RISK OF ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT INJURY IN FEMALE SOCCER ATHLETES: SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Authors

  • Indra Gunawan Faculty of Medicine, University of Jambi, Indonesia Author

Keywords:

Athletes, Anterior Cruciate Ligament, Female Soccer, Injury

Abstract

Women's soccer is quickly becoming one of the most popular sports in the world. The quick acceleration and deceleration of many joints in the lower limbs is required for many of the common movements that occur during play, such as jumping and cutting. During these activities, participants frequently sustain injuries to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), which is one of the factors that contributes to the knee's overall stability. Injuries to the ACL almost always call for expensive surgery, significant time away from athletics, and put the long-term health of the joint at jeopardy. Women are more likely to suffer an ACL tear than men because of anatomical differences and gender-specific variables, such as menstruation. Injuries frequently occur in situations when there is no physical contact, typically as a result of rapid acceleration or deceleration motions. These motions have been the subject of research, which has uncovered a number of kinematic and kinetic mechanisms, in addition to muscle activation patterns that typically take place during the moment of injury; however, the findings tend to vary from population to population. This article provides a summary of recent and important research on the mechanisms of ACL injuries, and it also draws attention to the dearth of particular research on high-risk populations of female soccer athletes. Injury prevention strategies among this demographic have been all over the place because the risk variables have not been conclusively determined. The possibility of female soccer players sustaining an injury to their ACL needs to be investigated more thoroughly in order to identify more specific injury risks and devise more effective preventative strategies. A greater awareness of this need may attract the attention of the scientific and medical communities, which may, in turn, drive the development of measures that prevent future ACL injuries and, as a result, the issues that these injuries provide to high-risk female soccer athletes.

References

Association FI de F. FIFA Big Count 2006: 270 million people active in football. Zurich F éd ération Int Footb Assoc. 2007;

Sutton KM, Bullock JM. Anterior cruciate ligament rupture: differences between males and females. J Am Acad Orthop Surg. 2013 Jan;21(1):41–50.

Ekstrand J, Spreco A, Bengtsson H, Bahr R. Injury rates decreased in men’s professional football: an 18-year prospective cohort study of almost 12 000 injuries sustained during 1.8 million hours of play. Br J Sports Med. 2021 Oct;55(19):1084–91.

Hägglund M, Waldén M, Magnusson H, Kristenson K, Bengtsson H, Ekstrand J. Injuries affect team performance negatively in professional football: an 11-year follow-up of the UEFA Champions League injury study. Br J Sports Med. 2013;47(12):738–42.

Eliakim E, Morgulev E, Lidor R, Meckel Y. Estimation of injury costs: financial damage of English Premier League teams’ underachievement due to injuries. BMJ open Sport Exerc Med. 2020;6(1):e000675.

Svantesson E, Hamrin Senorski E, Webster KE, Karlsson J, Diermeier T, Rothrauff BB, et al. Clinical Outcomes After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury: Panther Symposium ACL Injury Clinical Outcomes Consensus Group. Orthop J Sport Med. 2020 Jul;8(7):2325967120934751.

Fältström A, Kvist J, Gauffin H, Hägglund M. Female Soccer Players With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Have a Higher Risk of New Knee Injuries and Quit Soccer to a Higher Degree Than Knee-Healthy Controls. Am J Sports Med. 2019 Jan;47(1):31–40.

Della Villa F, Hägglund M, Della Villa S, Ekstrand J, Waldén M. High rate of second ACL injury following ACL reconstruction in male professional footballers: an updated longitudinal analysis from 118 players in the UEFA Elite Club Injury Study. Br J Sports Med. 2021 Dec;55(23):1350–6.

Tabben M, Eirale C, Singh G, Al-Kuwari A, Ekstrand J, Chalabi H, et al. Injury and illness epidemiology in professional Asian football: lower general incidence and burden but higher ACL and hamstring injury burden compared with Europe. Br J Sports Med. 2022 Jan;56(1):18–23.

Olivares-Jabalera J, Fílter-Ruger A, Dos’Santos T, Afonso J, Della Villa F, Morente-Sánchez J, et al. ExerciseBased Training Strategies to Reduce the Incidence or Mitigate the Risk Factors of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury in Adult Football (Soccer) Players: A Systematic Review. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Dec;18(24).

