New York Times -
How a Warm-Up Routine Can Save Your Knees
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
Erik Isakson/Getty Images
Rupturing an anterior cruciate ligament in
the knee is a nightmare. As the parent of a teenage son who is seven
months out from A.C.L. reconstruction surgery, I can attest to the
physical and psychological toll it can take, not to mention the medical
bills. But a practical new study suggests that changing how sports teams
warm up before practices and games could substantially lower the risk
that athletes will hurt a knee, at a cost of barely a dollar per player.
Injuries to the A.C.L., which connects the
tibia and femur and stabilizes the knee joint, are soaring, with an
estimated 150,000 cases a year. The ligament is prone to tearing if the
knee shears sideways during hard, awkward landings or abrupt shifts in
direction – the kind of movements that are especially common in sports
like basketball, football, soccer, volleyball and skiing.
Motivated by the growing occurrence of these
knee injuries, many researchers have been working in recent years to
develop training programs to reduce their number. These programs,
formally known as neuromuscular training, use a series of exercises to
teach athletes how to land, cut, shift directions, plant their legs, and
otherwise move during play so that they are less likely to injure
themselves.
Studies have found that the programs can reduce the number
of A.C.L. tears per season by 50 percent or more, particularly among
girls, who tear their A.C.L.s at a higher rate than boys do (although,
numerically, far more boys are affected).
But to date, few leagues, high schools or
teams across the country have instituted neuromuscular training. That
puzzled Dr. Eric Swart, a resident in orthopedic surgery at
Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center.
Wondering what might motivate coaches and
other interested parties to take up A.C.L. injury-prevention programs,
Dr. Swart and his colleagues settled on naked self-interest. They set
out to see what the financial savings involved in undertaking — or
resisting — an A.C.L.-injury prevention program might be.
So, for a study presented last Friday
at the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons annual meeting in New
Orleans, he and his colleagues gathered recent clinical trials related
to neuromuscular training and used them to create a model of what would
happen in a hypothetical sports league composed of male and female
athletes, ages 14 to 22, if they did or did not practice neuromuscular
training. The researchers then began running the monetary numbers.
They first determined that, not surprisingly,
the medical costs associated with a single A.C.L. tear are staggering,
with the estimated price for reconstructive surgery and rehabilitation
averaging $15,000. If the incidence of A.C.L. tears is about 3 percent
among athletes not practicing neuromuscular training, as the clinical
trials showed, then, the researchers concluded, the cost of these
injuries per player was quite high.
“In our model, it worked out to something
like $500 per player,” Dr. Swart said. “Imagine if people collected that
as a fee when kids signed up” for club soccer or basketball.
However, neuromuscular training changed that
calculus, he continued, dropping the likely incidence of the injuries to
about 1.5 percent of the athletes. More important for this study, the
cost of the training was negligible, since several of the programs
included in the analysis are available free on the Internet and require
almost no equipment.
According to the researchers’ calculations,
the cost of starting a neuromuscular training program averaged $1.25 per
player per year, “which is so much cheaper than visiting an orthopedic
surgeon,” said Dr. Swart, an orthopedic surgeon. The cost was the same
whether the training was directed at both genders or only at girls.
Those parents and coaches who find that
number enticing can begin neuromuscular training with their charges
quite easily, Dr. Swart said. “Neuromuscular training is just a better
way to warm up,” he said.
Most of the scientifically studied programs
consist of about 15 to 20 minutes of exercises including marching,
jumping, squatting and side-to-side shuffling that, Dr. Swart said,
“help to wake up the brain and nervous system” and get the entire body
moving with sharper coordination. The programs also emphasize landing
with knees bent and in the proper alignment.
Among the most thoroughly studied neuromuscular training options are the PEP (Prevent Injury, Enhance Performance) program, which was developed by the Santa Monica Sports Medicine Foundation, and the FIFA 11 program,
created by the international governing body of soccer. Both programs
are free, and coaches need no training to teach them to athletes.
It is important, though, that athletes
perform the exercises correctly and in the order prescribed by the
programs, Dr. Swart said, to avoid injuries during the training itself.
You can find step-by-step, easy-to-follow videos of the workout routines
for both the PEP program and the FIFA 11 program on each group’s
website. (A sample video from each program can also be viewed below).
Dr. Swart and his colleagues also evaluated
the cost-effectiveness of screening young athletes to find those whose
biomechanics place them at especially high risk of tearing an A.C.L. and
train only them. But the costs of screening were too high to make it
practical for youth leagues or high schools.
Instead, Dr. Swart said, universal
neuromuscular training for athletes involved in high-risk sports seemed
to be cost-effective and to significantly reduce the chance that you
will be visiting his office this season.
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