Skip to main content
Revista Brasileira de Ortopedia logoLink to Revista Brasileira de Ortopedia
. 2014 Oct 27;49(6):573–580. doi: 10.1016/j.rboe.2013.10.003

Muscle injury: current perspectives and trends in Brazil☆☆

Lesão muscular: perspectivas e tendências atuais no Brasil

Diego Costa Astur 1,, João Vitor Novaretti 1, Renato Kalil Uehbe 1, Gustavo Gonçalves Arliani 1, Eduardo Ramalho Moraes 1, Alberto de Castro Pochini 1, Benno Ejnisman 1, Moises Cohen 1
PMCID: PMC4487428  PMID: 26229864

Abstract

Objective

To evaluate the management, procedures and perspectives of sports physicians and orthopedists in Brazil with regard to diagnosing and treating muscle injuries.

Methods

A questionnaire containing 20 questions relating to the topic of muscle injury was applied to sports physicians and orthopedists during the Second Brazilian Congress of Arthroscopy and Sports Traumatology, in 2013.

Results

Completely answered questionnaires were received from 168 sports physicians and orthopedists. Doctors from all regions of Brazil with a mean of 11 years of experience of treating muscle injuries were interviewed. Lower limbs were affected in 97% of the cases, particularly the quadriceps, adductor and sural triceps. The injury occurred during the eccentric phase in 62% of the interviews; 39% underwent ultrasound examination and 37% magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the injury to be diagnosed. Medication, rest and cryotherapy during the acute phase (87.5%) and medication, rest and physiotherapy during treatment of the injury (56%) were the prevalent options. The criteria for returning to sports were very subjective and disparate among the options presented, and most of the interviewees had already used some therapy that was adjuvant to traditional methods.

Conclusion

The number of muscle injuries treated per year was greater than 30, independent of whether in the public or private sector. These injuries occurred mainly at the muscle–tendon junction, in the lower limbs and during the eccentric phase of muscle contraction. Ultrasound was the examination most performed, while MRI was considered ideal. For most of the interviewees, the preferred treatment involved rest, medication and physiotherapy. In addition, 52% believed that platelet-rich plasma was an efficient treatment and 42% said that they had already used it.

Keywords: Muscle injury, Perspectives, Treatment, Management, Epidemiology

Introduction

Over recent decades, the number of people taking part in sports activities around the world has progressively increased. A large part of this increase has occurred because of the extensive dissemination by the media of the benefits to health that result from regularly practicing exercise. Exercise provides improvement of quality of life and reduction of the risk of having many diseases.1, 2, 3

However, it is known that the benefits from practicing sports stand in contrast to the increase in the number of osteomuscular injuries.4 Almost 10 million sports-related injuries occur every year in the United States.5 Most of them are not very severe, but they are painful and often incapacitating, since they take people away from their physical and professional activities.6

Muscle injuries are the commonest of these and account for 10–55% of all sports injuries. They consist mainly of bruises, sprains and lacerations.7 Injuries due to sprains generally affect superficial and two-joint muscles (rectus femoris, knee flexors and gastrocnemius) and they occur during the eccentric phase of contraction.8 The causes are multifactorial and there are some risk factors, such as age, previous muscle injuries in the same region, ethnicity, overloading, force imbalance and alteration of the capacity to stretch the muscle group in question.9

However, little has changed over recent decades regarding the way in which muscle injuries are understood and treated. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the conceptualizations, diagnostic methods, treatment methods and perspectives of specialist physicians through applying a questionnaire among them, on muscle injuries in Brazil. From these results, it will be possible to delimit national trends on this little studied topic and guide subsequent new research in this field.

Methods

This was a descriptive study with application of a questionnaire to a sample formed mainly by sports physicians and orthopedists. This questionnaire was composed of 20 closed questions and was drawn up by the present authors in a simple and objective manner. It covered the main topic of the subject of muscle injuries (Appendix 1).

The questionnaire was applied to physicians who routinely treat muscle injuries who were attending the Second Brazilian Congress of Sports Arthroscopy and Traumatology (SBRATE), which took place in Fortaleza in 2013.

Thus, 168 questionnaires were filled out under guidance from one of the researchers for clarifications of any doubts that may have arisen.

