Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Laura J. Huston is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Laura J. Huston.


Journal of The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons | 2000

Noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries: risk factors and prevention strategies.

Letha Y. Griffin; J. Agel; M. J. Albohm; Elizabeth A Arendt; R. W. Dick; William E. Garrett; J. G. Garrick; Timothy E. Hewett; Laura J. Huston; Mary Lloyd Ireland; R. J. Johnson; W. B. Kibler; Scott M. Lephart; Jack Lewis; T. N. Lindenfeld; B. R. Mandelbaum; P. Marchak; C. C. Teitz; E. M. Wojtys

An estimated 80,000 anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears occur annually in the United States. The highest incidence is in individuals 15 to 25 years old who participate in pivoting sports. With an estimated cost for these injuries of almost a billion dollars per year, the ability to identify risk factors and develop prevention strategies has widespread health and fiscal importance. Seventy percent of ACL injuries occur in noncontact situations. The risk factors for non-contact ACL injuries fall into four distinct categories: environmental, anatomic, hormonal, and biomechanical. Early data on existing neuromuscular training programs suggest that enhancing body control may decrease ACL injuries in women. Further investigation is needed prior to instituting prevention programs related to the other risk factors.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2006

Understanding and Preventing Noncontact Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries A Review of the Hunt Valley II Meeting, January 2005

Letha Y. Griffin; Marjorie J. Albohm; Elizabeth A. Arendt; Roald Bahr; Bruce D. Beynnon; Marlene DeMaio; Randall W. Dick; Lars Engebretsen; William E. Garrett; Jo A. Hannafin; Timothy E. Hewett; Laura J. Huston; Mary Lloyd Ireland; Robert J. Johnson; Scott M. Lephart; Bert R. Mandelbaum; Barton J. Mann; Paul Marks; Stephen W. Marshall; Grethe Myklebust; Frank R. Noyes; Christopher M. Powers; Clarence L. Shields; Sandra J. Shultz; Holly J. Silvers; James R. Slauterbeck; Dean C. Taylor; Carol C. Teitz; Edward M. Wojtys; Bing Yu

The incidence of noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries in young to middle-aged athletes remains high. Despite early diagnosis and appropriate operative and nonoperative treatments, posttraumatic degenerative arthritis may develop. In a meeting in Atlanta, Georgia (January 2005), sponsored by the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine, a group of physicians, physical therapists, athletic trainers, biomechanists, epidemiologists, and other scientists interested in this area of research met to review current knowledge on risk factors associated with noncontact anterior cruciate ligament injuries, anterior cruciate ligament injury biomechanics, and existing anterior cruciate ligament prevention programs. This article reports on the presentations, discussions, and recommendations of this group.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1996

Neuromuscular Performance Characteristics in Elite Female Athletes

Laura J. Huston; Edward M. Wojtys

The purpose of this research was to identify possible predisposing neuromuscular factors for knee injuries, particularly anterior cruciate ligament tears in female athletes by investigating anterior knee laxity, lower extremity muscle strength, endurance, muscle reaction time, and muscle recruitment order in response to anterior tibial translation. We recruited four subject groups: elite female (N = 40) and male (N = 60) athletes and sex-matched nonathletic controls ( N = 40). All participants underwent a subjective evaluation of knee function, arthrometer measurement of anterior tibial translation, isokinetic dynamometer strength and endurance tests at 60 and 240 deg/sec, and anterior tibial translation stress tests. Dynamic stress testing of muscles demonstrated less anterior tibial translation in the knees of the athletes (both men and women) com pared with the nonathletic controls. Female athletes and controls demonstrated more anterior tibial laxity than their male counterparts and significantly less mus cle strength and endurance. Compared with the male athletes, the female athletes took significantly longer to generate maximum hamstring muscle torque during isokinetic testing. Although no significant differences were found in either spinal or cortical muscle reaction times, the muscle recruitment order in some female athletes was markedly different. The female athletes appeared to rely more on their quadriceps muscles in response to anterior tibial translation; the three other test groups relied more on their hamstring muscles for initial knee stabilization.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1998

Association Between the Menstrual Cycle and Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries in Female Athletes

Edward M. Wojtys; Laura J. Huston; Thomas N. Lindenfeld; Timothy E. Hewett; Mary Lou V. H. Greenfield

