Sports Medicine: Just the Facts

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CHAPTER 86 • ICE HOCKEY INJURIES 511


  • Back:Back strain and sprain—players skate in a for-
    ward flexed position. This combined with the frequent
    trunk rotation that accompanies shooting and passing
    can place the player at risk for these injuries.

  • Spondylolysis has been reported in ice hockey ath-
    letes.

  • Abdomen:Because of the abrupt and sudden changes
    in movement (Joyner and Snouse, 2002; Sim et al,
    1988), hockey players are at risk for abdominal muscle
    strain.

  • Athletes can sustain traumatic abdominal injury, espe-
    cially when the handle of the stick is forced into the
    abdomen during a collision into the boards (which is
    typically the result of illegal checking).

  • Thigh, groin:Anterior thigh hematomas may occur
    as a result of collision with the boards or of blocking
    a shot puck. These hematomas are at risk for myositis
    ossificans (Sim et al, 1988) and treatment should be
    directed at preventing this complication.
    a. If the hematoma is identified immediately after the
    game, the athlete can be placed in fixed knee flex-
    ion for 24 hours in an attempt to tamponade the
    bleeding thereby decreasing the size of the
    hematoma.
    b.Old hematomas should not be passively stretched,
    as this may increase the risk of myositis ossificans.

  • Adductor strains are common enough that studies
    have been performed in an attempt to determine if cer-
    tain players are at increased risk for this injury and to
    ascertain what prevention measures can be imple-
    mented in an attempt to decrease lost playing time.
    Hockey players are at risk for this injury as a result of
    the explosive starts and changes in direction (Joyner
    and Snouse, 2002).

  • Osteitis pubis

  • Knee: Most common significant lower extremity
    injury.
    a. Although anterior cruciate ligament(ACL) and
    meniscal injury has been reported, medial collat-
    eral ligament (MCL) injury is 14 times more
    common (Molsa et al, 1997).
    b. The ACL appears to be spared because the foot
    does not lock in position on the ice.
    c. The mechanisms for MCL injury are both contact
    and noncontact valgus stress to the knee.

  • Ankle:Ankle sprain—mechanism of injury is dorsi-
    flexion, eversion, and external rotation (Thompson
    and Scoles, 2000), producing deltoid ligament sprain.
    a. This is in contrast to most other sports where the
    typical mechanism is plantarflexion, inversion, and
    internal rotation, producing lateral ligament (espe-
    cially anterior talofibular ligament) injury.
    b. The mechanism of injury also places the hockey
    athlete at risk for syndesmotic injury and


Massoneuve fracture (due to transmittal of the
force out through the fibula).
c. Ankle sprains result in 10% of major injuries in ice
hockey (defined as absence from sport greater than
28 days) (Molsa et al, 1997).
d. In an attempt to prevent these debilitating injuries,
many hockey players prefer skates that have added
external ankle support (Green et al, 1976).


  • Boot lace lacerations—the ice skate blade is essen-
    tially a 10–12-in. scalpel. The anterior ankle is at risk
    for laceration of tendons and neurovascular structures
    because of its proximity to the skates of others. A rel-
    atively small laceration can cause damage to these
    underlying superficial structures (Tator, 1987).
    a. However, most athletes are relatively protected
    from this injury because of the thickly padded
    skate tongue over the anterior ankle. Athletes who
    turn their skate tongue downward (out of personal
    preference) place themselves at increased risk
    (Tator, 1987).

  • Foot:Lace bite (Joyner and Snouse, 2002)—nagging
    dorsal foot pain and/or parasthesias.
    a. Players often do not wear socks and prefer tight fit-
    ting skates as this is thought by athletes to improve
    performance and speed on the ice. The compres-
    sion of the laces in such situations can cause exten-
    sor tendon and nerve injuries of the dorsum of the
    foot.
    b. To prevent this injury, the tongue of the boot
    should remain in a neutral position (Clanton and
    Wood, 2003).


MEDICAL ILLNESSES


  • Indoor ice rinks have ice resurfacing machines called
    Zambonis that are gas or propane powered. The emis-
    sions from the machine coupled with poor ventilation
    can create increased carbon monoxide levels on the
    ice.

  • Nitrogen dioxide induced lung injury and other indoor
    air quality syndromes

  • Cold induced vasomotor rhinitis
    a. Profuse watery rhinorrhea that typically begins
    within minutes of skating on the ice. It is thought to
    be the result of an overly sensitive cholinergic reflex
    in response to exposure to cold air and changes in
    humidity (Ayars, 2000; Bousquet et al, 2003).
    b. The athlete has little nasal itching, ocular pruritis,
    or sneezing, but increased nasal secretions, post-
    nasal drip, sinus headaches, anosmia, and sinusitis
    are common (Ayars, 2000; Bousquet et al, 2003).
    c. It is a diagnosis of exclusion. Rhinitis caused by
    infection, allergy, anatomic abnormalities and

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