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ACL Injury Prevention Programs Michael D. Lee, MD.

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Presentation on theme: "ACL Injury Prevention Programs Michael D. Lee, MD."— Presentation transcript:

1 ACL Injury Prevention Programs Michael D. Lee, MD

2 ACL Tears 250,000 to 300,000 per year $20,000 to $50,000 per reconstruction $800 to $3000 out of pocket PT: $1000+

3 ACL Reconstruction 6% ipsilateral knee (2-10%) 12% contralateral knee (8-16%) about 1 in 5 will have another ACL tear Failure Rate Wright et al., JBJS, 2011

4 ACL Revision 14% Failure Rate Wright et al., JBJS, 2012

5 ACL Tears ACL reconstructed knee is not “normal” lifelong increased risk of OA best treatment: prevention

6 Female Risk 4 - 6 times male risk Title IX 1972 Act Female participation 5 times at college level Female participation 10 times high school level

7 ACL Injuries 70% are non-contact injuries Non-contact injuries are theoretically preventable

8 Risk Factors non-modifiable modifiable basis for prevention

9 Non-modifiable Risk Factors anatomic genetic: COL5 risk in some females developmental hormonal Ge G

10 Notch Stenosis Theory: small notch impinges on ACL Several studies support this theory

11 Notch Width Index

12 Notch Size Smaller notch = smaller ACL? + correlation of ACL size and notch width index Smaller ACL found in ACL injured patients compared to controls

13 Ligamentous Laxity Generalized LL a significant risk for ACLI Studies show knee hyperextension in ♀ soccer and bball players a risk for ACLI

14 Tibial Slope

15 Increased slope increases ACLI risk Increased slope increases ACL strain

16 Hormonal Function ACL fibroblasts have estrogen receptors Estrogen affects tensile properties of ligaments Increased ACLI risk in pre-ovulatory menstrual phase (first 1/2 of cycle)

17 Hormone Function Retrospective studies show decreased risk of ACLIs with BCPs Theory: stabilize hormonal functional through cycle

18 Neuromuscular Maturation No ACLI difference in pre-adolescent ♀ vs ♂ 4 -6 x risk for females after maturation only males have a n-m spurt with increase in power, strength and coordination post-maturation jump mechanics differ

19 Modifiable Risk Factors ligament dominance quadriceps dominance leg dominance trunk dominance Neuromuscular Imbalance

20 Ligament Dominance responsible for valgus collapse supporting ms groups don’t adequately contract to absorb ground reaction forces this increases the forces placed thru static restraints

21 Ligament Dominance all LE muscles contribute to dynamic stability posterior kinetic chain most important for ACLI prevention (glutes, hamstrings, gastro- soleus) improper PKC recruitment during landing causes higher knee abd. moments and increases load on ACL

22 Valgus Collapse

23 Quadriceps Dominance ♀ preferentially activate quads in landing results in stiff-legged, extended landing posture rather than safer flexed position hamstrings are ACL-agonists, reducing anterior tibial translation Quads are ACL-antagonists, exerting strain on ACL

24 Quadriceps Dominance an erect or extended knee landing posture activates the quads quadriceps contraction increase anterior shear stress to knee protective pull of hamstrings is lost plyometric training can increase HS:Quad torque or strength ratio

25 Leg Dominance women rely more on one leg compared to men leg dominance defined as measurable muscle asymmetry limited evidence to support LD as a definite risk factor

26 Trunk Dominance inability to control trunk in space allows greater movements outside of safe zone creates larger moments on the LE ACL injured females in one study had significantly more max. trunk displacement in all directions compared to controls

27 Environmental most important is shoe-surface interface larger (longer) cleats and rubber floors are risk factors in several studies

28 Fatigue may decrease dynamic stability Chappell et al: increased ant shear force and valgus moments, and decreased flexion angles in jump study in fatigued vs non-fatigued state data support but clinical research lacking to validate this theory

29 Prevention Focus balance strength proprioception endurance plyometrics stability

30 Prevention Biomechanics decrease peak landing forces, knee abduction forces and HS/Quad strength ratio increase knee flexion with landing importance of feedback can’t be overemphasized Goals

31 Clinical Studies Hewett et al. 1999, 1263 athletes: increased ACLI in untrained group Mandelbaum “PEP” program: Prevent injury and Enhance Performance. 20 min. soccer program replaces warm-up. Reduced ACLI 74- 88% over 2 years

32 Clinical Studies Gilchrist et al.: 1435 female Div. I soccer players. Non-contact ACLI rate 3.3 x less in trained group Caraffa et al.: Proprioceptive training 600 soccer players. ACLI 8 x higher in untrained group

33 Meta-Analyses of ACL PP Hewett 2006: 6 studies, concluded that N-M programs have sign. effect on reducing ACLIs Yoo 2010: ACLI PP best for < 18 y.o., female, and emphasis on plyometric and strength training. Sadoghi 2012: significant, positive effect of ACLI PP. ♀ RRI = 52%. ♂ RRI = 85%

34 Screening Meyer: ♀ separated into hi/low risk groups from motor analysis of drop vertical jump. Significant decrease in knee abduction moments in hi risk group with ACLI PP training. DiStefano: “LESS”: Landing Error Scoring System. Those with higher risk scores improved most with ACLI PP

35 Screening Studies consistently identify at risk athletes identification methods presently are too labor intensive for large scale implementation.

36 Compliance Poor athletes and coaches prefer to focus on performance rather than injury prevention

37 Compliance Performance is usually enhanced with ACLI PP Improved: LE strength, vertical jump height, squat strength, single leg hop distance, sprint times

38 Recommendations “ all female athletes should undergo an ACL PP until more reliable methods of identification of at-risk athletes are developed. The training sessions should emphasize proper technique and should be performed year-round.” Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 2013

39 Questions?


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