According to a presenter at the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports
Medicine Annual Meeting, Chicago, athletes who sustained an ACL injury are at greater
risk for subsequent ACL injuries during the first 2 years after reconstruction
and return-to-sport compared to athletes who have not had an ACL injury.
“Our second injury rate in the first 24 months
is relatively high. We see more contralateral injuries in female athletes than
ipsilateral re-tears in the ACL reconstruction cohort, and the second ACL
injury seems to occur early on after the return-to-sport,” said Mark V.
Paterno, PT, PhD, MBA, SCS, ATC, from the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital,
said at the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine Annual Meeting.
Paterno
and colleagues studied the incidence rate of a second ACL injury
in the 2 years following ACL reconstruction
and return-to-sport in a young, active population. They hypothesized the
incidence rate of a subsequent ACL injury would be less than the incidence rate
reported within the first 12 months after return-to-sport, but greater than the
ACL injury incidence rate in an uninjured cohort of young athletes.
In
their prospective study, the investigators enrolled 78 patients (59 women, 19
men) aged 10 years to 25 years who underwent ACL reconstruction and returned to
a pivoting/cutting sport and compared them to 47 healthy, control athletes (34
women, 13 men) without a history of ACL or lower extremity injury. All athletes
were playing a pivot/cut sport for more than 50 hours per year. Each athlete
was followed for injury and athletic exposure data.
Paterno
and colleagues found 23 patients in the ACL reconstruction group and four
athletes in the uninjured group had an ACL injury during the 24-month period.
The overall incidence rate of a second ACL injury within 24 months after ACL
reconstruction and return-to-sport was nearly six times greater than uninjured
group.
Female
athletes who had an ACL reconstruction showed a four times greater rate of
injury within 24 months of return-to-sport than the female control athletes.
Within the ACL reconstruction group, the female athletes were two times more
likely to have a contralateral injury, he said.
Overall,
29.5% of athletes had a second ACL injury within 24 months of return-to-sport
with 20.5% having a contralateral injury and 9% having an ipsilateral graft
re-tear injury. More women (23.7%) had a contralateral injury than men (10.5%).
Reference:
Paterno MV.
Paper #2. Presented at the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine
Annual Meeting; July 11-14, 2013; Chicago.
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