| Literature DB >> 28884352 |
Matthew L Baker1,2, Devakar R Epari2, Silvio Lorenzetti1, Mark Sayers3, Urs Boutellier1, William R Taylor4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Golf is commonly considered a low-impact sport that carries little risk of injury to the knee and is generally allowed following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Kinematic and kinetic studies of the golf swing have reported results relevant to the knee, but consensus as to the loads experienced during a swing and how the biomechanics of an individual's technique may expose the knee to risk of injury is lacking.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28884352 PMCID: PMC5684267 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-017-0780-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Fig. 1Search strategy used to acquire articles for this systematic review
Prevalence of knee injury in golf, population characteristics and potential injury mechanisms extracted from injury surveys (n = 18) obtained through a systematic search of the literature
| References | Cohort | Study type | General injury reports | Knee injury reports |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Batt [ | Amateur golfers: male | Retrospective survey; period unspecified | 57% of players reported an incidental or actual injury: 72 acute injuries (while playing golf), 82 chronic injuries (aggravated by playing golf) | Actual injuries: men |
| Dhillon et al. [ | Amateur golfers: male | Retrospective verbal interview; period: entire career | 193 total injuries. Injury per HC bracket: 0–9 (61.8%), 10–17 (51.8%), 18–36 (36%) | Knee injuries: male |
| Finch et al. [ | Amateur golfers, median age 40.5 y (24–65 y) | Unspecified | Knee injuries total: 18% | |
| Fradkin et al. [ | Amateur golfers: female | Retrospective survey; period: previous 12 months | 184 injuries: 38.6% reported recurring injury. Self-reported injury mechanism: overuse (43.6%), technical error (18%) | Knee injuries total |
| Fradkin et al. [ | Amateur golfers | Retrospective assessment of hospital records | Presentations to hospital ED: 10.8% required hospitalization | Knee injuries total |
| Fradkin et al. [ | Amateur golfers | Retrospective survey; period: previous 12 months | 36.5% of subjects reported 111 injuries: 51.4% of injuries required treatment. Self-reported injury mechanism: overuse (29.7%), overexertion (26.1%) | Knee injuries |
| Gosheger et al. [ | Amateur golfers, HC 21.5 ± 14.7, male | Retrospective survey; period: entire career | Amateur injury rate 39.7%, professional injury rate 60%; HC did not affect injury rate in amateurs | Knee injuries: amateur |
| Guten [ | Amateur and professional golfers, 35 right-handed, male | 2-y case history of reports to a knee clinic | Right knee | |
| Hadden et al. [ | 88 professional golfers | Consultation records from British Open physiotherapy service; period: 7 y | 88 injuries reported | Knee injuries total: 7% |
| McCarroll and Gioe [ | Professional golfers, male | Retrospective survey; period: entire career | 103 men reported 192 injuries; 87 women reported 201 injuries; average of two injuries per player; injuries due to repetitive practice swings 68.7%; injuries occurring during competition 7.3% | Knee injuries: in men |
| McCarroll et al. [ | Amateur golfers, age 52 y (15–86); male | Retrospective survey; period unspecified | 708 (62%) of those surveyed reported 908 injuries; 1.28 injuries per golfer; male injuries | Knee injuries: in men |
| McHardy et al. [ | Amateur golfers: male | Retrospective survey; period: previous 12 months | 288 subjects reported one or more injuries; average injury rate: 17.6%. Self-reported injury timing: follow-through 30.2%, downswing 17.7%; common self-reported injury mechanism: incorrect swing/poor technique 44.8%, overuse 25.3%; 57.3% of injuries occurred over extended periods | Data extracted manually from publication graphics. Knee injuries total: 8.3% |
