1. The ultrasound appearance of the patellar tendon attachment to the tibia in young athletes is conditional on gender and pubertal stage
- Author
-
Gaele Ducher, Ron Ptazsnik, J. Black, Peter Robert Coombs, Gregory John Lammers, Jillian Leigh Cook, and Shona Bass
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Pubertal stage ,Age Distribution ,Patellar Ligament ,medicine ,Humans ,Osteochondrosis ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Tibia ,Sex Distribution ,Child ,Ultrasonography ,Orthodontics ,Analysis of Variance ,biology ,business.industry ,Athletes ,Cartilage ,Ultrasound ,Puberty ,Australia ,Anthropometry ,biology.organism_classification ,Patellar tendon ,Surgery ,Tendon ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Tennis ,Female ,business - Abstract
This cross-sectional study investigated the imaging appearance of the previous termpatellarnext term tendon attachment to the tibia in young male and female tennis players of different ages and pubertal status. Forty-four competitive young players, who had been playing tennis at least for 2 years, were recruited from a tennis school and local tennis clubs. All subjects had bilateral ultrasound imaging of the previous termpatellarnext term tendon attachment to the tibia. Standard anthropometric measurements, pubertal status and injury history were recorded. Ultrasound appearance of the previous termpatellarnext term tendon attachment was categorised into three stages: cartilage attachment, insertional cartilage and mature attachment. Cartilage attachment was more prevalent in boys (32%) and extended further into puberty (until Tanner stage 4) compared to girls (6% and Tanner stage 1). Tendons with Osgood–Schlatter Disease symptoms (n = 3) did not have a cartilage attachment. Imaging appearance commonly seen in young active athletes, consistent with a clinical diagnosis of OSD, was more common in boys and in the pre- and peri-pubertal stages.
- Published
- 2008