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Dive into the research topics where Christer Rolf is active.

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Featured researches published by Christer Rolf.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2014

Acute Achilles Tendon Ruptures Incidence of Injury and Surgery in Sweden Between 2001 and 2012

Tuomas T. Huttunen; Pekka Kannus; Christer Rolf; Li Felländer-Tsai; Ville M. Mattila

Background: Population-based incidence rates and trends of acute Achilles tendon ruptures are not known. It is also not known whether recent high-quality randomized controlled trials not favoring surgery have had an effect on treatment protocols. Purpose: To assess the incidence of acute Achilles tendon ruptures in Sweden and to examine the trends in surgical treatment. Study Design: Descriptive epidemiology study. Methods: We conducted a nationwide registry-based study including all adult (≥18 years of age) inpatient and outpatient hospital visits because of an acute Achilles tendon rupture in Sweden between 2001 and 2012. Results: We identified a total of 27,702 patients (21,979 men, 79%) with acute Achilles tendon ruptures between 2001 and 2012. In 2001, the sex-specific incidence of acute Achilles tendon ruptures was 47.0 (per 100,000 person-years) in men and 12.0 in women. In 2012, the corresponding values were 55.2 in men and 14.7 in women, with an increase of 17% in men and 22% in women. The proportion of surgically treated patients declined from 43% in 2001 to 28% in 2012 in men and from 34% in 2001 to 22% in 2012 in women. Conclusion: The incidence of acute Achilles tendon ruptures in Sweden is increasing. The most probable reason for this increase is the rise in the number of older adults participating in high-demand sports. The proportion of surgically treated patients is decreasing most likely because of recent high-quality randomized controlled trials and their meta-analyses supporting similar results between surgical and nonsurgical approaches.


Foot & Ankle International | 1998

Local Bone Deformation at Two Predominant Sites for Stress Fractures of the Tibia: An In Vivo Study

Ingrid Ekenman; Kjartan Halvorsen; P. Westblad; Li Felländer-Tsai; Christer Rolf

Local bone deformation was registered at two predominant injury sites for tibial stress fractures in a healthy female volunteer. Two instrumented strain gauge staples were inserted under local anesthesia to the anterior middiaphysis (AM) and to the posteromedial part of the distal tibia (PD). Calibration and reliability of the instrumented staple system have previously been demonstrated in vitro. Concomitant ground reaction forces were registered with a Kistler force plate. Studying peak values, it was shown that during a voluntary 30-cm forward jump, PD deformation was greater during forefoot landing (2700–4200 microstrain) than during a heel strike landing (1200–1900 microstrain) and also compared with the concomitant AM deformation under both above testing conditions (1300–1900 microstrain). The stance phase during walking resulted in PD deformation of 950 microstrain, whereas the concomitant AM deformation was 334 microstrain. The greatest AM deformation (mean, 2128 microstrain) was registered during ground contact after a voluntary vertical drop from a height of 45 cm, concomitant with a PD deformation of 436 microstrain. These data are the first to show different local deformations at various sites of the tibia in vivo. The PD deformation was larger than previously noted from other parts of the tibia, whereas the middiaphysis data are consistent with other reports. The results may support the clinical assumption of different etiologies for stress fractures at these predominant sites.


Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports | 2007

Overuse injuries of the lower extremity in runners

Christer Rolf

The purpose of this article is to review the literature on overuse injuries of the lower extremity in runners and to discuss briefly todays knowledge concerning etiology, diagnosis and treatment. Running is a natural entity in many sports and a majority of runners will sustain one or more overuse injuries throughout the career, in most cases affecting the lower extremity. A runner may be regarded as an athlete who regularly runs as the predominant physical acitivty. From that point, we should subdivide the definition “runner” considering the character of different sports or recreational activities performed. Overuse injuries are often described merely from symptoms, including several different etiological and pathoan‐atomic correlates covering a variety of ailments. The clinical approach should be focused on a thorough history and physical examination. Analysis of possible injury mechanisms, correction of associated extrinsic and intrinsic factors and advice on alternative training should be given. A knowledge of specific demands from the type of running performed is necessary to evaluate the symptoms presented. Overuse etiology has to be considered multifactorial with a yet unsolved exact pathophysiology needing further research. The definition of a “runner”, of “running” and of “overuse injury” should be established and agreed upon. This review attempts to draw attention to the huge multidisciplinary work that has to be done to better understand the mechanisms causing an overuse injury in a runner and to define diagnoses on a scientific base, whether or not excentric or intrinsic factors predispose or trigger.


Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine | 2007

Increased Deposition of Sulfated Glycosaminoglycans in Human Patellar Tendinopathy

Sai-Chuen Fu; Kai-Ming Chan; Christer Rolf

Objective:To investigate if the increased proteoglycans in patellar tendinopathy involves a qualitative change in the types of proteoglycans. Design:This is an observational study based on the biochemical analysis of proteoglycans. Setting:University Teaching Hospital. Patients:Patellar tendon samples from 12 patients with patellar tendinopathy and 12 healthy controls were collected and proteoglycans were extracted for biochemical analyses. All patients fulfilled the diagnostic criteria of having patellar tendinopathy with well-defined clinical features, more than 6 months of insufficient nonoperative treatment including physiotherapeutic modalities, and verification by ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging. Twelve control subjects, 10 men and 2 women with an average age of 31 years (range 16 to 38 years), represented patients with anterior cruciate ligament deficiency who were operated on using the healthy patellar tendon as an autograft. The control subjects had no previous history or clinical signs of patellar tendon injury. Interventions:The independent variable is the presence of pathological conditions of patellar tendinopathy. Main Outcome Measurements:The dependent variables include the electromobility of proteoglycans, staining intensity of proteoglycan core proteins, and the tissue content of glycosaminoglycan disaccharides. Results:The results indicated that the increased proteoglycans in pathological tissues also exhibited qualitative changes as compared to those in healthy patellar tendons. Dermatan monosulfates were significantly increased in the proteoglycans extracted from the pathological tissues of patellar tendinopathy. Conclusions:Our results indicate that proteoglycans deposited in the pathological tissues of patellar tendinopathy were oversulfated as compared to healthy tendons, which may represent a new pathological attribute for the understanding of chronic pain in patellar tendinopathy.


Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001

Subacute bartonella infection in Swedish orienteers succumbing to sudden unexpected cardiac death or having malignant arrhythmias.

Lars Wesslen; Christian Ehrenborg; Martin Holmberg; Svena McGill; Eva Hjelm; Olle Lindquist; Egil Henriksen; Christer Rolf; Erik G. Larsson; Göran Friman

During the period 1979-92, an increasing number of sudden unexpected cardiac deaths (SUCD) occurred in young, Swedish, male elite orienteers. Myocarditis was the most common diagnosis in the 16 victims, and in 4 cases was also associated with fatty infiltration mimicking arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC). Tissues from autopsies of 5 orienteers were tested for Bartonella by PCR targeting the gltA (citrate-synthase) gene. The products were then sequenced. Antibodies to B. henselae, B. quintana and B. elizabethae were measured by indirect fluorescence antibody assay. Bartonella spp. DNA was detected in the hearts of 4 deceased orienteers, and in the lung of a fifth deceased case. The sequences were close to B. quintana in 2 cases and identical to B. henselae in 3. Four of these 5 cases, as well as 2 additional cases of elite orienteers with ARVC, indicated antibodies to Bartonella. It is suggested that Bartonella-induced silent subacute myocarditis, eventually leading to electric instability, caused the increased SUCD rate among the Swedish orienteers. It is further suggested that Bartonella infection may be a major pathogenetic factor in the development of ARVC-like disease. Although the mode of transmission is unknown, both zoonotic/vector-borne and parenteral person-to-person transmission may be involved.During the period 1979-92, an increasing number of sudden unexpected cardiac deaths (SUCD) occurred in young, Swedish, male elite orienteers. Myocarditis was the most common diagnosis in the 16 victims, and in 4 cases was also associated with fatty infiltration mimicking arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC). Tissues from autopsies of 5 orienteers were tested for Bartonella by PCR targeting the gltA (citrate-synthase) gene. The products were then sequenced. Antibodies to B. henselae, B. quintana and B. elizabethae were measured by indirect fluorescence antibody assay. Bartonella spp. DNA was detected in the hearts of 4 deceased orienteers, and in the lung of a fifth deceased case. The sequences were close to B. quintana in 2 cases and identical to B. henselae in 3. Four of these 5 cases, as well as 2 additional cases of elite orienteers with ARVC, indicated antibodies to Bartonella. It is suggested that Bartonella-induced silent subacute myocarditis, eventually leading to electric instability, caused the increased SUCD rate among the Swedish orienteers. It is further suggested that Bartonella infection may be a major pathogenetic factor in the development of ARVC-like disease. Although the mode of transmission is unknown, both zoonotic/vector-borne and parenteral person-to-person transmission may be involved.


