The results of our study suggest increased ND and anterior pelvic tilt, regardless of gender, are significantly associated with a history of ACL rupture. While females demonstrated larger q-angle measures than males, this difference was independent of ACL injury history. These findings suggest that malalignments at the foot and the pelvis influence risk of ACL injury. Excessive pronation was found to be the factor most associated with ACL injury history. This finding is in agreement with other retrospective studies (Beckett et al., 1992; Woodford-Rogers et al., 1994; Loudon et al., 1996). Subjects in our study with greater than 0.80 cm ND were 20 times more likely to have torn their ACL than subjects with less than 0.63 cm ND. Subjects with between 0.63 and 0.80 cm were 16 times more likely than those with less the 0.63 cm ND to have torn their ACL. It has been previously demonstrated that increased pronation is correlated to greater internal rotation in the transverse plane at the knee (Coplan, 1989). This increased rotation may place additional strain on the ACL during deceleration activities and increase the risk of rupture. We are unaware of any intervention studies that have examined the role of foot orthotics as a prophylactic means of preventing ACL ruptures in athletes who hyperpronate. Increased anterior pelvic tilt was also found to be significantly associated with ACL injury history. While we found that females had more anterior pelvic tilt than males, we did not find a significant interaction between gender and injury history related to this measure. In other words, increased anterior pelvic tilt was associated with ACL injury history in both males and females. This suggests that anterior pelvic tilt is not a risk factor of ACL ruptures exclusive to females. Loudon et al. (1996) found that in females anterior pelvic tilt was significantly related to having a history of ACL injury when assessed statistically in a univariate analysis, however it was not a significant factor when examined in a multivariate analysis. The 3 significant predictors of ACL injury history in Loudon et al’s multivariate analysis were genu recurvatum, ND, and static rearfoot position. While we did not assess for genu recurvatum in our study, it is plausible that as the pelvis tilts farther anteriorly that the knees would be able to hyperextend further (Ireland et al., 1997). Loudon et al. (1996) concluded that the combination of hyperpronation and genu recurvatum were significantly associated with ACL injury risk in female athletes. In addition to being associated with genu recurvatum, increased anterior pelvic tilt places the hamstrings in an elongated position. Lengthening of the hamstrings may slow their neuromuscular response time (Trontelj, 1993), and thus, their capacity to serve as dynamic agonists to the ACL. Conversely, anterior tilt is associated with shortening of the hip flexors, including the rectus femoris (Lee et al., 1997). This may allow for faster neuromuscular facilitation of this muscle (Trontelj, 1993) and contribute to the phenomenon of quadriceps dominance hypothesized by Huston and Wojtys (1996). Specific relationships between structural alignments and altered neuromuscular function that may cause injury predispositions are not clearly understood and warrant further research. Likewise, it is unknown if manual therapy techniques, such as muscle energy, may be used to permanently influence excessive pelvic tilt and lessen injury risk associated with these malalignments. Females in our study, regardless of injury history, demonstrated significantly greater q-angle measures than males. This is consistent with previous findings (Horton and Hall, 1989; Woodland and Francis, 1992; Moul, 1998). We did not, however, demonstrate a significant relationship between increased q-angle and ACL injury history. Increased q-angle is often anecdotally stated as a possible explanation for the increased prevalence of ACL injuries among females, however two recent extensive literature reviews could not identify published research to support this hypothesis (Huston et al, 2000; Murphy et al., 2003). This illustrates that not all gender differences related to the knee are directly related to increased risk of ACL injury in female athletes. We did not identify significant relationships between ACL injury history and either leg length discrepancy or hip internal and external ROM. We included these variables in our study because they had not been extensively examined in previous studies of lower extremity structural alignment and ACL injury risk. We hypothesized that limbs shorter than the contralateral side may be more associated with ACL injury risk because the shorter limb would tend to pronate, and thus rotate, more than longer limbs. Likewise we hypothesized that increased ROM for rotation at the hip could also increase ACL injury risk. These hypotheses were refuted. Our study was retrospective in nature and thus has inherent limitations. It is possible that the increased ND and anterior pelvic tilt found in previously injured limbs could be the result of post-traumatic or post-surgical adaptations of the lower extremity rather than risk factors for initial ACL injury. Because of the biomechanical and neuromuscular relationships of these malalignments to the ACL proposed earlier we doubt that this is true, but the possibility cannot be definitively disproved. A prospective study examining the risk factors to ACL injury identified here would help to further elucidate the relationship between lower extremity malalignment and increased injury risk. Lastly, the combination of ND and anterior pelvic tilt explained only 42% of the variance associated with ACL injury history in our subjects. It is likely that risk factors such as neuromuscular recruitment strategies, movement patterns, and hormonal fluctuations are associated with the unexplained variance in ACL injury risk not related to lower extremity malalignment. Our findings, along with other previously published retrospective studies, provide a starting point for further investigation of ACL injury risk. Identification of significant relationships between lower extremity malalignments and ACL injury history is clinically relevant as it confirms the existence of increased injury risk with certain patterns of skeletal alignment. However, there is still a clear need for larger scale retrospective and prospective studies that examine the relationships between lower extremity malalignments and ACL injury risk with larger sample sizes and increased statistical power. Likewise, the study of intervention techniques aimed at correcting hyperpronation (with foot orthotics) and anterior pelvic tilt (muscle energy) in an effort to prevent ACL injuries may also be warranted. |