Knee joints
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Knee Joints: Knee instability has more to do with work than sport
Key findings were as follows:
1. the overall prevalence of knee instability in the year preceding the study was 22%, with a much higher incidence among females (36%) than males (14%);
2. the overall prevalence of constant or recurrent instability was 14%;
3. the prevalence of absence from sport and work due to knee instability were 5% and 1% respectively.
Knee instability did not seem to be related to the type of sport preferred by the participants, whose chosen sports included soccer, handball, basketball, badminton, tennis, competitive gymnastics, swimming and jogging; neither was it related to weekly hours of participation in a specific type of sport or years of participation in that sport.
But it was strongly linked with female gender, years of predominantly standing occupational work and hours of predominantly sitting occupational work per day.
The researchers point out that the observed prevalence of knee instability was considerably lower than that of knee pain among athletes, while the reported 1% prevalence of absence of work might suggest it is not a serious problem. However, the fact that only 17% of the young participants were in occupational work raised the prevalence of absence to 6%, similar to that of absence from sport.
'In conclusion,' they say, 'knee instability is a commonly reported phenomenon among active athletes independent of the type and the amount of sports activity, but highly dependent on female gender, type and amount of occupational work.'
Preventive strategies therefore need to be focused on female athletes, with special attention given to athletes' occupational workload.
Scand J Med Sci Sports 2001 Aug 11(4), pp233-238
Isabel Walker





























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