@article{nokey,
title = {Current perspectives and clinical practice of physiotherapists on assessment, rehabilitation, and return to sport criteria after anterior cruciate ligament injury and reconstruction. An online survey of 538 physiotherapists},
author = {V. Korakakis and A. Kotsifaki and A. Korakaki and S. Karanasios and R. Whiteley},
doi = {10.1016/j.ptsp.2021.08.012},
issn = {1466-853x},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-01-01},
journal = {Phys Ther Sport},
volume = {52},
pages = {103-114},
abstract = {OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the perspectives and clinical practice of physiotherapists regarding rehabilitation after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). DESIGN: Online survey. SETTING: Survey platform. PARTICIPANTS: Greek physiotherapists. OUTCOME MEASURES: The survey consisted of 7 sections: participant demographics, importance of ACLR rehabilitation, clinical measurements, practice, criteria to progress rehabilitation, return to running and return to sport. RESULTS: Significant variability in measures and criteria used for clinical decision-making were found including: limb symmetry in strength and function, knee range of motion and effusion, progression, and return to sport criteria. The majority of the practitioners (28.3%) extrapolate knee strength from hop capacity. Return to running ranged from 3 to 5 months post-operatively reflecting that this was tied to physical capacities, not time from surgery. 70.0% of the Greek physiotherapists would allow return to sport ≤9 months after ACLR. Agreement was found in using: physical measures, function, and dynamic stability in ACLR rehabilitation, but the mode and interpretation varied substantially. Less than 29.0% of the physiotherapists reported using patient-reported outcome measures in their decision-making. CONCLUSION: Current ACLR rehabilitation practices in Greece are largely not aligned with the contemporary scientific evidence and guidelines.},
note = {1873-1600
Korakakis, Vasileios
Kotsifaki, Argyro
Korakaki, Alexandra
Karanasios, Stefanos
Whiteley, Rodney
Journal Article
England
Phys Ther Sport. 2021 Aug 30;52:103-114. doi: 10.1016/j.ptsp.2021.08.012.},
keywords = {anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction; physical therapy; rehabilitation; return to sport},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the perspectives and clinical practice of physiotherapists regarding rehabilitation after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). DESIGN: Online survey. SETTING: Survey platform. PARTICIPANTS: Greek physiotherapists. OUTCOME MEASURES: The survey consisted of 7 sections: participant demographics, importance of ACLR rehabilitation, clinical measurements, practice, criteria to progress rehabilitation, return to running and return to sport. RESULTS: Significant variability in measures and criteria used for clinical decision-making were found including: limb symmetry in strength and function, knee range of motion and effusion, progression, and return to sport criteria. The majority of the practitioners (28.3%) extrapolate knee strength from hop capacity. Return to running ranged from 3 to 5 months post-operatively reflecting that this was tied to physical capacities, not time from surgery. 70.0% of the Greek physiotherapists would allow return to sport ≤9 months after ACLR. Agreement was found in using: physical measures, function, and dynamic stability in ACLR rehabilitation, but the mode and interpretation varied substantially. Less than 29.0% of the physiotherapists reported using patient-reported outcome measures in their decision-making. CONCLUSION: Current ACLR rehabilitation practices in Greece are largely not aligned with the contemporary scientific evidence and guidelines.