Cincinnati Sportsmedicine Research and Education Foundation, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Phys Sportsmed. 2009 Oct;37(3):49-61. doi: 10.3810/psm.2009.10.1729.
High school and collegiate female athletes have a significantly increased risk of sustaining a noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injury compared with male athletes participating in the same sport. This review summarizes the current knowledge of the risk factors hypothesized to influence this problem, and the neuromuscular training programs designed to correct certain biomechanical problems noted in female athletes. The risk factors include a genetic predisposition for sustaining a knee ligament injury, environmental factors, anatomical indices, hormonal influences, and neuromuscular factors. The greatest amount of research in this area has studied differences between female and male athletes in movement patterns during athletic tasks; muscle strength, activation, and recruitment patterns; and knee joint stiffness under controlled, preplanned, and reactive conditions in the laboratory. Neuromuscular retraining programs have been developed in an attempt to reduce these differences. The successful programs teach athletes to control the upper body, trunk, and lower body position; lower the center of gravity by increasing hip and knee flexion during activities; and develop muscular strength and techniques to land with decreased ground reaction forces. In addition, athletes are taught to preposition the body and lower extremity prior to initial ground contact to obtain the position of greatest knee joint stability and stiffness. Two published programs have significantly reduced the incidence of noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries in female athletes participating in basketball, soccer, and volleyball. Other programs were ineffective, had a poor study design, or had an insufficient number of participants, which precluded a true reduction in the risk of this injury. In order to determine which risk factors for noncontact anterior cruciate ligament ruptures are significant, future investigations should include larger cohorts of athletes in multiple sports, analyze factors from all of the major risk categories, and follow athletes for at least one full athletic season. Future risk assessment studies should incorporate reactive tasks under more realistic sports conditions.
与从事相同运动的男性运动员相比,高中和大学的女性运动员有更高的风险会遭受非接触性前交叉韧带损伤。本综述总结了目前已知的影响该问题的危险因素,并介绍了旨在纠正女性运动员某些生物力学问题的神经肌肉训练计划。危险因素包括易患膝关节韧带损伤的遗传倾向、环境因素、解剖学指标、激素影响和神经肌肉因素。该领域的大部分研究都研究了女性和男性运动员在运动任务中的运动模式、肌肉力量、激活和募集模式以及在实验室中受控、预先计划和反应条件下的膝关节刚度之间的差异。已经开发了神经肌肉再训练计划,以试图减少这些差异。成功的计划教导运动员控制上半身、躯干和下半身的位置;在活动中通过增加髋关节和膝关节的弯曲度降低重心;并发展肌肉力量和技术,以降低地面反作用力的方式着地。此外,运动员还被教导在初始地面接触之前预先定位身体和下肢,以获得最大膝关节稳定性和刚度的位置。两个已发表的计划显著降低了参加篮球、足球和排球的女性运动员的非接触性前交叉韧带损伤的发生率。其他计划无效、研究设计不佳或参与者人数不足,无法真正降低这种伤害的风险。为了确定非接触性前交叉韧带断裂的危险因素是否显著,未来的研究应包括多个运动项目的大量运动员,分析来自所有主要风险类别的因素,并至少随访运动员一个完整的运动赛季。未来的风险评估研究应在更现实的运动条件下纳入反应性任务。