Ekstrand J, Hägglund M, Kristenson K, Magnusson H, Waldén M. Fewer ligament injuries but no preventive effect on muscle injuries and severe injuries: an 11-year follow-up of the UEFA Champions League injury study. Br J Sports Med. 2013 Aug;47(12):732–7.

Waldén M, Hägglund M, Magnusson H, Ekstrand J. ACL injuries in men’s professional football: a 15-year prospective study on time trends and return-toplay rates reveals only 65% of players still play at the top level 3 years after ACL rupture. Br J Sports Med. 2016 Jun;50(12):744–50.

Della Villa F, Buckthorpe M, Grassi A, Nabiuzzi A, Tosarelli F, Zaffagnini S, et al. Systematic video analysis of ACL injuries in professional male football (soccer): injury mechanisms, situational patterns and biomechanics study on 134 consecutive cases. Br J Sports Med. 2020;54(23):1423–32.

Fältström A, Kvist J, Bittencourt NFN, Mendonça LD, Hägglund M. Clinical Risk Profile for a Second Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury in Female Soccer Players After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction. Am J Sports Med. 2021 May;49(6):1421–30.

Krosshaug T, Steffen K, Kristianslund E, Nilstad A, Mok K-M, Myklebust G, et al. The Vertical Drop Jump Is a Poor Screening Test for ACL Injuries in Female Elite Soccer and Handball Players: A Prospective Cohort Study of 710 Athletes. Am J Sports Med. 2016 Apr;44(4):874–83.

Nilstad A, Andersen TE, Bahr R, Holme I, Steffen K. Risk factors for lower extremity injuries in elite female soccer players. Am J Sports Med. 2014 Apr;42(4):940–8.

Brophy RH, Stepan JG, Silvers HJ, Mandelbaum BR. Defending Puts the Anterior Cruciate Ligament at Risk During Soccer: A Gender-Based Analysis. Sports Health. 2015 May;7(3):244–9.

Allen MM, Pareek A, Krych AJ, Hewett TE, Levy BA, Stuart MJ, et al. Are Female Soccer Players at an Increased Risk of Second Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Compared With Their Athletic Peers? Am J Sports Med. 2016 Oct;44(10):2492–8.

Celebrini RG, Eng JJ, Miller WC, Ekegren CL, Johnston JD, Depew TA, et al. Effect of a novel movement strategy in decreasing ACL risk factors in female adolescent soccer players: a randomized controlled trial. Clin J Sport Med Off J Can Acad Sport Med. 2014 Mar;24(2):134–41.

Faude O, Junge A, Kindermann W, Dvorak J. Risk factors for injuries in elite female soccer players. Br J Sports Med. 2006;40(9):785–90.

Gans I, Retzky JS, Jones LC, Tanaka MJ. Epidemiology of Recurrent Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries in National Collegiate Athletic Association Sports: The Injury Surveillance Program, 2004-2014. Orthop J Sport Med. 2018 Jun;6(6):2325967118777823.

Faunø P, Wulff Jakobsen B. Mechanism of anterior cruciate ligament injuries in soccer. Int J Sports Med. 2006 Jan;27(1):75–9.

Thoma LM, Grindem H, Logerstedt D, Axe M, Engebretsen L, Risberg MA, et al. Coper Classification Early After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Rupture Changes with Progressive Neuromuscular and Strength Training and Is Associated With 2-Year Success: The Delaware-Oslo ACL Cohort Study. Am J Sports Med. 2019 Mar;47(4):807–

Lee DYH, Karim SA, Chang HC. Return to sports after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction - a review of patients with minimum 5-year follow-up. Ann Acad Med Singapore. 2008 Apr;37(4):273–8.

Paterno M V, Kiefer AW, Bonnette S, Riley MA, Schmitt LC, Ford KR, et al. Prospectively identified deficits in sagittal plane hip–ankle coordination in female athletes who sustain a second anterior cruciate ligament injury after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction and return to sport. Clin Biomech. 2015;30(10):1094–101.

Amoako AO, Nassim A, Keller C. Body mass index as a predictor of injuries in athletics. Curr Sports Med Rep. 2017;16(4):256–62.

Downloads

Published

2023-02-21

How to Cite

Gunawan, I. (2023). RISK OF ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT INJURY IN FEMALE SOCCER ATHLETES: SYSTEMATIC REVIEW. Journal of Advanced Research in Medical and Health Science (ISSN 2208-2425), 9(2), 67-73. https://jarmhs.com/MHS/index.php/mhs/article/view/129

Similar Articles

21-30 of 48

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)