Apmis | 1999

Sudden unexpected cardiac deaths among young Swedish orienteers - Morphological changes in hearts and other organs.

Erik G. Larsson; Lars Wesslen; Olle Lindquist; Ulrik Baandrup; Lars Eriksson; E.G.J. Olsen; Christer Rolf; Göran Friman

During the years 1979–1992 an accumulation of sudden unexpected cardiac deaths (SUD) occurred among young Swedish orienteers. A reevaluation of material saved from 16 autopsies was undertaken. Myocarditis was most frequent. It was found in different stages in the majority of cases, indicating subacute or chronic disease with ongoing reparative processes. There were severe morphological changes in all cases. All but one showed a picture of fibrosis and unspecific hypertrophy and/or degenerative changes in myocytes. The hearts were classified into three groups (A‐C), based on the morphological picture of the retrieved heart tissue and the macroscopic description. Group A comprised five cases in which areas with active myocarditis combined with areas of healing or healed myocarditis widely distributed in the left ventricle were the only morphological changes found. Group B comprised four cases demonstrating foci of myocarditis in different stages in the left ventricle and changes resembling those found in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD), including degenerative changes with fibrosis and fatty infiltration located in either ventricle. Group C comprised the remaining seven cases. In none of the cases were coronary artery or valvular anomalies present, nor significant coronary sclerosis or changes outside the heart that could cause SUD.


Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 1999

Early influence of an ankle sprain on objective measures of ankle joint function. A prospective randomised study of ankle brace treatment.

Johan Leanderson; Marie Bergqvist; Christer Rolf; P. Westblad; Susanne Wigelius-Roovers; Torsten Wredmark

Abstract The purpose of this study was to analyse objective modalities of ankle joint function after an acute ankle sprain and to see whether treatment with an air-cushioned ankle brace could enhance the restoration of function compared with a traditionally used compression bandage. The study included 73 consecutive patients between 15 and 55 years of age with an acute grade II or III ankle sprain, who sought medical care within 24 h of the time of injury. Patients with recurrent sprain were excluded. The patients were allocated at random to treatment with compression bandage or an air-cushioned ankle brace (Air-Stirrup, Aircast). The regimen included early motion and weight-bearing in both groups. The patients were examined initially within 24 h, after 3–5 days, 2, 4 and 10 weeks after the injury by the following tests: clinical examination including range of motion, recording of postural sway by stabilometry, joint position sense test, isokinetic eversion-inversion muscle torques and figure-of-eight running. A decreased active range of motion in eversion-inversion was observed during the entire follow-up period. Increased postural sway was registered when standing on the injured foot up to 4 weeks after the injury, as were a deficit in evertor muscle peak torque and an evertor-invertor muscle imbalance compared with the uninjured side. Women demonstrated a greater impairment in postural sway than men. A longer curve running time with the injured ankle at the outside of the curve was noted at the 10-week follow-up. With the exception of running in a figure of eight, these measures were not influenced by treatment with a semi-rigid ankle brace. The methods used in the present study are well suited for further studies of objective modalities of ankle joint function, with the possible exception of the joint position sense test.


Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 2012

Expression of chondro-osteogenic BMPs in clinical samples of patellar tendinopathy

Yun Feng Rui; Pauline Po Yee Lui; Christer Rolf; Yin Mei Wong; Yuk Wa Lee; Kai-Ming Chan

