2013 May;22(2):100-7. doi: 10.1123/jsr.22.2.100. Epub 2012
Oct
30.
PMID- 15887586
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050803
LR - 20210529
IS - 0147-7447 (Print)
IS - 0147-7447 (Linking)
VI - 28
IP - 4
DP - 2005 Apr
TI - The effect of radiofrequency energy on nonweight-bearing areas of bone
following
shoulder and knee arthroscopy.
PG - 392-9
AB - This prospective randomized clinical trial evaluated whether the use of
radiofrequency energy (RFE) devices for soft-tissue ablation and coagulation
cause thermal injury to bone. Fifty patients underwent one of three treatment
modalities: electrocautery, monopolar RFE, or bipolar RFE. Preoperative and
postoperative magnetic resonance imaging was compared to evaluate for
evidence of
osteonecrosis. Postoperative MRI of all patients did not reveal any
osteonecrosis
or subchondral edema. These findings indicate electrocautery, monopolar RFE,
and
bipolar RFE devices can be used safely for soft-tissue blation and
hemostasis.
FAU - Nho, Shane J
AU - Nho SJ
AD - Section of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Rush Medical
College of Rush University, Rush-Presbyterian St Luke's Medical Center,
Chicago,
IL, USA.
FAU - Freedman, Kevin B
AU - Freedman KB
FAU - Bansal, Shanti L
AU - Bansal SL
FAU - Romeo, Anthony A
AU - Romeo AA
FAU - Bach, Bernard R Jr
AU - Bach BR Jr
FAU - Bush-Joseph, Charles A
AU - Bush-Joseph CA
FAU - Turner, David A
AU - Turner DA
FAU - Cole, Brian J
AU - Cole BJ
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Orthopedics
JT - Orthopedics
JID - 7806107
SB - IM
CIN - Orthopedics. 2006 Apr;29(4):292. PMID: 16628986
MH - Acromion/*surgery
MH - Adult
MH - Aged
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - *Arthroscopy
MH - Bone Marrow Diseases/diagnosis
MH - Bone and Bones/*injuries/pathology
MH - Burns/*diagnosis
MH - Bursa, Synovial/*surgery
MH - Connective Tissue/surgery
MH - Decompression, Surgical/*instrumentation
MH - Edema/diagnosis
MH - Electrocoagulation/*instrumentation
MH - Equipment Design
MH - Equipment Safety
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Fractures, Spontaneous/diagnosis
MH - Hemostasis, Surgical/*instrumentation
MH - Humans
MH - Image Enhancement
MH - Knee Joint/*surgery
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Osteonecrosis/diagnosis
MH - Postoperative Complications/*diagnosis
MH - Shoulder Joint/*surgery
EDAT- 2005/05/13 09:00
MHDA- 2005/08/04 09:00
CRDT- 2005/05/13 09:00
PHST- 2005/05/13 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/08/04 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/05/13 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.3928/0147-7447-20050401-16 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Orthopedics. 2005 Apr;28(4):392-9. doi: 10.3928/0147-7447-20050401-16.
PMID- 12845425
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20040805
LR - 20220317
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 12
IP - 2
DP - 2004 Mar
TI - Tibial fixation comparison of semitendinosus-bone composite allografts fixed
with
bioabsorbable screws and bone-patella tendon-bone grafts fixed with titanium
screws.
PG - 88-93
AB - Tibial fixation remains the weak link of ACL reconstruction over the first 8-
12
weeks postoperatively. This study compared the biomechanical properties of
tibial
fixation for a bone-patellar tendon-bone (BPTB) graft and a novel
semitendinosus-bone composite (SBC) allograft with mixed cortical-cancellous
bone
dowels at each end. Seven paired, fresh frozen cadaveric knees (20-45 years)
were
stripped of all soft tissue attachments and randomly assigned to receive
either
the BPTB graft or SBC allograft. Grafts were placed into tibial tunnels via a
standard protocol and secured with either a 10 mmx28 mm bioabsorbable (SBC)
or
titanium (BPTB) screw. Grafts were cycled ten times in a servo hydraulic
device
from 10-50 N prior to pull to failure testing at a rate of 20 mm/min with the
force vector aligned with the tibial tunnel ("worst case scenario"). Wilcoxon
Signed Rank Tests were used to evaluate biomechanical differences between
graft
types ( p<0.05). Tibial bone mineral density and interference screw insertion
torque were statistically equivalent between graft types. The mode of failure
for
all constructs was direct screw and graft construct pullout from the tibial
tunnel. Significant differences were not observed between graft types for
maximum
load at failure strength (BPTB=620.8+/-209 N vs. SBC=601.2+/-140 N, p=0.74)
or
stiffness (BPTB=69.8 N/mm+/-29 N/mm vs SBC=47.1+/-31.6 N/mm, p=0.24). The SBC
allograft yielded significantly more displacement prior to failure than the
BPTB
graft (15.1+/-4.9 mm vs 9.2+/-1.3 mm, p=0.04). Increased construct
displacement
appeared to be due to fixation failure, with some evidence of graft tissue
tearing around the sutures: Bioabsorbable screw (10 x 28 mm) fixation of the
SBC
allograft produced unacceptable displacement levels during testing. Further
study
is recommended using a titanium interference screw or a longer bioabsorbable
screw for SBC graft fixation under cyclic loading conditions.
FAU - Kocabey, Y
AU - Kocabey Y
AD - Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Frazier Rehabilitation Institute, Suite
1003,
University of Louisville, 210 East Gray Street, Louisville, KY 40202, USA.
FAU - Klein, S
AU - Klein S
FAU - Nyland, J
AU - Nyland J
FAU - Caborn, D
AU - Caborn D
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20030704
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - D1JT611TNE (Titanium)
SB - IM
CIN - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2004 Mar;12(2):87. PMID: 15024561
MH - *Absorbable Implants
MH - Adult
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - Bone Density/physiology
MH - *Bone Screws
MH - Cadaver
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Joint/surgery
MH - Male
MH - *Materials Testing
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Patella/surgery
MH - Stress, Mechanical
MH - Tendons/*transplantation
MH - Tensile Strength/physiology
MH - Tibia/*surgery
MH - Titanium
MH - Transplantation, Homologous
EDAT- 2003/07/08 05:00
MHDA- 2004/08/06 05:00
CRDT- 2003/07/08 05:00
PHST- 2002/08/24 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2003/03/06 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2003/07/08 05:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2004/08/06 05:00 [medline]
PHST- 2003/07/08 05:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-003-0370-y [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2004 Mar;12(2):88-93. doi:
10.1007/s00167-003-0370-y. Epub 2003 Jul 4.
PMID- 16116012
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20050927
LR - 20220318
IS - 0003-2999 (Print)
IS - 0003-2999 (Linking)
VI - 101
IP - 3
DP - 2005 Sep
TI - Ketamine sedation during spinal anesthesia for arthroscopic knee surgery
reduced
the ischemia-reperfusion injury markers.
PG - 904-909
LID - 10.1213/01.ANE.0000159377.15687.87 [doi]
AB - We studied the effect of ketamine sedation on oxidative stress during
arthroscopic knee surgery with tourniquet application by determining blood
and
tissue malonyldialdehyde (MDA) and hypoxanthine (HPX) levels. Thirty ASA I-II
patients undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery with tourniquet were randomly
divided into two groups. Spinal anesthesia induced with 12.5 mg bupivacaine
was
administered to all patients. In the ketamine group, after IV administration
of
0.01 mg/kg midazolam, a continuous infusion of ketamine (0.5 mg . kg(-1) .
h(-1))
was used until the end of surgery whereas the placebo group received a
volume-equivalent placebo infusion. Ramsey Sedation Scale (RSS) was used for
assessing the sedation level. Venous blood and synovial membrane tissue
samples
were obtained before ketamine infusion, at 30 min of tourniquet ischemia, and
at
5 min after tourniquet deflation for MDA and HPX measurements. Tissue MDA and
HPX
levels were significantly less in the ketamine group than the control group
after
reperfusion. RSS scores were higher in the ketamine group without any adverse
effect. We conclude that ketamine sedation attenuates lipid peroxidation
markers
in arthroscopic knee surgery with tourniquet application.
FAU - Saricaoglu, Fatma
AU - Saricaoglu F
AD - *Department of Anaesthesiology and Reanimation, †Department of Sports
Medicine
and Orthopaedics, and the ‡Department of Biochemistry, Hacettepe University
Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey.
