Original Research

The Epidemiology of Hip and Groin Injuries in Professional Baseball Players

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References

In the current study, extra-articular injuries about the hip were the most common, making up 95.4% of the total injuries. Many (79.1%) of these were strains or contusions of the adductor, iliopsoas, or gluteal muscles. This is consistent with other articles reporting hip injuries in athletes.3,9 A study on hip injuries in the National Football League found that strains and contusions comprised 92% of all hip injuries.3 Another report on European professional football found that 72% of hip injuries over a 7-season period were adductor or iliopsoas injuries.9 This prior study also reported that 15% of the hip and groin strains were re-injuries. Intra-articular injuries comprised only 4.6% of the hip injuries in our study. FAI and labral tears were the most common intra-articular diagnosis at 80.9%.

Almost all (96.2%) of the extra-articular hip injuries in this series were able to be treated nonoperatively and caused a mean of 12.4 days missed. Those which required operative treatment caused a mean of 54.6 days missed. For intra-articular injuries, 40.5% were treated surgically and these players missed a mean 122.5 days. Those treated nonsurgically missed an average of 22.2 days. Whether treated surgically or nonsurgically, the mean days missed following an intra-articular injury was approximately twice that of extra-articular injuries. Our findings regarding time or games missed are similar to other reports studying hip injuries in professional athletes.2,3,9 Intra-articular injuries such as FAI, chondral injuries, or labral tears caused between 46 and 64 days missed compared to 3 to 27 days missed for extra-articular injuries in professional soccer players.9 Feeley and colleagues3 found a mean of 5.07 to 33.6 days missed for extra-articular injuries such as strains or contusions, and 63.5 to 126.2 days missed for intra-articular injuries including arthritis, labral tears, subluxations, dislocations, and fractures. A report on National Hockey League players found that intra-articular injuries made up 10.6% of all hip and groin injuries and caused significantly more games missed than extra-articular injuries.2

In both minor and major league players, for all reported positions at the time of hip or groin injury, infield players collectively were more commonly injured than outfielders, batters, or base runners, and fielding was the most common activity being performed at the time of injury. The pitcher’s mound was the most common single location for injuries and these players had the longest time missed following injury. The correlation between hip and groin pathology and upper extremity injuries in overhead athletes has been discussed in previous studies.12,21 Interestingly, we found that the specific location on the field with the highest incidence of hip and groin injuries was the pitcher’s mound. As we follow these players over time, a future correlation between the incidence of hip and groin injuries and the incidence of shoulder and elbow injuries may be noted. A noncontact injury was the most frequent mechanism of injury. This corroborates the finding that muscle strains and contusions made up the majority of injuries in this series. Other series on hip injuries have also found that noncontact mechanisms are common.3

Although this was one of the first studies exploring the epidemiology of hip and groin injury, there are some limitations of this study. The retrospective nature of this study relied upon the reporting of injuries in the MLB database. As such, there may be underreporting of injuries into the official database by players or medical staff for a variety of reasons. Differences in technique for diagnosis and treatment among the medical staff for different teams were not controlled for. Due to the wide range of hip and groin pathology, and the often difficult diagnosis, a specific injury was not always provided. Therefore, the category of “other” hip injury was entered in to the database when symptoms were nonspecific or not all details were provided. Fortunately, this category made up a small percentage of the reported injuries, but does remain a confounding factor in describing the etiology of hip injuries in these players. Our data were taken from professional baseball players only, and so we cannot recommend extrapolation to other sports or nonprofessional baseball athletes.

Despite the inherent limitations of reporting registry data, this study serves as the initial report of the occurrence of hip and groin injuries in professional baseball players, and improves our knowledge of the positions and situations that put players at most risk for these injuries. An understanding of the overall epidemiology of these injuries serves as a platform for more focused research in this area in the future. We can now focus research on specific positions, such as pitchers, that have a high incidence of injury to determine the physiologic and environmental factors which put them at higher risk for injury in general and for more significant injuries with more days missed. This information can help to guide position-specific training programs for injury prevention as well as improve rehabilitation protocols for more efficient recovery and return to sports.

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