PurposeThe pathogenesis of patellar tendinopathy remains unclear. Expression of BMP-2/-4/-7 was reported in an ossified failed tendon healing animal model of patellar tendinopathy. This study aimed to investigate the expression of these chondro-osteogenic BMPs in clinical samples of patellar tendinopathy.MethodsPatellar tendon samples were collected from 16 consecutive patients with patellar tendinopathy and 16 consecutive controls undergoing anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with bone-patellar tendon-bone autograft in the authors’ hospital after getting their consent. The expression of BMP-2/-4/-7 was examined in all samples using immunohistochemistry. Ossification observed in two tendinopathy samples was characterized by histology, alizarin red S staining, alcian blue staining, TRAP staining and immunohistochemical staining of Sox9, osteopontin (OPN) and osteocalcin (OCN).ResultsRegions of hypo- and hyper-cellularity and vascularity, with loss of crimp structure of collagen matrix, were observed in patellar tendinopathy samples. Round cells and in some cases, cells with typical chondrocyte phenotype were observed. For the ossified tendinopathy samples with positive alizarin red S staining, OPN-positive and Sox9-positive chondrocyte-like cells in alcian blue-stained extracellular matrix, OCN-positive osteoblast-like cells and TRAP-positive multi-nucleated cells were observed around the ossified deposits. No expression of BMP-2/-4/-7 was observed in healthy patellar tendons. However, the expression of BMP-2/-4/-7 was observed in all patellar tendinopathy samples with or without ossification.ConclusionsClinical samples of patellar tendinopathy showed ectopic expression of BMP-2/-4/-7. This was not evident in control samples from healthy patellar tendons.Level of evidencePrognostic studies, Level III.


Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports | 2007

An experimental in vivo method for analysis of local deformation on tibia, with simultaneous measures of ground reaction forces, lower extremity muscle activity and joint motion.

Christer Rolf; P. Westblad; Ingrid Ekenman; A. Lundberg; N. Murphy; M. Lamontagne; Kjartan Halvorsen

This paper presents the pilot procedures of a new in vivo experimental method for measures of local bone deformation on tibia. The tibia transducer consists of a strain gauge mounted on a surgical staple, and was designed to measure local bone deformation. Pilot measurements were undertaken during two standardized conditions of forefoot and heel landing in seven healthy volunteers. Implantation of two tibia force transducers on tibia were preformed under local anaesthesia. The local peak tibia deformation occurred at 20–42 ms (median) after ground contact, and was up to eight times higher during stance phase loading compared with standing still on one leg. Ground reaction forces, muscle activation patterns and kinematics and were registered stimulataneously, and were used to validate that the observed local deformation on tibia occurred under controlled and clinically relevant conditions. The new method may be used for investigating local deformation within various bone structures of the lower extremity. There are further methodological issues to address before major clinical interpretations may be concluded. In order to verify that the strain gauge transducer system was valid, a controlled displacement of the staple shanks was performed with a micrometer, and showed a linear relationship between applied deformation and strain gauge response (r= 0.97–0.99). In addition, a linear relationship was found between externally applied static forces and strain gauge response in a four‐point bending cadaver system (r= 0.96–0.98).


Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports | 2007

Aerobic and anaerobic work capacities and leg muscle characteristics in elite orienteers

Christer Rolf; Andersson G; P. Westblad; Saltin B

Aerobic and anaerobic work capacities, leg muscle structure and metabolic characteristics of m. vastus lateralis (NT), m. rectus femoris (RG) and mm. gastrocnemii (NT and RG) were analysed in five male and seven female elite orienteers from the Swedish National team (NT) and a reference group (RG) of eight male and 10 female upcoming orienteers, all in optimal shape at the end of a competitive season. Maximal oxygen uptake was 78.4 mlikgimin for NT men (range 75–81) and 67.8 ml/kg/min for NT women (range 62–71), for both groups significantly higher (P<0.001) than for RG. Maximal serum lactate was 13.3 mmol/l for NT men (range 10–17) and 11.7 mmol/l for NT women (range 8.4–14), which did not differ from RG. No significant correlation was found between maximal oxygen uptake and maximal serum lactate. For NT females only maximal oxygen uptake was significantly related to running economy (P<0.01). Muscle biopsies showed a high content of type I fibres in m. vastus lateralis as well as in m. gastrocnemius mediale. M. vastus lateralis (NT) had a higher proportion of type I fibres, capillaries per fibre as well as CS, HAD and LDH 1–2 enzymes compared with m. rectus femoris (RG) (P<0.01–<0.001), the latter muscle showing a more anaerobic profile. NT males and females had a higher metabolic potential in m. gastrocnemius mediale than RG (P<0.001). Our results reflect an obligate high and narrow range of aerobic and anaerobic work capacities for successful performance in international elite orienteering. It remains to be shown how these laboratory data are related to individual performance in authentic orienteering competitions.

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Göran Friman

Uppsala University Hospital

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Kai-Ming Chan

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Sai-Chuen Fu

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Li Felländer-Tsai

Karolinska University Hospital

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Shu-Hang Yung

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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