Title: ... incidence coincides with onset of puberty (Michaud
1When does gender matter? How maturation relates
to ACL injury
2Introduction
- Estimated 80,000 -250,000 ACL ruptures occur per
year (Garrick, 1999) - Over 50 in 15-25 year old athletes
- 70 noncontact mechanism (Boden, 2000)
- Increased ACL injury risk for adolescent and
adult females (Agel, 2005)
3Introduction
- Pubertal stage may relate to rate and type of
injury (Tursz, 1986 Adirim, 2003) - Decreased incidence of fracture, increased
incidence of sprain - Increase in overall injury rate related to sports
as boys and girls progress through pubertal stages
4Introduction
- Onset of ACL injury incidence coincides with
onset of puberty (Michaud, 2001 Shea, 2004) - No difference in ACL rates between genders before
onset of puberty Age 12 distinct shift in
increased female sprain rates - Gender bias in ACL injuries present after age 12
5Proposed risk factors for ACL injury
- Environmental
- Surface
- Footwear
- Interaction between surface footwear
- Protective equipment
- Anatomical
- Q angle
- Static valgus
- Pronation
- BMI
- Femoral notch width
- ACL geometry/structure
- Hormonal
- Regulation of collagen synthesis and ligament
degradation - Laxity
- Neuromuscular
- Altered movement patterns
- Altered activation patterns
- Altered muscle stiffness
6Neuromuscular Risk Factors
- Altered movement patterns
- Kinematic (range of motion)
- Kinetic (joint torque as measured by ground
reaction force) - Tibial shear
7Altered Movement Patterns
- Consistent kinematic differences found between
adult and adolescent males and females during
laboratory based landing tasks (Ford, 2003
Hanson, in press Hewett, 2005 Padua, 2002) - Females display
- Decreased hip and knee flexion
- Increased hip internal rotation
- Increased knee valgus
- Increased anterior tibial shear
8Altered Movement Patterns
- Prospective kinetic differences found between ACL
injured and healthy adolescent females (Hewett,
05) - Injured group had larger knee valgus moments
- Higher ground reaction forces
9Altered Movement Patterns
- Less published information looking at
pre-pubertal males and females - No kinematic differences shown between genders in
pre-pubertals (Jackson, submitted) or before age
12 (Yu, 2005) - Differences in force management between genders
in pre-pubertal population during sidestep
cutting (Jackson) - Inherent differences between genders regarding
force management?
10Neuromuscular Risk Factors
- Altered muscle activation patterns
- High levels of quadriceps activity
- Low levels of hamstring activity
- Decreased normalized strength
- Altered muscle stiffness patterns
- Muscle activation response time to movement or
perturbation
11Altered Muscle Activation
- Adult females of all levels exhibit quadriceps
dominance during landing and cutting (Huston,
1996 Malinzak, 2001 White, 2003) - Eccentric contraction coupled with decreased knee
flexion ? greater anterior tibial shear - Decreased knee flexion minimizes posterior shear
forces of the hamstrings
Borrowed from Darin Padua
12Altered Muscle Stiffness
- Adult females have decreased stiffness of the
hamstrings and quadriceps (Padua, 2002 Wojtys,
2002 Blackburn, 2008) - Decreased ability to dissipate external forces
- Increased joint motion
- Greater load placed on static restraints
(ligament dominance) - Increased risk for ACL injury
- No known studies investigating muscle stiffness
in youth population
13- What is happening during puberty that is
changing neuromuscular control patterns and
resulting in differences between adolescent and
adult males and females?
14- Borrowed from Carmen Quatman
15Sex Differences in Pubertal Changes
- Prepubertal similar in
- Height
- Weight
- BMI
- Muscle width
- Bone width and length
- Pubertal different in
- Height
- Weight
- BMI
- Bone length
- Females have more hip internal rotation knee
valgus - Females have larger Q angles
16Rapid Growth Significantly Affects
- Height
- Weight
- Length and mass of levers (tibia, femur)
- Center of mass
- Muscle strength, activation stiffness
(Myer, 2007)
17What We Should Do
- Proposed females do not go through neuromuscular
spurt similar to males - Negatively affects trunk hip neuromuscular
control
(Myer, 2008)
18- What should we do?
- Examine
- Identify
- Implement
19Examine
- Examine neuromuscular control performance
(Hewett, 2005) - Gender differences relate to risk factors for ACL
injury - Neuromuscular control patterns develop early and
may continue to progress/change
20Examine
- Examine the position of the entire body during
jumping, landing and cutting? - Lateral trunk lean
- Hip flexion
- Femur position
- Knee flexion
- Knee valgus
- Tibial external rotation
- Foot eversion
21Identify
- Identify at risk individuals and intervene
Garret Griffin, 2006
22Implement Prevention Programs
- What to include?
- Balance
- Strength
- Agility
- Plyometrics
- Risk awareness
23Implement Prevention Programs
- How often and for how long?
- Optimal parameters are not known
- Adjust accordingly based on
- Population
- Level of injury risk
- Rate of improvement
- Information overload
- How much time is a coach willing to give you?
- Do not proceed past the point of improper
mechanics
24Implement Prevention Programs
- What age?
- Optimal age is not known, improvements seen in
adolescent and adult groups - Do not cause harm by overloading developing
structures - My opinion, younger is better keeping in mind the
goal of the program - Introduce awareness
- Establish proper mechanics
- Minimize risk factors
25Questions?