Most Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries in Professional Athletes Occur Without Contact to the Injured Knee: A Systematic Review of Video Analysis Studies.

Categoria Systematic review
GiornaleArthroscopy : the journal of arthroscopic & related surgery : official publication of the Arthroscopy Association of North America and the International Arthroscopy Association
Year 2024
PURPOSE: To systematically review studies utilizing video analyses to evaluate anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury mechanisms in athletes during sport to better understand risk factors and the potential for injury prevention. METHODS: A literature search was conducted in accordance with the 2020 PRISMA guidelines statement using SCOPUS, PubMed, Medline, and the Cochrane Central Register for Controlled Trials from database inception through June 2023. Inclusion criteria including studies reporting on ACL injury mechanisms occurring in athletes based on video analysis. Athlete demographics, injury mechanisms, position of the lower extremity, and activity at the time of injury were recorded. RESULTS: A total of 13 studies, consisting of 542 athletes, met inclusion criteria. The majority of athletes competed at the professional level (91%, n=495/542) with 79% (n=422/536) of athletes being male. The most common sports were soccer (33%, n=178/542) and American football (26%, n=140/542). The most common injury mechanism was non-contact in 42.9% (n=230/536) of athletes, followed by indirect contact (32.6%, n=175/536) and direct contact (22.4%, n=120/536). The most common position of injury was with a planted foot ( 91.7%, n=110/120), full or near full knee extension ( 84.4%, n=49/58), and axial loading ( 81.3%, n=87/107). Injuries commonly involved a deceleration/shift in momentum ( 50.4%, n=123/244) or pivoting maneuver ( 36.1%, n=77/213). At the time of injury, the knee commonly fell into valgus ( 76.8%, n=225/293) with associated internal (53.5%, n=46/86) or external tibiofemoral rotation ( 57.7%, n=101/175). CONCLUSIONS: The majority of ACL injuries, when evaluated by video analysis, involve professional athletes participating in soccer and American football. The most common injury mechanism occurred without contact with the knee in extension during a deceleration or momentum shift, with resultant valgus and rotational force across the knee. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: IV; Systematic review of level IV studies.
Epistemonikos ID: 583cd61d4192c18806d7d8f1ece7df5fa6f91358
First added on: Apr 26, 2024