From the data obtained through the questionnaires that were filled out, descriptive statistics were calculated on the variables involved, in order to characterize the sample.

The data were analyzed using the SPSS for Windows software, version 16.0, and the significance level was taken to be 5%.

Results

There were 168 completed questionnaires, filled out by physicians from 20 states in all the five regions of Brazil (Table 1): 118 were orthopedists, 43 were orthopedists and sports physicians, five were sports physicians and two were from other specialties.

Table 1.

Geographical distribution of the study participants.

Number of physicians
North 9 (5%)
Northeast 44 (27%)
Center-West 18 (10%)
Southeast 79 (47%)
South 18 (10%)
Total 168

The mean length of time for which the professionals interviewed had been active in treating muscle injuries was 11 years. Most of the interviewees dealt with muscle injuries in both public and private services and saw more than 30 cases per year (Table 2).

Table 2.

Number of muscle injury cases treated within the public and private systems every year.

Muscle injury cases treated/year Public service Private service Public and private
<10 4 (27%) 9 (13%) 11 (15%)
10–20 5 (33%) 13 (19%) 10 (13%)
20–30 2 (13%) 10 (15%) 25 (33%)
>30 4 (27%) 35 (52%) 29 (39%)
Total 15 67 75

Most of the injuries cited occurred in the lower limbs (97%): 30% in the quadriceps, 28% in the thigh adductors and 21% in the sural triceps. These injuries most commonly occurred during the eccentric phase of movement (in cases seen by 62% of the interviewees) and mostly affected the muscle–tendon junction (53%) and the muscle body (45%) (Table 3).

Table 3.

Main characteristics of the muscle injuries: site affected and type of contraction at time of injury.

Limb affected
 Lower 97%
 Upper 3%



Muscle grouping
 Quadriceps 30%
 Thigh adductors 28%
 Sural triceps 21%
 Hamstrings 16%
 Biceps brachialis 3%
 Others 2%



Type of contraction
 Eccentric 62%
 Concentric 30%
 Isometric 3.50%
 Not known 4.50%



Region affected
 Muscle–tendon junction 53%
 Muscle body 45%
 Bone avulsion 2%

The examination most often performed by the physicians interviewed, in order to aid in the diagnosis, was ultrasound (39%), but the majority of them (84%) considered that magnetic resonance imaging was the best examination for making diagnoses (Table 4). Through the imaging examination, it was possible to classify the injuries using the method preferred by the majority of the interviewees (73%): the method that divides injuries into three grades according to the number of fibers injured. On the other hand, 24% of the interviewees preferred to classify injuries only with a description of the anatomical region injured. Moreover, 48% considered chronic muscle injuries to be those that had been presented for more than six weeks, 35% for more than three weeks and 15% for more than 3 months.

Table 4.

Comparison between the examination most performed and the one considered ideal for diagnosing muscle injuries.

Examination performed Ideal examination
USG 65 (39%) 23 (14%)
MRI 62 (37%) 142 (84%)
USG + MRI 29 (17%) 0
Not used 12 (7%) 3 (2%)

USG, ultrasound; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.

The treatment of choice in the acute phase of the injury for most of the interviewees was a combination of rest, cryotherapy and medication. Regarding the options for medications, the majority (35%) prescribed anti-inflammatory drugs alone, followed by analgesics (25%) and an association of anti-inflammatory drugs and analgesics (12%). For most of the interviews (56%), the treatment after the acute phase was composed of medication, rest and physiotherapy. In this case, the medication most prescribed was analgesics (Table 5, Table 6).

Table 5.

Main medications used for treating muscle injuries at the time of the injury (acute) and during the treatment period (post-injury).

Treatment Acute Post-injury
NSAID 59 (35%) 39 (23%)
AG 42 (25%) 74 (44%)
NSAID + AG 20 (12%) 7 (4%)
NSAID + AG + RX 20 (12%) 6 (3.5%)
NSAID + RX 18 (10.5%) 9 (5.5%)
AG + RX 5 (3%) 9 (5.5%)
RX 3 (2%) 15 (9%)
Other 1 (0.5%) 9 (5.5%)

NSAID, non-steroid anti-inflammatory drug; AG, analgesic; RX, muscle relaxant.

Table 6.

Therapeutic options for treating muscle injuries at the time of the injury and after the injury.

Treatment Acute Treatment Post-injury
Medication + rest + cryo 147 (87.5%) Medication + rest + physio 95 (56%)
Medication + rest 10 (6%) Physio + rest 28 (17%)
Cryo + rest 7 (4%) Physio 25 (15%)
Medication 0 Medication + rest 15 (9%)
Cryo 0 Medication 0
Other 4 (2.5%) Other 5 (3%)

Cryo, cryotherapy; Physio, physiotherapy.

For injuries classified as grade I, the mean length of time away from sports activities was 13 days; grade II, 28 days; and grade III,48 days. The main criteria used for determining the return to sport were comparison of muscle strength alone in the injured limb with the contralateral limb and combination evaluation of the pain scale and muscle strength in relation to the contralateral limb, along with the patient's own degree of confidence (Table 7).

Table 7.

Criteria used for the return to sport, for patients treated for muscle injury.

Criteria for return to sport Number
FM contralateral 24 (14%)
Pain + contralateral MS + confidence 23 (13.5%)
Pain + contralateral MS 22 (13%)
All options 19 (11%)
Pain 16 (9.5%)
Other options 14 (8.5%)
Confidence 13 (7.5%)
Pain + confidence 12 (7%)
Imaging examination 5 (3%)
Pain + imaging examination 5 (3%)
Contralateral MS + confidence 5 (3%)
Pain + contralateral MS + imaging examination 3 (2%)
MS + imaging examination + confidence 2 (1%)
MS + imaging examination 1 (0.5%)
Pain + imaging examination + confidence 1 (0.5%)
Pain + MS + circumference of injured limb 1 (0.5%)
Pain + confidence + circumference of injured limb 1 (0.5%)
MS + imaging examination + circumference of injured limb 1 (0.5%)
Circumference of injured limb 0

Contralateral MS refers to comparison of muscle strength between the injured and uninjured sides; pain is evaluated by means of a visual analog scale; confidence is a subjective measurement; imaging examination relates to follow-up of the evolution of the injury; circumference of the injured limb refers to evolution comprising hypotrophy caused by the injury.

The interviewees were also asked about other possible therapies cited in the literature that could be used for treating muscle injuries: 52% believed that treatment with platelet-rich plasma (PRP) was efficient, but only 42% had already used this therapeutic method, while 14% did not believe in any of the methods presented and 24% had never used any of these therapeutic methods (Table 8).

Table 8.

Interviewees’ opinions regarding the efficiency of new therapies presented in the literature, for treating muscle injuries, and whether they had had the opportunity to use the respective therapeutic options.

Therapy Efficiency Used
PRP 88 (52%) 70 (42%)
Shockwaves 45 (27%) 45 (27%)
Gene therapy 11 (6.5%) 0
Local infiltration 7 (4%) 36 (21%)
Others 20 (12%) 18 (11%)
No opinion 24 (14%) 40 (24%)

PRP, platelet-rich plasma.

Discussion

Muscle injury is the commonest type of musculoskeletal injury. It may represent up to 50% of all orthopedic complaints. In most cases, the patient is capable of returning to activities at the same level as before the injury, without functional deficits.10, 11 Nonetheless, little is known about these injuries. There is no consensus on the best way of defining their severity, the most appropriate treatment and the most efficient form of rehabilitation.

The present study evaluated the main topics involved in muscle injuries and investigated them among a population of highly specialized physicians who were accustomed to dealing with this pathological condition.

These questions were put to 168 sports physicians and/or orthopedists from all regions of Brazil whose mean level of experience of treating muscle injuries was 11 years.

When the number of muscle injuries treated per year was evaluated, it was seen that, independent of the subspecialization of orthopedist or sports physician, these were the injuries most frequently treated at the places where the majority of the interviewees attended patients. Independent of whether attendance was within the public or private system, the mean number of cases of injuries exceeded 30 per year. The great majority of the physicians reported that the commonest injuries were in the lower limbs, which is in line with the sports practices that are most popular in our setting, i.e. soccer and athletics. The result was that greater numbers of injuries occurred in the muscles groupings involved, for example, in kicking movements: quadriceps, thigh adductors and sural triceps.

In the literature, muscle injuries have been correlated with eccentric contraction.12, 13, 14, 15 62% of the interviewees also took the view that the majority of the injuries occurred during this phase of the contraction, which should serve as information for correct physical preparation and injury prevention among athletes practicing a variety of physical activities.

Although many classifications have been described with the aim of better understanding of the types of muscle injury, we believe that there is still no consensus about the best way of differentiating between them.16 The difficulty in making samples homogenous makes comparison between different injuries very complex. Classifications may relate to anatomy, the region in which the muscle fibers are affected or the time elapsed since the injury, among many others. In the present study, the majority of the participants chose to define the type of injury according to the number of fibers injured and they divided these injuries into three types: grades I, II and III. However, even though this classification depends on an imaging examination, it is still very subjective and results from the opinion of the physician who makes the assessment. Even so, this is the classification that best led the professionals to the type of treatment and the length of time for which the athlete will be away from his sport. It was seen that the higher the grade of the injury was, the longer the time for which the study participants chose to keep the athletes from their activities was. In discussing the time required for defining an injury as acute or chronic, there was also a very wide range of opinions. In the literature, there has been little scientifically base description of what constitutes a chronic injury.16 In the present study, 48% believed that these are injuries that occurred more than six weeks ago, 35% more than three weeks ago and 15% more than three months ago.

In relation to the diagnostic method, there was concordance with the literature regarding the notion that magnetic resonance imaging would be the ideal examination,17 although the majority of the interviewees used ultrasound. This can be explained by the difference in costs between the examinations, although this may no longer be the rule in other countries, where the costs of magnetic resonance imaging are not as high as it is in Brazil.

The treatment for muscle injuries is without doubt the most controversial item. Although the same treatment has been used for more than 40 years, some therapies have been described and have started to be used in our setting, even though in some situations there has been little basis for this in the literature. In the acute phase, the great majority of the interviewees mainly used analgesic and anti-inflammatory medications, in association with rest and cryotherapy.

The subsequent treatment, which in most cases is guided by the type of injury, was composed of physiotherapy, rest and medication, according to 56% of the interviewees. This has been the conventional trio of treatments for muscle injuries for many years. Over this time period, much has been said about adjuvant therapies that might accelerate muscle healing and provide an earlier return to sport. We asked the participants whether they considered that treatments with PRP, shockwaves, local infiltration and gene therapy were efficient. Most of them believed that PRP treatment would be efficient, followed by shockwaves, gene therapy and infiltration. However, when asked whether they were using these therapies, smaller numbers of participants affirmed this: 42% had already used PRP, 27% shockwaves and 21% infiltration. None of them mentioned using gene therapy.

For the return to sports practice, the main criteria used by the participants were comparison of muscle strength with the contralateral side, comparison of the combined results from the visual analog pain scale and muscle strength with the contralateral side and the patient's confidence. The great challenge in treating muscle injuries probably relates to the exact time at which injured patients can return to their sports activities at a high performance level. Today, many criteria are used to measure this capacity to return, but in most cases these methods are still subjective, with little scientific evidence.

Although this was purely a descriptive study, with a low level of evidence, it has great importance in that it analyzed the way in which specialists deal with injuries that are so common yet so little studied with regard to the main aspects of this pathological condition.

Conclusion

The number of muscle injury cases treated every year was greater than 30, independent of whether this was in the public or private sector. The injuries occurred mainly at the muscle–tendon junction, in the lower limbs and during the eccentric phase of muscle contraction. Ultrasound was the examination most used, while magnetic resonance imaging was considered to be ideal. The preferred treatment involved rest, medication and physiotherapy, for the majority of the interviewees. Moreover, 52% of the physicians believed that PRP was efficient and 42% said that they had used it.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Footnotes

Please cite this article as: Astur DC, Novaretti JV, Uehbe RK, Arliani GG, Moraes ER, de Castro Pochini A, Ejnisman B, Cohen M. Lesão muscular: perspectivas e tendências atuais no Brasil. Rev Bras Ortop. 2014;49:573–580.

☆☆

Work developed at the Sports Traumatology Center, Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology, Paulista Medical School, Federal University of São Paulo (Unifesp), São Paulo, SP, Brazil.

