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Patterns of Hamstring Muscle Tears in the General Population: A Systematic Review

Hamstring tears are well recognised in the sporting population. Little is known about these injuries in the general population. Evaluating the rates, patterns and risk factors of non-sporting hamstring tears, compared to sporting related hamstring tears. MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Cen...

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Published in:PloS one 2016-05, Vol.11 (5), p.e0152855-e0152855
Main Authors: Kuske, Barbara, Hamilton, David F, Pattle, Sam B, Simpson, A Hamish R W
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description Hamstring tears are well recognised in the sporting population. Little is known about these injuries in the general population. Evaluating the rates, patterns and risk factors of non-sporting hamstring tears, compared to sporting related hamstring tears. MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (1989-2015). Studies reporting patients with a grade 2 or 3 hamstring muscle tear, identified clinically, confirmed by MRI imaging or direct visualisation during surgical exploration. 144 sets of linked data were extracted for analysis. Most injuries were in males (81.3%), where mean age at injury was lower (30.2, 95% CI 29.1-31.3) than in females (35.4, 95% CI 32.4-38.4) p = 0.06. Key differences were found in the proportion of non-sporting injuries in patients under and over the age 40 (p = 0.001). The proportion of non-sporting injuries was significantly higher in females compared to males (25.9% female non-sporting injuries, versus 8.5% male; p = 0.02). Avulsions were more frequently reported in non-sporting activities (70.5%). The proportion of such injuries was notably higher in females, though this failed to meet significance (p = 0.124). Grouped by age category a bimodal distribution was noted, with the proportion of avulsions greater in younger (age 40) (p = 0.008). 86.8% of patients returned to pre-injury activity levels with a similar frequency across all study variables; age, activity (sporting vs non-sporting) and injury type (avulsion vs tear). This review highlights a proportion of adults suffering grade 2 or 3 hamstring injuries from activities other than the classic sports trauma. The majority of these non-sporting injuries were avulsion injuries that clustered in older female and skeletally immature patients suggesting a potential link to bone mineral density.
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subjects Adult
Adults
Age
Age composition
Arthritis
Avulsion
Biology and Life Sciences
Bone mineral density
Clinical trials
College football
Data processing
Diabetes
Exploration
Female
Females
Hamstring Muscles - diagnostic imaging
Hamstring Muscles - injuries
Humans
Injuries
Injury analysis
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Males
Medicine and Health Sciences
Muscles
Older people
Pain
Patients
Population
Quality
Research and Analysis Methods
Risk analysis
Risk factors
Sports injuries
Sports related injuries
Studies
Surgery
Tearing
Tendons
Trauma
title Patterns of Hamstring Muscle Tears in the General Population: A Systematic Review
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