FAU - Dal, Didem
AU - Dal D
FAU - Salman, Akgün Ebru
AU - Salman AE
FAU - Doral, Mahmut Nedim
AU - Doral MN
FAU - Klnç, Kamer
AU - Klnç K
FAU - Aypar, Ülkü
AU - Aypar Ü
LA - eng
PT - Clinical Trial
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Anesth Analg
JT - Anesthesia and analgesia
JID - 1310650
RN - 0 (Anesthetics, Dissociative)
RN - 0 (Biomarkers)
RN - 0 (Hypnotics and Sedatives)
RN - 0 (Hypoxanthines)
RN - 4Y8F71G49Q (Malondialdehyde)
RN - 690G0D6V8H (Ketamine)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - *Anesthesia, Spinal
MH - *Anesthetics, Dissociative
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/surgery
MH - *Arthroscopy
MH - Biomarkers
MH - Blood Pressure/physiology
MH - Female
MH - Hemodynamics/drug effects
MH - Humans
MH - *Hypnotics and Sedatives
MH - Hypoxanthines/blood
MH - *Ketamine
MH - Knee/*surgery
MH - Male
MH - Malondialdehyde/blood
MH - Pain Measurement
MH - Reperfusion Injury/metabolism/*prevention & control
MH - Tourniquets/adverse effects
EDAT- 2005/08/24 09:00
MHDA- 2005/09/28 09:00
CRDT- 2005/08/24 09:00
PHST- 2005/08/24 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2005/09/28 09:00 [medline]
PHST- 2005/08/24 09:00 [entrez]
AID - 00000539-200509000-00053 [pii]
AID - 10.1213/01.ANE.0000159377.15687.87 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Anesth Analg. 2005 Sep;101(3):904-909. doi:
10.1213/01.ANE.0000159377.15687.87.
PMID- 22808704
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20120807
LR - 20191210
IS - 0270-1367 (Print)
IS - 0270-1367 (Linking)
VI - 83
IP - 2
DP - 2012 Jun
TI - Distance reached in the Anteromedial Reach Test as a function of learning and
leg
length.
PG - 188-95
AB - The anteromedial reach test (ART) is a new outcome measure for assessing
dynamic
knee stability in anterior cruciate ligament-injured patients. The effect of
learning and leg length on distance reached in the ART was examined. Thirty-
two
healthy volunteers performed 15 trials of the ART on each leg. There was a
moderate correlation (r = .44-.50) between reach distance and leg length,
therefore reach distances were normalized for leg length. Normalized reach
distance increased significantly over the 15 trials (p < .01), reaching a
plateau
after 8 trials, identified by a moving average graph. It is recommended that
participants be afforded eight practice trials and that reach distances be
normalized by expressing them as a percentage of leg length.
FAU - Bent, Nicholas P
AU - Bent NP
AD - School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, USA.
n.p.bent@bham.ac.uk
FAU - Rushton, Alison B
AU - Rushton AB
FAU - Wright, Chris C
AU - Wright CC
FAU - Batt, Mark E
AU - Batt ME
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - Res Q Exerc Sport
JT - Research quarterly for exercise and sport
JID - 8006373
SB - IM
MH - Adolescent
MH - Adult
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Knee Injuries
MH - Knee Joint/*physiology/physiopathology
MH - Male
MH - Proprioception/physiology
MH - Rupture
MH - Transfer, Psychology
MH - Young Adult
EDAT- 2012/07/20 06:00
MHDA- 2012/08/08 06:00
CRDT- 2012/07/20 06:00
PHST- 2012/07/20 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2012/07/20 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2012/08/08 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1080/02701367.2012.10599849 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Res Q Exerc Sport. 2012 Jun;83(2):188-95. doi:
10.1080/02701367.2012.10599849.
PMID- 24189336
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20140710
LR - 20131115
IS - 1557-0584 (Electronic)
IS - 1557-0576 (Linking)
VI - 37
IP - 4
DP - 2013 Dec
TI - Combination of robot-assisted and conventional body-weight-supported
treadmill
training improves gait in persons with multiple sclerosis: a pilot study.
PG - 187-93
LID - 10.1097/NPT.0000000000000018 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The majority of persons with multiple sclerosis (MS)
experience problems with gait, which they characterize as highly disabling
impairments that adversely impact their quality of life. Thus, it is crucial
to
develop effective therapies to improve mobility for these individuals. The
purpose of this study was to determine whether combination gait training,
using
robot-assisted treadmill training followed by conventional body-weight-
supported
treadmill training within the same session, improved gait and balance in
individuals with MS. METHODS: This study tested combination gait training in
7
persons with MS. The participants were randomized into the immediate therapy
group (IT group) or the delayed therapy group (DT group). In phase I of the
trial, the IT group received treatment while the DT group served as a
concurrent
comparison group. In phase II of the trial, the DT group received treatment
identical to the treatment received by the IT group in phase I. Outcome
measures
included the 6-Minute Walk Test (6MWT), the Timed 25-Foot Walk Test,
velocity,
cadence, and the Functional Reach Test (FRT). Nonparametric statistical
techniques were used for analysis. RESULTS: Combination gait training
resulted in
significantly greater improvements in the 6MWT for the IT group (median
change =
+59 m) compared with Phase I DT group (median change = -8 m) (P = 0.08) and
FRT
(median change = +3.3 cm in IT vs -0.8 cm in the DT group phase I; P = 0.03).
