Sports Medicine: Just the Facts

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CHAPTER 83 • FOOTBALL 491

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83 FOOTBALL


John M MacKnight, MD

INTRODUCTION



  • Sports medicine coverage of American football places
    unique demands on the sports medicine practitioner. A
    wide variety of sport-specific conditions and injuries
    demand that individuals responsible for the care of
    football teams be well versed in an array of both med-
    ical and orthopedic issues. Appropriate planning can
    minimize the likelihood of athlete injury and help to
    ensure that athletes are protected and returned to play
    as quickly as possible.


MUSCULOSKELETAL INJURIES


  • Fifty percent of football players at all levels will be
    injured to some degree in any given season. The
    majority of these injuries involve the lower extremity
    with sprains, contusions, and strains being most
    common. Fractures account for 10% of injuries.


LOWER EXTREMITY INJURIES

MEDIALCOLLATERALLIGAMENTSPRAIN, KNEE


  • The most common knee injury seen in football, result-
    ing from a valgus load to the knee by another player
    during blocking or tackling.

  • Grade-I injuries have stretched but not disrupted the
    ligament and the knee examination (valgus loading of
    the knee at 0°and 30°of flexion) reveals no laxity
    compared to the uninjured side. Grade-II injuries have
    partial ligament disruption with discernible laxity on
    valgus testing but preservation of an end point. Grade-
    III injuries represent full ligament tears with gross
    laxity and no discernible end point.

  • All three grades are generally managed conservatively
    with icing, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
    (NSAIDs), and protective bracing. Even athletes with
    grade-III injuries may resume sport in protective
    braces if symptoms allow.

  • Many football programs now utilize protective medial
    stabilizing braces to decrease the incidence of medial
    collateral ligament(MCL) injury, particularly in inte-
    rior linemen. Although data have not clearly proven
    their efficacy, they may enhance proprioceptive func-
    tion and are a reasonable preventative measure for at-
    risk players.


ANTERIORCRUCIATELIGAMENTTEAR


  • The most devastating knee injury commonly seen in
    football. Anterior cruciate ligament(ACL) tears gen-
    erally result from valgus loading of the slightly flexed
    knee creating significant shear forces on the ACL and
    subsequent tearing. The majority are noncontact
    injuries, but the ACL may be torn in a similar contact
    mechanism to that of the MCL noted above.

  • The injury is accompanied by significant pain, imme-
    diate swelling, subjective instability of the knee, often
    an audible “pop” or a sense of tearing inside the knee,
    and laxity on the Lachman test.
    •For competitive athletes, ACL tears will generally
    require surgical reconstruction. Graft options include
    patellar tendon, hamstring tendon, or cadaveric grafts.
    Patellar tendon grafts are generally preferred in ath-
    letes but may lead to earlier patellofemoral arthritis
    than the alternatives. Caution must also be used with

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