A 23-year old professional soccer player (body mass = 77.5 kg; height = 1.85 m) was followed for one year after BF injury. Symptoms included local tenderness and pain, more noticeable under stretch (straight leg raise > 45°). The clinical diagnosis based on US and MRI evaluation was BF injury (strain) of the right leg. This injury was classified as a structural injury with moderate partial tear (disruption more than the diameter of a fascicle) (Mueller-Wohlfahrt et al., 2013) and it was not a re-injury. The player was injured during the second half of an official game while sprinting. The local Ethics Committee approved the investigation and the participant gave written informed consent to participate. The intervention protocol consisted of three phases. Phase 1 included non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication for the first 5 days along with a standard physiotherapy treatment consisting of ice, crutches, rest, ultrasound and laser and isometric contractions involving the pelvis-lumbar region. Our treatment goal for the patient, at this phase, was to facilitate muscle healing and to regain pain-free, full range of motion and submaximal isometric contraction. Phase 2 included a combination of physical therapy modalities (heat, ultrasound and thermal bands) and trunk stability and moderate intensity strengthening (isometric, concentric and eccentric short-range) exercises, mild stretches (approximately 6-8 exercises / per session, four times a week, intensity increasing from 2 X 6 reps to 4 x 12 repetitions). The overall duration of this phase was 2 weeks and ended when the patient could perform an MVC test without pain. Finally, phase 3 exercises included various type of cutting maneuvers, eccentric hamstring and balance exercises of increasing demand as well as advanced trunk stability exercises. The patient returned to sport when he could perform advanced sport-specific exercises without pain and the strength differences between the two limbs were less than 5%. Outcome measures were taken at six occasions: 3, 7, 14, 21, 28 days and 1 year after injury. Particularly, the patient was stabilized on the chair of a Cybex (HumacNorm, CSMI, MA) dynamometer in the prone position with a hip flexion angle of 0° (Figure 1). The axis of rotation of the dynamometer was carefully aligned with the lateral femoral condyle. A twin – axis goniometer (Model TSD 130B, Biopac Systems, Inc., Goleta, CA) was used to record knee angular position (0n = full knee extension). An ultrasonic apparatus (SSD-3500, ALOKA, Japan) was used with an electronic linear array probe of 10 MHz wave frequency. All signals were fed through BNC connectors (Models CLB 102 and CLB107, Biopac Systems, Inc., Goleta, CA) to a 12-bit analog-to-digital converter sampling at a rate of 1000 Hz per channel using the Acknowledge (version 3.9.1, Biopac Systems, Inc., Goleta, CA) software. The video capturing module of this software allowed simultaneous recording of the ultrasound video images at a rate of 30 Hz. The scanning head of the probe was coated with transmission gel to obtain acoustic coupling. The US probe moved sequentially along muscle length (from the superior to the inferior border) until the ischial tuberosity at least 5 times. From the recorded US video images, the scar was identified and markers were then placed on the skin, to indicate its position along muscle length and to ensure its consistent identification in repeated scans (Figure 1). To exclude any joint rotation effects, US images were also recorded during a passive knee joint motion (from ~10° of knee flexion to ~3° hyper-extension) immediately after the MVC trial. Initially the scar was identified on the captured US image (Figure 2) at rest. Using a video-based software (Max Traq Lite version 2.09, Innovision Systems, Inc., Columbiaville, Michingan. U.S.A) four points were digitized onthe US image andthe length andwidth were measured. Furthermore, three fascicles were selected from two regionsbased on their position relative to the scar: one fascicle from the region superficially to the scar, the second fascicle from the region “underneath” the scar closer to the deep aponeurosis and, a third fascicle (referred to as “typical” fascicle) from the deeper region located as far as possible from the scar. For each of these fascicles, two points were digitized along their length and their angle relative to the deeper aponeurosis was calculated (Figure 2). For the ruptured fascicle, the angle between the fascicle and a line perpendicular to deep aponeurosis was considered as the pennation angle. To quantify tendon / aponeurosis strain, a marker was placed on the dermal surface under the pad as a reference point to ascertain that the probe did not slide on the dermal surface and to act as a fixed reference from which manual measures of elongation could be made. A 5-sec isometric maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) was initially performed followed by three 10-s ramp isometric flexion contractions guided by an audiovisual signal. Particularly, the participant was instructed to gradually increase the level of effort every 1 sec until MVC. To achieve this, the moment curve was displayed on a screen notifying the participant to increase the level of effort, every 10% MVC. The procedure was repeated separately for each of three knee flexion angular positions: 0° (full extension), 45° and 90°. The sequence of tests was randomized across angular positions. To quantify strain, the intersection point between a selected fascicle and the deep aponeurosis was digitized in each US video sequence and its displacement was measured. This displacement was then corrected for any joint position effects by removing the displacement of the point measured during the passive joint test. Strain was then calculated by dividing the displacement by the resting length. Resting length was measured using a flexible measurable tape at 40° of knee flexion (where the passive moment is almost zero) as the curved path from the BF distal origin (lateral aspect of fibula) to the aponeurosis / tendon marker measured along the skin surface (Kellis et al., 2009) and it was equal to 244.5 mm. To express the changes in strain relative to the changes in MVC moment across the 6 testing sessions, in each occasion, the strain was divided by the recorded MVC moment. |