| McHardy et al. [ | Amateur golfers: male | Prospective survey; period: previous 12 months | 78 players reported 93 injuries. Self-reported injury mechanism: swing technique 46.2%, overuse 23.7%. Self-reported injury timing: impact 23.7%, follow-through 21.5%, slow onset 13%, downswing 7.5% | Data extracted manually from publication graphics. Knee injuries total: 8.7% |
| McNicholas et al. [ | 286 amateur and professional golfers, age range 0–70 y | Unspecified | Knee injuries total: 13% | |
| Smith and Hillman [ | Professional golfers: European PGA tour players | Consultation records from tour physiotherapy van; period: 2 y, 2005, 2006 (36 tournaments) | 2328 consultations were considered to be related to injury. Joint and muscular conditions were the most common injury type (92.7%) | Knee injuries total |
| Stude et al. [ | Amateur golfers: male | Retrospective survey; period: entire career | 12% reported being injured playing golf; 74% reported pain or discomfort subsequent to playing golf; 35% of those with pain believed it interfered with their ability to play | 8% of pain reports were localized to the knee |
| Sugaya et al. [ | Professional golfers: male tour golfers | Retrospective survey; period unspecified | Total injuries | Total knee injuries |
| Thériault et al. [ | Amateur golfers: male | Retrospective survey; period unspecified | Male injury rate 23.3%; female injury rate 29.0%; total injury rate 25.2%, 1.31 injuries per golfer. Self-reported injury mechanism: overuse 20%, technical errors/deficiencies 62.7%. Injury type: sustained over prolonged period 54.5%, single trauma 45.5% | Total knee injuries 4% |
Values are presented as mean ± standard deviation (range) unless otherwise indicated
ED emergency department, HC handicap, PGA Professional Golfers’ Association, y year
Prevalence of knee injury and/or pain in total knee arthroplasty golfers, population characteristics and potential injury mechanisms extracted from injury surveys (n = 4) obtained through a systematic search of the literature
| Study | Cohort | Study type | Participation and surgeon advice | Knee injury and pain reports |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mallon and Callaghan [ | Amateur golfers, 83 TKA pts: 62 men, 21 women, 47 left TKA, 26 right TKA; mean age at follow-up 65.4 y; 80 golfers were right handed | Retrospective survey; follow-up period: minimum of 3 y post-operative; radiographs obtained for 54 subjects | 78.3% were recommended to use a cart; 86.7% used a golf cart after TKA; 75.9% found no shot harder after TKA; 16.9% found every shot harder after TKA | Right TKA: pain during play 8.3%, pain after play 25%. Left TKA: pain during play: 21.3%, pain after play 42.6%. Indication of radiographic loosening in 53.7% of all prostheses, 79.1% of cemented prostheses, 44.5% of uncemented prostheses |
| Mallon et al. [ | Amateur | Retrospective survey: professional follow-up: 4 y (2–8) post-operative; amateur follow-up: 5 y (0.5–11) post-operative | Professionals: All were able to continue play and teaching post TKA. Amateurs: All continued to play at least 3 times per week | Professionals: no injury reports, no revisions at time of survey. Amateurs: 90% had no discomfort during play, 10% had some pain but less than pre-operative levels, one revision from the cohort |
| Noble et al. [ | TKA pts: 105 women aged 71 ± 11 y, 71 men aged 70 ± 9 y | Retrospective knee function survey of TKA golfers vs. results from age-matched control golfers | Control subjects: significant pain 0%, some pain 7%. TKA subjects: significant pain 6%, some pain 49% | |
| Jackson et al. [ | Amateur golfers, 93 TKA patients: 80% male, 20% female, mean age at TKA 66 y (44–79), HC 11–30; right TKA 36 (39%); left TKA 17 (18%); bilateral TKA 40 (43%); 85 (91%) were right-handed golfers | Retrospective survey; follow-up period: mean 8.7 y (6.4–12.1) post-operative | 91% had played golf for ≥10 y. Rounds per month: 33% less than one, 36% 2–7; 31% ≥ 8. 30% received surgeon advice. Of these, 59% were restricted to using a golf cart, 30% were restricted to spike-less shoes, 15% received swing advice from surgeons, 86% made no swing changes post TKA | 83% had less pain post TKA, 13% had more pain post TKA, 28% felt driving the ball was easier post TKA, 20% found driving the ball and bunker play harder post TKA |
