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Deficits in Glenohumeral Passive Range of Motion Increase Risk of Shoulder Injury in Professional Baseball Pitchers

Authors :
Leonard C. Macrina
Kevin E. Wilk
Ron A. Porterfield
Kyle T. Aune
Timothy J. Evans
James R. Andrews
Glenn S. Fleisig
Paul Harker
Source :
The American Journal of Sports Medicine. 43:2379-2385
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2015.

Abstract

Background: Shoulder injuries from repetitive baseball pitching continue to be a serious, common problem. Purpose: To determine whether passive range of motion of the glenohumeral joint was predictive of shoulder injury or shoulder surgery in professional baseball pitchers. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2. Methods: Passive range of motion of the glenohumeral joint was assessed with a bubble goniometer during spring training for all major and minor league pitchers of a single professional baseball organization over a period of 8 successive seasons (2005-2012). Investigators performed a total of 505 examinations on 296 professional pitchers. Glenohumeral external and internal rotation was assessed with the pitcher supine and the arm abducted to 90° in the scapular plane with the scapula stabilized anteriorly at the coracoid process. Total rotation was defined as the sum of internal and external glenohumeral rotation. Passive shoulder flexion was measured with the pitcher supine and the lateral border of the scapula manually stabilized. After examination, shoulder injuries and injury durations were recorded by each pitcher’s respective baseball organization and reported to the league as an injury transaction as each player was placed on the disabled list. Results: Highly significant side-to-side differences were noted within subjects for each range of motion measurement. There were 75 shoulder injuries and 20 surgeries recorded among 51 pitchers, resulting in 5570 total days on the disabled list. Glenohumeral internal rotation deficit, total rotation deficit, and flexion deficit were not significantly related to shoulder injury or surgery. Pitchers with insufficient external rotation (Conclusion: Insufficient shoulder external rotation on the throwing side increased the likelihood of shoulder injury and shoulder surgery. Sports medicine clinicians should be aware of these findings and develop a preventive plan that addresses this study’s findings to reduce pitchers’ risk of shoulder injury and surgery.

Details

ISSN :
15523365 and 03635465
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Sports Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a81508dd9512252036f9d76a5fe573e7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0363546515594380