Magnetic resonance imaging parameters for assessing risk of recurrent hamstring injuries in elite athletes
Background: Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging has established its usefulness in diagnosing hamstring muscle strain and identifying features correlating with the duration of rehabilitation in athletes; however, data are currently lacking that may
predict which imaging parameters may be predictive of a repeat strain.
Purpose: This study was conducted to identify whether any MR imaging-identifiable parameters are predictive of athletes at risk of sustaining a recurrent hamstring strain in
the same playing season.
Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3.
Methods: Forty-one players of the Australian Football League who sustained a hamstring injury underwent MR examination within 3 days of injury between February and August
2002. The imaging parameters measured were the length of injury, cross-sectional area, the specific muscle involved, and the location of the injury within the muscle-tendon unit. Players who suffered a repeat injury during the same season were
reimaged, and baseline and repeat injury measurements were compared. Comparison was also made between this group and those who sustained a single strain. Results: Forty-one players sustained hamstring strains that were positive on MR imaging, with
31 injured once and 10 suffering a second injury. The mean length of hamstring muscle injury for the isolated group was 83.4 mm, compared with 98.7 mm for the reinjury group (P = .35). In the reinjury group, the second strain was also of greater
length than the original (mean, 107.5 mm; P = .07). Ninety percent of players sustaining a repeat injury demonstrated an injury length greater than 60 mm, compared with only 58% in the single strain group (P = .01). Only 7% of players (1 of 14)
with a strain <60 mm suffered a repeat injury. Of the 27 players sustaining a hamstring strain >60 mm, 33% (9 of 27) suffered a repeat injury. Of all the parameters assessed, only a history of anterior cruciate ligament sprain was a statistically
significant predictor for suffering a second strain during the same season of competition.
Conclusion: A history of anterior cruciate ligament injury was the only statistically significant risk factor for a recurrent hamstring strain in our study.
Of the imaging parameters, the MR length of a strain had the strongest correlation association with a repeat hamstring strain and therefore may assist in identifying which athletes are more likely to suffer further reinjury.
© Copyright 2007 The American Journal of Sports Medicine. SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.
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| Notations: | biological and medical sciences |
| Published in: | The American Journal of Sports Medicine |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2007
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/0363546507301258 |
| Volume: | 35 |
| Issue: | 9 |
| Pages: | 1500-1506 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |