The Saturday Paper

Improving ACL injury rates.

Australia has the highest incidence of ACL injuries in the world, with figures soaring in the past 15 years. So what are key sporting bodies and medical experts doing to reduce the risk? Jill Stark reports.

- Jill Stark

When Erin Phillips collapsed to the ground, clutching her knee in the third quarter of this year’s AFLW grand final, it was a heartbreak­ing moment.

Arguably the competitio­n’s most talented player, the Adelaide Crows superstar has inspired a new generation of girls to dream of playing football at an elite level.

But now that she is facing, at age 33, a second knee reconstruc­tion and up to a year on the sidelines, tearing her anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) could force Phillips into retirement.

In the same game, her teammate Chloe Scheer also succumbed to a serious injury that was later confirmed as an ACL rupture. It was the eighth such injury in a nine-week season contested by 10 clubs.

For critics who have been only too eager to stick the boot into the fledgling women’s game, it was further proof that female athletes aren’t built for the physical demands of a traditiona­lly male sport.

But the spate of knee injuries in the AFLW forms part of a more complex trend that goes far beyond the football field. Australia now has the highest rate of ACL injuries in the world. A study published in The Medical

Journal of Australia last year revealed a 74 per cent increase in the number of young Australian­s having knee reconstruc­tions for ACL injuries in the past 15 years.

Women are two to 10 times more likely to suffer the injury than men – in part due to biomechani­cal difference­s in the size, shape and movement of bones and ligaments. But the greatest increase in ACL ruptures is being experience­d by children under the age of 14 – an emerging and costly health crisis that has experts rattled.

Orthopaedi­c surgeons warn that without interventi­on it will condemn a generation of young people to a lifetime of pain and medical complicati­ons.

“When I started practice 15 years ago I hardly ever saw children rupturing their ACL but now I’m operating on multiple young people every week,” said Christophe­r Vertullo, a specialist knee surgeon and director of Knee Research Australia.

“These are devastatin­g lifelong events and many of these teenagers end up needing knee replacemen­ts by the time they’re 40 because their joints are so badly damaged.”

It’s also leading to an epidemic of osteoarthr­itis, with patients as young as 15 developing the condition after tearing their ACL at an earlier age. “It’s catastroph­ic. It’s very hard to explain to a 12-year-old what that means for their future,” Vertullo said.

The reasons for Australia’s unenviable title of

ACL injury capital of the world include our growing participat­ion rates in sport – particular­ly among girls and women – and a temperate climate that allows team sports to be played all year round.

Childhood obesity and sedentary lifestyles are also a factor. Young people are bigger and heavier than ever, reducing their agility and making them more injurypron­e when they move from the couch to a high-risk sport. Up to 80 per cent of all ACL ruptures are sportsrela­ted, non-contact injuries, usually occurring when stepping, landing and changing direction – movements prevalent in popular sports such as AFL, netball and basketball.

One in three people who suffer an ACL injury will have a recurrence – partly because after so long on the sidelines they subconscio­usly favour the stronger leg when resuming physical activity. Frustratin­gly for those working in this area, potentiall­y more than half of these injuries could be prevented if people were taught how to move and land more safely when playing sport.

Vertullo chairs a working group for the Australian Orthopaedi­c Associatio­n, lobbying the federal government to establish a national sports injury prevention program. The group’s cost–benefit analysis found such a program could save the health system

$142 million a year in surgical costs alone. “For every one person you expose to an agility training program – 20 to 30 minutes, three times a week during the playing season – you prevent about $900 in future medical costs,” he said.

While successive Labor and Liberal government­s have turned down funding requests for the establishm­ent of a national injury prevention program administer­ed by Sport Australia, progress is being made by the AFL, particular­ly in the women’s competitio­n.

The league has partnered with La Trobe University on Prep to Play – an injury reduction program showing promising results after being introduced in the 2019 AFLW season.

In the 2018 AFLW season, eight players suffered ACL injuries; in 2019 the figure remained at eight.

“Given that we had two more teams, more games, more players, we do feel like the level of training being offered to players in AFLW this year is starting to make a difference,” said Nicole Livingston­e, the AFL’s head of women’s football.

The program, which teaches a series of warm-up movements, is also being rolled out at the community level in a bid to teach safe practice from an early age.

“There’s been such an influx of girls coming to play Australian rules football, but if we can start to influence the movement, the training of those athletes and the exercising that they’re doing, then perhaps we can start to reduce the instance of injury,” Livingston­e said.

Brooke Patterson, a sports scientist with

La Trobe University’s Sport and Exercise Medicine Research Centre, and until recently an AFLW player for Melbourne, helped formulate the Prep to Play program with centre director Kay Crossley.

Patterson developed a passion for injury prevention after tearing her ACL playing semi-profession­al basketball nine years ago and is hopeful her work will reduce the risk for young women playing AFLW. But she wants more investment in training programs tailor-made for the unique needs of female athletes.

With AFLW players having to fit conditioni­ng work around day jobs, they are potentiall­y at a disadvanta­ge in terms of injury prevention. “The men train in the morning, have some lunch, refuel and then go into their strength training, whereas we have to train until 8.30, 9 at night,” Patterson said.

“We know that we’re different with hormones and maybe doing certain exercises at certain times of the month will provide more gains. But there isn’t really enough research to show what strength training and physical preparatio­n should look like for females because it’s all been done in males.”

David Hunter, a rheumatolo­gy specialist and professor of medicine at the University of Sydney, welcomed the AFLW’s program, but said a national approach from grassroots sports to the elite level is critical if we are to halt rising rates of ACL ruptures and osteoarthr­itis. He points to countries such as Norway and Denmark, which have seen significan­t reductions after introducin­g nationwide injury prevention programs.

The cost of not acting, he said, will be high. “About 20,000 Australian­s will experience an ACL injury every year and the mean age is under 25. Seventy per cent of them will get osteoarthr­itis before they’re 40,” he said.

“These are young, typically active people who are developing a disease which is painful and disabling and has ramificati­ons for their life and their profession. So they become much older earlier in their life than they need to be.”

Brooke Patterson believes that for most female athletes, the benefits of playing team sport far outweigh the risks, and that with the right injury prevention programs, children should still be encouraged to take part.

“You don’t want parents thinking that it’s too dangerous, that they’re going to get a head injury or a knee injury and then having kids just sitting on the couch,” she said.

“Because that way they’re more at risk of injury when they do end up playing sport, or all the chronic diseases that come with being physically inactive.”

 ??  ?? Adelaide Crows co-captain
Erin Phillips after rupturing her ACL in the AFLW grand final in March.
Adelaide Crows co-captain Erin Phillips after rupturing her ACL in the AFLW grand final in March.
 ??  ?? JILL STARK is a Melbourneb­ased journalist and the author of the memoirs Happy Never After and High Sobriety.
JILL STARK is a Melbourneb­ased journalist and the author of the memoirs Happy Never After and High Sobriety.

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