Significant overall pre-post improvements following combination gait training
were found in 6MWT (+32 m; P = 0.02) and FRT (+3.3 cm; P = 0.06) for IT and
Phase
II DT groups combined. CONCLUSIONS: Combination of robot with
body-weight-supported treadmill training gait training is feasible and
improved
6MWT and FRT distances in persons with MS.Video Abstract available (see
Video,
Supplemental Digital Content 1, http://links.lww.com/JNPT/A62) for more
insights
from the authors.
FAU - Ruiz, Jennifer
AU - Ruiz J
AD - Mandell Center for Multiple Sclerosis, Mount Sinai Rehabilitation Hospital,
Hartford, Connecticut (J.A.R., M.P.L., E.W.T., A.C.L.); and Department of
Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Brown University (E.W.T.), Department
of
Neurology, Brown University (A.C.L.), and Providence VA Medical Center
(A.C.L.),
Providence, Rhode Island.
FAU - Labas, Michele P
AU - Labas MP
FAU - Triche, Elizabeth W
AU - Triche EW
FAU - Lo, Albert C
AU - Lo AC
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PL - United States
TA - J Neurol Phys Ther
JT - Journal of neurologic physical therapy : JNPT
JID - 101193365
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Exercise Test
MH - Exercise Therapy/*methods
MH - Female
MH - Gait/*physiology
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Multiple Sclerosis/physiopathology/*rehabilitation
MH - Pilot Projects
MH - Postural Balance/physiology
MH - *Robotics
MH - Severity of Illness Index
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - Walking/*physiology
EDAT- 2013/11/06 06:00
MHDA- 2014/07/11 06:00
CRDT- 2013/11/06 06:00
PHST- 2013/11/06 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/11/06 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/07/11 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1097/NPT.0000000000000018 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - J Neurol Phys Ther. 2013 Dec;37(4):187-93. doi: 10.1097/NPT.0000000000000018.
PMID- 21234545
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20110922
LR - 20221207
IS - 1433-7347 (Electronic)
IS - 0942-2056 (Print)
IS - 0942-2056 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 5
DP - 2011 May
TI - A prospective randomized study of ACL-reconstructions using bone-patellar
tendon-bone grafts fixed with bioabsorbable or metal interference screws.
PG - 753-9
LID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1353-4 [doi]
AB - INTRODUCTION: Bioabsorbable screws are, at the expense of metal screws,
increasingly used as fixation device in ACL-reconstructions. The possible
advantages with bioabsorbable screws are better postoperative MRI evaluations
and
easier revision surgery. PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to compare the
clinical outcome after ACL-reconstructions with BPTB-grafts fixed with metal
interference screws or bioabsorbable screws 7 years postoperatively. The
resorption of the bioabsorbable screws was also analyzed. METHODS: Between
2000
and 2001, 41 patients with ACL deficient knees were randomized for the use of
BPTB-graft fixed with either metal interference screws or bioabsorbable poly-
L:
-lactic acid screws. This is a 7-year follow-up with clinical examinations of
both groups and, MRI of the patients with bioabsorbable screws. RESULTS: The
clinical and functional results were satisfactory in both groups. There were
no
significant differences between the groups in any parameter measured, except
for
better Pivot shift results in the bioscrew group (P = 0.04). The MRI
evaluation
showed degradation of the bioscrews. A residual screw tract which appeared
threaded was seen in the tibia in 11 of the 16 patients. There was no sign of
bony ingrowth in the previous screw site in the tibia in any of the patients.
CONCLUSION: The potential advantages of using PLLA-screws compared to metal
screws are not sufficient to warrant the routine use of PLLA-screws in
ACL-reconstructions. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: I.
FAU - Drogset, Jon Olav
AU - Drogset JO
AD - Trondheim University Hospital, Norwegian University of Science and
Technology,
Trondheim, Norway.
