4.6 Article

Mechanisms of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury in World Cup Alpine Skiing A Systematic Video Analysis of 20 Cases

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume 39, Issue 7, Pages 1421-1429

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0363546511405147

Keywords

anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury; injury mechanism; alpine skiing; professional ski racer; video analysis

Funding

  1. Royal Norwegian Ministry of Culture
  2. South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority
  3. International Olympic Committee
  4. Norwegian Olympic Committee & Confederation of Sport
  5. Norsk Tipping AS
  6. International Ski Federation
  7. DJO

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Background: There is limited insight into the mechanisms of anterior cruciate ligament injuries in alpine skiing, particularly among professional ski racers. Purpose: This study was undertaken to qualitatively describe the mechanisms of anterior cruciate ligament injury in World Cup alpine skiing. Study Design: Case series; Level of evidence, 4. Methods: Twenty cases of anterior cruciate ligament injuries reported through the International Ski Federation Injury Surveillance System for 3 consecutive World Cup seasons (2006-2009) were obtained on video. Seven international experts in the field of skiing biomechanics and sports medicine related to alpine skiing performed visual analyses of each case to describe the injury mechanisms in detail (skiing situation, skier behavior, biomechanical characteristics). Results: Three main categories of injury mechanisms were identified: slip-catch, landing back-weighted, and dynamic snowplow. The slip-catch mechanism accounted for half of the cases (n = 10), and all these injuries occurred during turning, without or before falling. The skier lost pressure on the outer ski, and while extending the outer knee to regain grip, the inside edge of the outer ski caught abruptly in the snow, forcing the knee into internal rotation and valgus. The same loading pattern was observed for the dynamic snowplow (n = 3). The landing back-weighted category included cases (n = 4) where the skier was out of balance backward in flight after a jump and landed on the ski tails with nearly extended knees. The suggested loading mechanism was a combination of tibiofemoral compression, boot-induced anterior drawer, and quadriceps anterior drawer. Conclusion: Based on this video analysis of 20 injury situations, the main mechanism of anterior cruciate ligament injury in World Cup alpine skiing appeared to be a slip-catch situation where the outer ski catches the inside edge, forcing the outer knee into internal rotation and valgus. A similar loading pattern was observed for the dynamic snowplow. Injury prevention efforts should focus on the slip-catch mechanism and the dynamic snowplow.

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