Zaremski Jason L, McClelland JoAnna, Vincent Heather K, Horodyski MaryBeth
Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2017 Oct 16;5(10):2325967117731296. doi: 10.1177/2325967117731296. eCollection 2017 Oct.
Elbow ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) injuries are common, particularly in adolescent athletes playing overhead sports. While the incidence and outcomes of surgical UCL injuries are well documented, the nonsurgical UCL injury patterns and injury management in this population are not yet known.
PURPOSE/HYPOTHESIS: The purpose of this study was to retrospectively assess the injury severity and subsequent management of UCL injuries among competitive athletes aged 11 to 22 years. We hypothesized that nonsurgical UCL injuries would occur more frequently in younger athletes compared with older athletes.
Descriptive epidemiological study.
Electronic medical records (using International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision and 10th Revision and Current Procedural Terminology codes) and keyword searches were used to identify all patients with sports-related UCL injuries between January 2000 and April 2016. A total of 136 records were included. Patients were stratified into 3 age brackets (age 11-13 years, n = 17; age 14-16 years, n = 49; age 17-22 years, n = 70). There were no prior elbow surgical interventions. The main outcome measures included the frequency and severity of UCL injuries and injury management (surgical, nonsurgical). Independent variables included age, UCL injuries per year, and sport classification.
There were 53 surgical and 83 nonsurgical UCL injuries. The number of nonsurgical cases increased 9-fold from 2000-2008 to 2009-2016. The UCL injuries were distributed as follows: 60 sprains, 39 partial tears, 36 ruptures, and 1 rerupture. Moreover, 7% of sprains, 51% of partial tears, and 78% of ruptures underwent UCL reconstruction. Nonsurgical management was most common in the youngest athletes (age 11-13 years, 100.0% of total injuries; age 14-16 years, 71.4% of total injuries; and age 17-22 years, 44.3% of total injuries) ( = .007). UCL injury volume was most commonly associated with javelin (odds ratio, 6.69; 95% CI, 0.72-61.62; = .07) and baseball (odds ratio, 1.55; 95% CI, 0.69-3.51; = .32).
Younger athletes sustained less severe UCL injuries more often than older athletes. Participation in javelin and baseball was associated with a greater likelihood of UCL injuries based on our dataset. This is the first study to provide data on the volume of nonsurgical UCL injuries among athletes in various sports.
肘部尺侧副韧带(UCL)损伤很常见,尤其在从事过头运动的青少年运动员中。虽然手术治疗的UCL损伤的发病率和结果已有充分记录,但该人群中非手术UCL损伤模式及损伤处理情况尚不清楚。
目的/假设:本研究的目的是回顾性评估11至22岁竞技运动员中UCL损伤的严重程度及后续处理情况。我们假设与年长运动员相比,非手术UCL损伤在年轻运动员中更常见。
描述性流行病学研究。
利用电子病历(使用国际疾病分类第9版和第10版以及当前手术操作术语编码)和关键词搜索,识别2000年1月至2016年4月期间所有与运动相关的UCL损伤患者。共纳入136份记录。患者被分为3个年龄组(11 - 13岁,n = 17;14 - 16岁,n = 49;17 - 22岁,n = 70)。既往无肘部手术干预。主要观察指标包括UCL损伤的频率和严重程度以及损伤处理方式(手术、非手术)。自变量包括年龄、每年的UCL损伤数和运动分类。
共有53例手术治疗和83例非手术治疗的UCL损伤。非手术病例数从2000 - 2008年到2009 - 2016年增加了9倍。UCL损伤分布如下:60例扭伤、39例部分撕裂、36例断裂和1例再断裂。此外,7%的扭伤、51%的部分撕裂和78%的断裂接受了UCL重建。非手术治疗在最年轻的运动员中最常见(11 - 13岁,占总损伤的100.0%;14 - 16岁,占总损伤的71.4%;17 - 22岁,占总损伤的44.3%)(P = 0.007)。UCL损伤量最常与标枪(优势比,6.69;95%可信区间,0.72 - 61.62;P = 0.07)和棒球(优势比,1.55;95%可信区间,0.69 - 3.51;P = 0.32)相关。
与年长运动员相比,年轻运动员更常发生不太严重的UCL损伤。根据我们的数据集,参与标枪和棒球运动与发生UCL损伤的可能性更大有关。这是第一项提供不同运动项目运动员中非手术UCL损伤量数据的研究。