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Return to Golf After Arthroscopic Management of Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome. Arthroscopy 2018 Dec;34(12):3187-3193.e1

Date

10/12/2018

Pubmed ID

30301634

DOI

10.1016/j.arthro.2018.06.042

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85054434895 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   14 Citations

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate if patients who reported playing golf before arthroscopic hip surgery for femoroacetabular impingement syndrome were able to return to playing golf postoperatively.

METHODS: The study was a retrospective analysis of all consecutive patients undergoing hip arthroscopy for femoroacetabular impingement syndrome between 2012 and 2014. Inclusion criteria required that a patient (1) reported playing golf before the surgery, (2) had a minimum 2-year follow-up, and (3) completed patient-reported outcome measures. An electronic postoperative return to golf questionnaire was completed by patients who reported golf as an activity. To evaluate patients' ability to return to golf after surgery, the following variables were analyzed with paired samples t test and χ-square tests: handedness, holes played, modified-Harris Hip Score, and Hip Outcome Score Activity of Daily Living and Sports-Specific Subscale.

RESULTS: A total of 29 patients (22 men; age, 36.0 ± 11.9 years) with a minimum of 24 months of follow-up who self-reported playing golf preoperatively were included in the analysis. Preoperatively, 23 patients (79%) had discontinued golfing owing to activity-related hip complaints. At the final follow-up, all patients had significant improvements in the Hip Outcome Score Activity of Daily Living (preoperatively, 65.9 ± 19.9; postoperatively, 91.5 ± 12.8; P < .0001), the Hip Outcome Score Sports-Specific Subscale (38.2 ± 23.5, 79.7 ± 28.8; P = .0002), and modified-Harris Hip Score (54.8 ± 15.6; 84.2 ± 15.8; P < .0001). Additionally, there was a decrease in pain from 7.34 ± 1.63 to 1.71 ± 2.3 postoperatively (P < .0001), and 97% of patients returned to golf at an average of 7.2 months postoperatively. Postoperatively, 55% of patients (n = 16) noted improved golfing performance, 41% (n = 11) returned to their preinjury level, 1 patient (3%) returned at a lower level owing to non-hip-related problems, and 1 (3%) did not return to golf owing to fear of reinjury.

CONCLUSIONS: Arthroscopic treatment of femoroacetabular impingement syndrome in patients who reported playing golf before surgery resulted in significant improvements in hip function and predictably high rates of patient satisfaction, with 97% returning to golfing activity and 55% noting improvement from preinjury sporting performance.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level IV, retrospective case series.

Author List

Waterman BR, Ukwuani G, Clapp I, Malloy P, Neal WH, Nho SJ

Author

Phillip Malloy in the CTSI department at Medical College of Wisconsin - CTSI




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adult
Arthroscopy
Female
Femoracetabular Impingement
Follow-Up Studies
Golf
Humans
Male
Pain Measurement
Retrospective Studies
Return to Sport