Mechanisms of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Tears in Professional National Basketball Association Players: A Video Analysis

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Abstract

A systematic search was performed of online databases for any anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries within the NBA. Video was obtained of injuries occurring during competition and downloaded for 2-dimensional video analysis. Thirty-five in-game videos were obtained for analysis. Of the reviewed cases, 19% were noncontact ACL injuries where there was no player-to-player contact from an opposing player. Three injury mechanism categories were found based on the events at the point of initial ground contact of the foot of the injured limb: single-leg casting (mean dorsiflexion angle 18.9° (14.4°); mean knee flexion angle 15.6° (7.8°); and mean trunk lateral flexion 18.2° (8.4°)); bilateral hop (mean dorsiflexion angle 18.2° (15.2°), mean knee flexion angle 21° (14.5°), mean trunk extension angle 6.9° (11.4°), and landing angle from the athlete's center of mass 47.9° (10.1°)); and single-leg landing after contact (mean abduction angle of the swing leg 105.4° (18.1°), mean knee flexion angle of the injured limb 34.2° (8.0°), and mean trunk ipsilateral flexion angle 22.2° (7.0°)).

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APA

Petway, A. J., Jordan, M. J., Epsley, S., Anloague, P., & Rimer, E. (2023). Mechanisms of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Tears in Professional National Basketball Association Players: A Video Analysis. Journal of Applied Biomechanics, 39(3), 143–150. https://doi.org/10.1123/jab.2022-0266

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