Filippo Migliorini, Emanuela Marsilio, Ernesto Torsiello, Andrea Pintore, Francesco Oliva, Nicola Maffulli
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引用次数: 3
Abstract
Introduction: Joint overload and sport-related injuries may accelerate the development of osteoarthritis (OA). A systematic review of the literature was performed to establish the risk of athletes to develop premature OA compared with nonathletes.
Materials and methods: This systematic review was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines. PubMed, Google scholar, Embase, and Web of Science databases were accessed in June 2021. All the published clinical studies investigating OA onset in athletes versus nonathletes were considered. Studies reporting data on secondary and/or post-traumatic OA were excluded.
Results: Data from 32 articles (20,288 patients) were retrieved. The mean age was 67.8±10.0 years and the mean body mass index was 25.0±2.5 kg/m2. 74% (6859 patients) of the athletes suffered from premature OA. Of them, 21% were active in soccer, 11% in handball, 11% in ice-hockey, 3% in football, and 0.3% in rugby. 26% of the athletes reported no significant differences in OA progression compared with healthy controls. Of these athletes, 47% were runners, 5% dancers, and 1% triathletes.
Conclusion: Certain sports, such as soccer, handball, ice-hockey, and rugby are more likely to be associated with premature knee and hip OA. Conversely, runners and ballet dancers do not evidence significant increase in OA. Moderate and recreational exposure to aerobic sports does not accelerate the development of OA.
引言:关节超负荷和运动相关损伤可能加速骨关节炎(OA)的发展。对文献进行了系统回顾,以确定与非运动员相比,运动员过早患OA的风险。材料和方法:根据PRISMA指南进行系统审查。PubMed、谷歌学者、Embase和Web of Science数据库于2021年6月访问。考虑了所有已发表的研究运动员与非运动员OA发病的临床研究。报告继发性和/或创伤后OA数据的研究被排除在外。结果:检索到32篇文章(20288名患者)的数据。平均年龄67.8±10.0岁,平均体重指数25.0±2.5 74%(6859例)的运动员患有早期OA。其中,21%的人活跃在足球运动中,11%的人从事手球运动,11%的人为冰球运动,3%的人从事足球运动,0.3%的人从事橄榄球运动。26%的运动员报告说,与健康对照组相比,OA进展没有显著差异。在这些运动员中,47%是跑步者,5%是舞者,1%是铁人三项运动员。结论:某些运动,如足球、手球、冰球和橄榄球,更可能与过早的膝关节和髋关节OA有关。相反,跑步者和芭蕾舞演员的OA没有明显增加。适度和娱乐性接触有氧运动不会加速OA的发展。
期刊介绍:
Sports Medicine and Arthroscopy Review helps physicians digest the large volume of clinical literature in sports medicine and arthroscopy, identify the most important new developments, and apply new information effectively in clinical practice. Each issue is guest-edited by an acknowledged expert and focuses on a single topic or controversy. The Guest Editor invites the leading specialists on the topic to write review articles that highlight the most important advances. This unique format makes the journal more in-depth, authoritative, and practical than most publications in this field. The journal also includes dozens of full-color and black-and-white arthroscopic images and illustrations.