Return to play and performance after shoulder instability in National Basketball Association athletes

Hypothesis: We hypothesized that players in the National Basketball Association (NBA) who sustained a shoulder destabilizing injury could return to play (RTP) successfully at a high rate regardless of treatment type. We used publicly available data to identify and evaluate 50 players who sustained a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of shoulder and elbow surgery 2020-01, Vol.29 (1), p.50-57
Hauptverfasser: Lu, Yining, Okoroha, Kelechi R., Patel, Bhavik H., Nwachukwu, Benedict U., Baker, James D., Idarraga, Alexander J., Forsythe, Brian
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container_end_page 57
container_issue 1
container_start_page 50
container_title Journal of shoulder and elbow surgery
container_volume 29
creator Lu, Yining
Okoroha, Kelechi R.
Patel, Bhavik H.
Nwachukwu, Benedict U.
Baker, James D.
Idarraga, Alexander J.
Forsythe, Brian
description Hypothesis: We hypothesized that players in the National Basketball Association (NBA) who sustained a shoulder destabilizing injury could return to play (RTP) successfully at a high rate regardless of treatment type. We used publicly available data to identify and evaluate 50 players who sustained an in-season shoulder instability event (subluxation/dislocation) while playing in the NBA. Demographic variables, return to NBA gameplay, incidence of surgery, time to RTP, recurrent instability events, and player efficiency rating (PER) were collected. Overall RTP was determined, and players were compared by type of injury and mode of treatment. All players (50/50) returned to game play after sustaining a shoulder instability event. In those treated nonoperatively, athletes who sustained shoulder subluxations returned after an average of 3.6 weeks, compared with 7.6 weeks in those who sustained a shoulder dislocation (P = .037). Players who underwent operative management returned after an average of 19 weeks. Athletes treated operatively were found to have a longer time interval between a recurrent instability event (70 weeks vs. 28.5 weeks, P = .001). We found 100% rate of RTP after a shoulder instability event in an NBA athlete. Players who experience shoulder dislocations were found to miss more time before RTP and were more likely to undergo surgical intervention compared with those who experienced a subluxation. Surgical repair maintained a longer interval between recurrent instability. Future investigations should aim to evaluate outcomes based on surgical procedures and identify possible risk factors predictive of recurrent instability or failure to RTP.
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We found 100% rate of RTP after a shoulder instability event in an NBA athlete. Players who experience shoulder dislocations were found to miss more time before RTP and were more likely to undergo surgical intervention compared with those who experienced a subluxation. Surgical repair maintained a longer interval between recurrent instability. 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subjects Adult
Athletic Performance
Bankart
Basketball - injuries
Conservative Treatment
Humans
Joint Instability - surgery
Joint Instability - therapy
Male
NBA
professional basketball
Recurrence
Return to Sport
return to sports
shoulder dislocation
Shoulder Dislocation - surgery
Shoulder Dislocation - therapy
Shoulder Injuries - surgery
Shoulder Injuries - therapy
Shoulder instability
shoulder stabilization
shoulder subluxation
Time Factors
Young Adult
title Return to play and performance after shoulder instability in National Basketball Association athletes
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