Boguszewski Daniel V, Cheung Edward C, Joshi Nirav B, Markolf Keith L, McAllister David R
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2015 Dec;43(12):2982-7. doi: 10.1177/0363546515608478. Epub 2015 Oct 13.
It has been reported that over 70% of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries occur in noncontact situations and that females are at 2 to 8 times greater risk of ACL injury than males. Increased joint laxity and reduced knee stiffness in female knees have been suggested as possible explanations for the higher ACL injury rates in females.
Compared with male knees, female knees will demonstrate increased laxity and reduced stiffness along the anterior-posterior (AP), internal-external (IE), and varus-valgus (VV) directions.
Controlled laboratory study.
Forty-seven fresh-frozen human cadaveric knees were tested (22 male and 25 female) by use of a robotic system. Mean ages were 34.6 years (range, 19-45 years) for males and 28.4 years (range, 16-42 years) for females. Joint laxity and stiffness were measured from force-vs-displacement or torque-vs-rotation curves recorded for 3 modes of testing: ± 134 N AP force, ± 5 N · m IE torque, and ± 10 N · m VV moment.
Compared with male knees, female knees had greater internal laxity from 0° to 50° flexion (P < .01; maximum difference of 8.3° at 50° of flexion) and greater valgus laxity from 0° to 50° of flexion (P < .05; maximum difference of 1.6° at 50° of flexion). However, female knees exhibited greater anterior laxity only at 50° of flexion (P < .03; difference of 1.3 mm). No significant male-female differences in anterior or posterior stiffness were found. Male knees had 42% greater internal stiffness from 0° to 30° of flexion (P < .03), 35% greater valgus stiffness at 10° of flexion (P < .03), and 19% greater varus stiffness at 50° of flexion (P < .03).
Female knees demonstrated significantly increased laxity and reduced stiffness compared with males. This finding was not uniform but was dependent on the direction tested and the knee flexion angle.
Understanding the risk factors for noncontact ACL injury is important for injury prevention. In combination with other female-specific risk factors, increased knee laxity may be a contributing factor associated with the higher rate of female ACL injuries.
据报道,超过70%的前交叉韧带(ACL)损伤发生在非接触情况下,并且女性ACL损伤的风险是男性的2至8倍。女性膝关节松弛度增加和膝关节僵硬程度降低被认为可能是女性ACL损伤率较高的原因。
与男性膝关节相比,女性膝关节在前后(AP)、内外(IE)和内翻-外翻(VV)方向上会表现出更大的松弛度和更低的僵硬程度。
对照实验室研究。
使用机器人系统对47个新鲜冷冻的人体尸体膝关节进行测试(22个男性和25个女性)。男性的平均年龄为34.6岁(范围19 - 45岁),女性为28.4岁(范围16 - 42岁)。通过记录三种测试模式的力-位移或扭矩-旋转曲线来测量关节松弛度和僵硬程度:±134 N的AP力、±5 N·m的IE扭矩和±10 N·m的VV力矩。
与男性膝关节相比,女性膝关节在0°至50°屈曲时具有更大的内翻松弛度(P <.01;在50°屈曲时最大差异为8.3°),在0°至50°屈曲时具有更大的外翻松弛度(P <.05;在50°屈曲时最大差异为1.6°)。然而,女性膝关节仅在50°屈曲时表现出更大的前向松弛度(P <.03;差异为1.3 mm)。在前后僵硬程度方面未发现显著的男女差异。男性膝关节在0°至30°屈曲时内翻僵硬程度高42%(P <.03),在10°屈曲时外翻僵硬程度高35%(P <.03),在50°屈曲时内翻僵硬程度高19%(P <.03)。
与男性相比,女性膝关节表现出明显更大的松弛度和更低的僵硬程度。这一发现并不一致,而是取决于测试方向和膝关节屈曲角度。
了解非接触性ACL损伤的风险因素对于预防损伤很重要。与其他女性特有的风险因素相结合,膝关节松弛度增加可能是女性ACL损伤率较高的一个促成因素。