Understanding gender-based differences in sports-related injuries (SRIs) may be able to improve treatment plans, according to a review article published recently in the Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (JAAOS).

In the article, the authors examined five common sports-related injuries: stress fracture; anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear; shoulder instability; concussion; and femoroacetabular impingement, a condition in which extra bone grows along one or both bones that form the hip joint.

“Males and females have different risk factors for experiencing SRIs,” says lead study author and orthopaedic surgeon Cordelia Carter, MD, in a media release from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS).

“Anatomic and physiologic characteristics such as skeletal structure, muscle mass, ligament laxity, and hormone levels differ between the sexes and may contribute to disparate injury risk. The best ways to avoid or treat a sports-related injury in a male may be different for a female. Understanding the sex-based differences can help orthopaedic surgeons be better equipped to care for patients with these injuries and improve their treatment outcomes.”

According to one study referenced in the review article that looked at SRIs in Canadian children and adolescents, males are more frequently injured during sports participation than females. Males also comprised 71% of SRIs in 11 of the 13 sports investigated.

Another study of children aged 5 to 17 years in the United States described the type and the frequency of SRIs to be a function of sex and highlighted the following findings, the release explains:

  • Females are more likely than males to sustain overuse injuries such as anterior knee pain, while males are at an increased risk of sustaining acute traumatic injuries such as fractures.
  • While some risk factors are a part of one’s nature, others can be modified.  For example, females demonstrate patterns of landing after a jump that are different from male landing patterns and are associated with ACL tears.
  • For both sexes, training programs can be used to teach at-risk athletes to modify landing patterns to help prevent ACL injury.

Other reviewed literature highlighted in the article reported that females have a higher incidence of concussion, most commonly in sports such as soccer, basketball, volleyball, and lacrosse. Some studies have linked this to females having more slender necks and smaller heads compared with those of males, which can render females more vulnerable to concussion when head trauma is sustained.

Others have suggested this higher rate can be linked to females’ being more likely to communicate symptoms after an injury than males, which could lead to higher reported rates and severity of such injuries as concussions, the release continues.

While the relative risk of getting an ACL tear is higher in females by a rate of two to one, the number of injuries is higher in males due to greater exposure to high-risk activities, the authors note.

They conclude that there is a continued need for focused efforts at studying the role of sex in SRIs.

“We are still learning about how sex plays a role in an athlete’s experience of sports injury,” Carter explains. “This paper paves the way for future researchers to begin to investigate how we can improve medical care for all athletes by recognizing that male and female athletes with the same injury may have better outcomes if their treatments are not the same but rather are sex-specific.”

[Source(s): American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, PR Newswire]