Values are presented as mean ± standard deviation (range) unless otherwise indicated
HC handicap, pt(s) patient(s), TKA total knee arthroplasty, y year
Fig. 2a Lead knee flexion angle during swings of amateur (HC >10), skilled amateur (HC 1–10), and professional golfers using all club types. Where the description of two phases between studies was similar, the respective data were merged into a common phase when at least five studies had reported results. This resulted in the establishment of six major phases throughout the swing: address, top of the backswing (top-BS), middle of the downswing (mid-DS), impact, middle of the follow-through (mid-FT), and End-FT. Thick lines and thin lines represent the combined mean and standard deviation of all study groups, respectively [39–50]. Electromyographic activity (mean ± standard deviation) as a percentage of muscle activity during maximum voluntary contraction (%MVC) of muscles crossing the knee joint at five phases of the golf swing: BS, early-DS, late-DS, early-FT, and late-FT, reported by b Bechler et al. [53] and c Marta et al. [54]. Muscles analysed: biceps femoris (BF), semimembranosus (SM), vastus lateralis (VL), semitendinosus (ST), gastrocnemius medialis (GNm), gastrocnemius lateralis (GNl), vastus medialis (VM), rectus femoris (RF). HC handicap
Fig. 3Lead knee flexion angle during swings of players of all skill levels using a driver, mid-iron (5–7), and pitching wedge (PW) or 9-iron during the six major phases of the swing: address, top of the backswing (top-BS), middle of the downswing (mid-DS), impact, middle of the follow-through (mid-FT), and end of the FT (End-FT). Thick lines and thin lines represent the combined mean and standard deviation of all study groups, respectively [39–50]
Fig. 4a Trail knee flexion angle of players of all skill levels using all club types at the six major swing phases: address, top of the backswing (top-BS), middle of the downswing (mid-DS), impact, middle of the follow-through (mid-FT), and end of the FT (End-FT). Thick lines and thin lines represent the combined mean and standard deviation of all study groups, respectively [39–41, 44, 45, 47, 49]. Electromyographic activity (mean ± standard deviation) as a percentage of muscle activity during maximum voluntary contraction (%MVC) of muscles crossing the knee joint at five phases of the golf swing: BS, early-DS, late-DS, early-FT, and late-FT, reported by b Bechler et al. [53] and c Marta et al. [54]. Muscles analysed: biceps femoris (BF), semimembranosus (SM), vastus lateralis (VL), semitendinosus (ST), gastrocnemius medialis (GNm), gastrocnemius lateralis (GNl), vastus medialis (VM), rectus femoris (RF)
Knee joint contact forces as a percentage of bodyweight during golf reported in the literature
| Study | Condition/anatomical direction | Lead knee (%BW) | Trail knee (%BW) | Unspecified knee (%BW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gatt et al. [ | Compressive | 99.9 ± 18.9 | 71.5 ± 8.7 | |
| Anterior | 39.0 ± 10.7 | 19.9 ± 5.0 | ||
| Posterior | −0.3 ± 2.6 | 10.1 ± 3.5 | ||
| Medial | 9.9 ± 3.3 | 9.5 ± 2.8 | ||
| Lateral | 17.0 ± 8.6 | 11.4 ± 4.2 | ||
| D’Lima et al. [ | Driver: compressive | 440 | 320 | |
| Sand wedge: compressive | 410 | |||
| Driver: anterior shear | 34 ± 1 | |||
| Mündermann et al. [ | Compressive | 320 |
Values are presented as mean ± standard deviation (range) unless otherwise indicated
HC handicap, y year, %BW percentage of bodyweight
| The occurrence of knee injuries related to golf ranges from 3 to 18% of all injuries, with older players generally demonstrating a higher prevalence of injury. |
| The mechanisms contributing to knee injuries during golf are unknown, but reports from the literature suggest that high joint loading and complex motions may increase risk of injury, especially in the lead (target-side) knee. |
| Clinicians, coaches, and players alike should carefully consider participation in or return to golf when knee pain is present or following knee injury or surgical procedures (including total knee arthroplasty), especially when the lead knee is of concern. |