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- J L Cook, K M Khan, P R Harcourt, Z S Kiss, M W Fehrmann, L Griffiths, and J D Wark.
- Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia.
- Clin J Sport Med. 1998 Apr 1; 8 (2): 73-7.
ObjectiveTo compare patellar tendon sonographic findings in active, currently asymptomatic, elite athletes with those in nonathletic controls.DesignCross-sectional cohort study with convenience control sample.SettingThe Victorian Institute of Sport Tendon Study Group, an institutional elite athlete study group in Australia.Patients And ParticipantsTwo hundred elite male and female athletes from the sports of basketball, cricket, netball, and Australian rules football. Forty athletes who had current symptoms of jumper's knee were excluded from analysis, leaving 320 subject tendons in athletes who were currently asymptomatic. Twenty-seven nonathletic individuals served as controls.Main Outcome MeasureSonographic patellar tendon appearance. We measured the dimensions of subject tendons and noted the presence or absence of hypoechoic regions and tendon calcification. Dimensions of hypoechoic regions were measured, and approximate cross-sectional areas were calculated. Chi-squared analysis was used to test the prevalence of hypoechoic regions in subjects and controls and men and women.ResultsIn currently asymptomatic subjects, hypoechoic regions were more prevalent in athlete tendons (22%) than in controls (4%), in male subject tendons (30%) than in female subjects (14%), and in basketball players (32%) than in other athletes (9%) (all p < 0.01). Bilateral tendon abnormalities were equally prevalent in men and women but more prevalent in basketball players (15%) than in other athletes (3%) (p < 0.05). Sonographic hypoechoic regions were present in 35 of 250 (14%) patellar tendons in athletes who had never had anterior knee pain.ConclusionsPatellar tendon sonographic hypoechoic areas were present in asymptomatic patellar tendons of a proportion of elite athletes but rarely present in controls. This has implications for clinicians managing athletes with anterior knee pain.
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