Smaller Biceps Femoris Aponeurosis Size in Legs with a History of Hamstring Strain Injury

Author:

Balshaw Thomas G.1,McDermott Emmet J.1,Massey Garry J2,Hartley Chris3,Kong Pui Wah4ORCID,Maden-Wilkinson Tom5,Folland Jonathan1

Affiliation:

1. School of Sport, Exercise, and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

2. School of Sport & Health Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

3. Department of Health Sciences, Birmingham City University, Birmingham, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

4. National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, Singapore

5. Academy of Sport and Physical Activity, Faculty of Health and Wellbeing, Collegiate Campus, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Abstract

AbstractBiceps femoris long head (BFLH) aponeurosis size was compared between legs with and without prior hamstring strain injury (HSI) using two approaches: within-group (injured vs. uninjured legs of previous unilateral HSI athletes) and between-group (previously injured legs of HSI athletes vs. legs of No Prior HSI athletes). MRI scans were performed on currently healthy, competitive male athletes with Prior HSI history (n=23;≥1 verified BFLH injury; including a sub-group with unilateral HSI history; most recent HSI 1.6±1.2 years ago) and pair-matched athletes with No Prior HSI history (n=23). Anonymized axial images were manually segmented to quantify BFLH aponeurosis and muscle size. Prior unilateral HSI athletes’ BFLH aponeurosis maximum width, aponeurosis area, and aponeurosis:muscle area ratio were 14.0–19.6% smaller in previously injured vs. contralateral uninjured legs (paired t-test, 0.008≤P≤0.044). BFLH aponeurosis maximum width and area were also 9.4–16.5% smaller in previously injured legs (n=28) from Prior HSI athletes vs. legs (n=46) of No Prior HSI athletes (unpaired t-test, 0.001≤P≤0.044). BFLH aponeurosis size was smaller in legs with prior HSI vs. those without prior HSI. These findings suggest BFLH aponeurosis size, especially maximum width, could be a potential cause or consequence of HSI, with prospective evidence needed to support or refute these possibilities.

Funder

Institute for Sports Research

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

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