Wiggins Amelia J, Grandhi Ravi K, Schneider Daniel K, Stanfield Denver, Webster Kate E, Myer Gregory D
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2016 Jul;44(7):1861-76. doi: 10.1177/0363546515621554. Epub 2016 Jan 15.
Injury to the ipsilateral graft used for reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) or a new injury to the contralateral ACL are disastrous outcomes after successful ACL reconstruction (ACLR), rehabilitation, and return to activity. Studies reporting ACL reinjury rates in younger active populations are emerging in the literature, but these data have not yet been comprehensively synthesized.
To provide a current review of the literature to evaluate age and activity level as the primary risk factors in reinjury after ACLR.
Systematic review and meta-analysis.
A systematic review of the literature was conducted via searches in PubMed (1966 to July 2015) and EBSCO host (CINAHL, Medline, SPORTDiscus [1987 to July 2015]). After the search and consultation with experts and rating of study quality, 19 articles met inclusion for review and aggregation. Population demographic data and total reinjury (ipsilateral and contralateral) rate data were recorded from each individual study and combined using random-effects meta-analyses. Separate meta-analyses were conducted for the total population data as well as the following subsets: young age, return to sport, and young age + return to sport.
Overall, the total second ACL reinjury rate was 15%, with an ipsilateral reinjury rate of 7% and contralateral injury rate of 8%. The secondary ACL injury rate (ipsilateral + contralateral) for patients younger than 25 years was 21%. The secondary ACL injury rate for athletes who return to a sport was also 20%. Combining these risk factors, athletes younger than 25 years who return to sport have a secondary ACL injury rate of 23%.
This systematic review and meta-analysis demonstrates that younger age and a return to high level of activity are salient factors associated with secondary ACL injury. These combined data indicate that nearly 1 in 4 young athletic patients who sustain an ACL injury and return to high-risk sport will go on to sustain another ACL injury at some point in their career, and they will likely sustain it early in the return-to-play period. The high rate of secondary injury in young athletes who return to sport after ACLR equates to a 30 to 40 times greater risk of an ACL injury compared with uninjured adolescents. These data indicate that activity modification, improved rehabilitation and return-to-play guidelines, and the use of integrative neuromuscular training may help athletes more safely reintegrate into sport and reduce second injury in this at-risk population.
用于重建前交叉韧带(ACL)的同侧移植物损伤或对侧ACL新损伤是ACL重建(ACLR)成功、康复并恢复运动后的灾难性后果。文献中不断涌现出关于年轻活跃人群ACL再损伤率的研究报告,但这些数据尚未得到全面综合。
对文献进行当前综述,以评估年龄和活动水平作为ACLR后再损伤的主要风险因素。
系统评价和荟萃分析。
通过在PubMed(1966年至2015年7月)和EBSCO主机(CINAHL、Medline、SPORTDiscus[1987年至2015年7月])中检索对文献进行系统评价。在检索并咨询专家以及对研究质量进行评级后,19篇文章符合纳入综述和汇总的标准。从每项独立研究中记录人群人口统计学数据和总再损伤(同侧和对侧)率数据,并使用随机效应荟萃分析进行合并。对总体人群数据以及以下亚组分别进行荟萃分析:年轻、恢复运动、年轻+恢复运动。
总体而言,第二次ACL再损伤总发生率为15%,同侧再损伤率为7%,对侧损伤率为8%。25岁以下患者的继发性ACL损伤率(同侧+对侧)为21%。恢复运动的运动员的继发性ACL损伤率也为20%。综合这些风险因素,25岁以下恢复运动的运动员的继发性ACL损伤率为23%。
这项系统评价和荟萃分析表明,年轻和恢复高水平活动是与继发性ACL损伤相关的显著因素。这些综合数据表明,在ACL损伤并恢复高风险运动的年轻运动员中,近四分之一的人在其职业生涯的某个阶段会再次发生ACL损伤,而且很可能在恢复比赛期早期就会发生。ACLR后恢复运动的年轻运动员中继发性损伤的高发生率相当于未受伤青少年ACL损伤风险的30至40倍。这些数据表明,调整活动、改进康复和恢复比赛指南以及使用综合神经肌肉训练可能有助于运动员更安全地重新融入运动,并降低这一高危人群的二次损伤发生率。