Appendix 1. Questionnaire applied during a congress, to ask professionals within this field about their management of muscle injuries

graphic file with name fx1.jpg

graphic file with name fx2.jpg

References

  • 1.Silva O.C. A qualidade de vida ligada à prática regular de atividades físicas. EFDeportes. 2010:150. [Google Scholar]
  • 2.Programa Nacional de Promoção da Atividade Física Agita Brasil Atividade física e sua contribuição para a qualidade de vida. Rev Saúde Públ. 2002;36(2):254–256. doi: 10.1590/s0034-89102002000200022. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 3.Haskell W.L., Lee I.M., Pate R.R., Powell K.E., Blair S.N., Franklin B.A. Physical activity and public health: updated recommendation for adults from the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association. Off J Am Coll Sports Med. 2007:1423–1434. doi: 10.1249/mss.0b013e3180616b27. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 4.Maffuli N., Longo U.G., Gougoulias N., Caine D., Denaro V. Sport injuries: a review of outcomes. Br Med Bull. 2011;97:47–80. doi: 10.1093/bmb/ldq026. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 5.Nicholl J.P., Coleman P., Williams B.T. The epidemiology of sports and exercise related injury in the United Kingdom. Br J Sports Med. 1995;29(4):232–238. doi: 10.1136/bjsm.29.4.232. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 6.Galer B.S., Rowbotham M., Perander J., Devers A., Friedman E. Topical diclofenac patch relieves minor sports injury pain: results of a multicenter controlled clinical trial. J Pain Symp Manage. 2000;19(4):287–294. doi: 10.1016/s0885-3924(00)00125-1. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 7.Järvinen T.A., Järvinen T.L., Kääriäinen M., Aärimaa V., Vaittinen S., Kalimo H. Muscle injuries: optimizing recovery. Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol. 2007;21(2):317–331. doi: 10.1016/j.berh.2006.12.004. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 8.Lindqvist K.S., Timpka T., Bjurulf P. Injuries during leisure physical activity in a Swedish municipality. Scand J Soc Med. 1996;24(4):282–292. doi: 10.1177/140349489602400409. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 9.Opar D.A., Williams M.D., Shield A.J. Hamstring strain injuries: factors that lead to injury and re-injury. Sports Med. 2012;42(3):209–226. doi: 10.2165/11594800-000000000-00000. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 10.Fernandes T.L., Pedrinelli A., Hernandez A.J. Lesão muscular – Fisiopatologia, diagnóstico, tratamento e apresentação clínica. Rev Bras Ortop. 2011;46(3):247–255. doi: 10.1016/S2255-4971(15)30190-7. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 11.Järvinen T.A.H., Järvinen T.L.N., Kääriäinen M., Kalimo H., Järvinen M. Muscle injuries. Biology and treatment. Am J Sports Med. 2005;33(5):745–764. doi: 10.1177/0363546505274714. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 12.Choi S.J., Lim J.Y., Nibaldi E.G., Phillips E.M., Frontera W.R., Fielding R.A. Eccentric contraction-induced injury to type I, IIa, and IIa/IIx muscle fibers of elderly adults. Age (Dordr) 2012;34(1):215–226. doi: 10.1007/s11357-011-9228-2. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 13.Lieber R.L., Fridén J. Mechanisms of muscle injury after eccentric contraction. J Sci Med Sport. 1999;2(3):253–265. doi: 10.1016/s1440-2440(99)80177-7. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 14.Pull M.R., Ranson C. Eccentric muscle actions: implications for injury prevention and rehabilitation. Phys Ther Sport. 2007;8(sI):88–97. [Google Scholar]
  • 15.Allen D.G. Eccentric muscle damage: mechanisms of early reduction of force. Acta Phys Scand. 2001;171(s1):311–319. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-201x.2001.00833.x. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 16.Mueller-Wohlfahrt H.W., Haensel L., Mithoefer K., Ekstrand J., English B., McNally S. Terminology and classification of muscle injuries in sport: the Munich consensus statement. Br J Sports Med. 2013;47(6):342–350. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2012-091448. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 17.Dias E.P., Marchiori E., Coutinho Junior A.C., Domingues R.C., Domingues R.C. Avaliação por ressonância magnética das injúrias musculares traumáticas. Radiol Bras. 2001;34(6):327–331. [Google Scholar]

Articles from Revista Brasileira de Ortopedia are provided here courtesy of Brazilian Society of Orthopedics and Traumatology

RESOURCES