FAU - Straume, Lene Granrud
AU - Straume LG
FAU - Bjørkmo, Ingrid
AU - Bjørkmo I
FAU - Myhr, Gunnar
AU - Myhr G
LA - eng
PT - Comparative Study
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20110114
PL - Germany
TA - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc
JT - Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the
ESSKA
JID - 9314730
RN - 0 (Metals)
RN - 0 (Polyesters)
RN - 0 (Polymers)
RN - 33X04XA5AT (Lactic Acid)
RN - 459TN2L5F5 (poly(lactide))
SB - IM
MH - Absorbable Implants
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament/*surgery
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Arthroscopy
MH - *Bone Screws
MH - *Bone-Patellar Tendon-Bone Grafting
MH - Chi-Square Distribution
MH - Female
MH - Follow-Up Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Lactic Acid
MH - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
MH - Male
MH - Metals
MH - Polyesters
MH - Polymers
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Plastic Surgery Procedures/*instrumentation/*methods
MH - Recovery of Function
MH - Treatment Outcome
PMC - PMC3076560
EDAT- 2011/01/15 06:00
MHDA- 2011/09/23 06:00
CRDT- 2011/01/15 06:00
PHST- 2009/04/18 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2010/11/30 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2011/01/15 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2011/01/15 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2011/09/23 06:00 [medline]
AID - 1353 [pii]
AID - 10.1007/s00167-010-1353-4 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2011 May;19(5):753-9. doi:
10.1007/s00167-010-1353-4. Epub 2011 Jan 14.
PMID- 19083719
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20090323
LR - 20161124
IS - 1873-1600 (Electronic)
IS - 1466-853X (Linking)
VI - 9
IP - 4
DP - 2008 Nov
TI - Effects of a plyometric program on vertical landing force and jumping
performance
in college women.
PG - 185-92
LID - 10.1016/j.ptsp.2008.08.001 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVES: To examine the effects of a plyometric program on peak vertical
ground reaction force as well as kinetic jumping characteristics in
recreationally athletic college women. DESIGN: Six week prospective exercise
intervention. SETTING: Division I university campus. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty
college
females who competed recreationally in basketball were randomly assigned to a
training (n=10) or control (n=10) group. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The absolute
change values for vertical ground reaction force, countermovement jump
height,
peak and average jump power, and peak jump velocity. Comparisons were made
using
Mann-Whitney U tests. RESULTS: Vertical ground reaction force decreased in
the
intervention group (-222.8+/-610.9N), but was not statistically different
(p=0.122) compared to the change observed in the control group (54.6+/-
257.6N).
There was no difference in the absolute change values between groups for
countermovement jump height (1.0+/-2.8cm vs. -0.2+/-1.5cm, p=0.696) or any of
the
associated kinetic variables following the 6-week intervention. CONCLUSIONS:
Although not statistically significant, the mean absolute reduction in
vertical
ground reaction force in the training group is clinically meaningful. Eight
of
the 10 women in the training group reduced vertical ground reaction force by
17-18%; however, improvements in jumping performance were not observed. This
indicates that programs aimed at enhancing performance must be designed
differently from those aimed at reducing landing forces in recreationally
athletic women.
FAU - Vescovi, Jason D
AU - Vescovi JD
AD - Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269, USA.
FAU - Canavan, Paul K
AU - Canavan PK
FAU - Hasson, Scott
AU - Hasson S
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20080918
PL - England
TA - Phys Ther Sport
JT - Physical therapy in sport : official journal of the Association of Chartered
Physiotherapists in Sports Medicine
JID - 100940513
SB - IM
MH - Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries
MH - Athletic Injuries/prevention & control
MH - *Athletic Performance
MH - Biomechanical Phenomena
MH - *Exercise Movement Techniques
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Leg/*physiology
MH - *Movement
MH - Physical Fitness/physiology
MH - Prospective Studies
MH - Sports/physiology
EDAT- 2008/12/17 09:00
MHDA- 2009/03/24 09:00
CRDT- 2008/12/17 09:00
PHST- 2008/03/04 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2008/06/16 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2008/08/06 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2008/12/17 09:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2008/12/17 09:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2009/03/24 09:00 [medline]
AID - S1466-853X(08)00099-0 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.ptsp.2008.08.001 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Phys Ther Sport. 2008 Nov;9(4):185-92. doi: 10.1016/j.ptsp.2008.08.001. Epub
2008
Sep 18.