Anterior cruciate ligament injury rates are four to eight times higher in women than in men. Because of estrogens direct effect on collagen metabolism and behavior and because neuromuscular performance varies during the menstrual cycle, it is logical to question the menstrual cycles effect on knee injury rates. Of 40 consecutive female athletes with acute anterior cruciate ligament injuries (less than 3 months), 28 (average age, 23 11 years) met the study criteria of regular menstrual periods and noncontact injury. Details concerning mechanism of injury, menstrual cycle, contraceptive use, and previous injury history were collected. A chi-square test was used to compute observed and expected frequencies of anterior cruciate ligament injury based on three different phases of the menstrual cycle: follicular (days 1 to 9), ovulatory (days 10 to 14), and luteal (day 15 to end of cycle). A significant statistical association was found between the stage of the menstrual cycle and the likelihood for an anterior cruciate ligament injury (P 0.03). In particular, there were more injuries than expected in the ovulatory phase of the cycle. In contrast, significantly fewer injuries occurred in the follicular phase. These hormones may be a factor in the knee ligament injury dilemma in women.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2002

The Effect of the Menstrual Cycle on Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries in Women as Determined by Hormone Levels

Edward M. Wojtys; Laura J. Huston; Melbourne D. Boynton; Kurt P. Spindler; Thomas N. Lindenfeld

Anterior cruciate ligament injury rates are reported to be two to eight times higher in women than in men within the same sport. Because the menstrual cycle with its monthly hormonal fluctuations is one of the most basic differences between men and women, we investigated the association between the distribution of confirmed anterior cruciate ligament tears and menstrual cycle phase. Sixty-nine female athletes who sustained an acute anterior cruciate ligament injury were studied within 24 hours of injury at four centers. The mechanism of injury, menstrual cycle details, use of oral contraceptives, and history of previous injury were recorded. Urine samples were collected to validate menstrual cycle phase by measurement of estrogen, progesterone, and luteinizing hormone metabolites and creatinine levels at the time of the anterior cruciate ligament tear. Results from the hormone assays indicate that the women had a significantly greater than expected percentage of anterior cruciate ligament injuries during midcycle (ovulatory phase) and a less than expected percentage of those injuries during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. Oral contraceptive use diminished the significant association between anterior cruciate ligament tear distribution and the ovulatory phase.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1994

Neuromuscular Performance in Normal and Anterior Cruciate Ligament-Deficient Lower Extremities

Edward M. Wojtys; Laura J. Huston

The neuromuscular function of the lower extremity in 40 normal and 100 anterior cruciate ligament-deficient vol unteers was evaluated by physical examination, KT- 1000 arthrometer measurements, isokinetic strength and endurance testing, subjective functional assess ment, and an anterior tibial translation stress test. A specially designed apparatus delivered an anteriorly di rected step force to the posterior aspect of the leg while anterior tibial translation was monitored and electro myographic signals were recorded at the medial and lateral quadriceps, medial and lateral hamstrings, and gastrocnemius muscles. Testing was done at 30° of knee flexion with the foot fixed to a scale to monitor weightbearing, while the tibia remained unconstrained. Results indicate that muscle timing and recruitment or der in response to anterior tibial translation are affected by anterior cruciate ligament injury. These alterations in muscle performance change with time from injury, cor relate with an individuals physical activity level, affect subjective functional parameters, and are directly re lated to the degree of dynamic anterior tibial laxity seen with stress testing.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2000

Anterior cruciate ligament injuries in the female athlete. Potential risk factors

Laura J. Huston; Mary Lou V. H. Greenfield; Edward M. Wojtys

In the general population, an estimated one in 3000 individuals sustains an anterior cruciate ligament injury per year in the United States, corresponding to an overall injury rate of approximately 100,000 injuries annually. This national estimate is low for women because anterior cruciate ligament injury rates are reported to be two to eight times higher in women than in men participating in the same sports, presenting a sizable health problem. With the growing participation of women in athletics and the debilitating nature of anterior cruciate ligament injuries, a better understanding of mechanisms of injury in women sustaining anterior cruciate ligament injuries is essential. Published studies strongly support noncontact mechanisms for anterior cruciate ligament tears in women, which make these injuries even more perplexing. Speculation on the possible etiology of anterior cruciate ligament injuries in women has centered on anatomic differences, joint laxity, hormones, and training techniques. Investigators have not agreed on causal factors for this injury, but they have started to profile the type of athlete who is at risk. In the current study the most recent scientific studies of intrinsic and extrinsic risk factors thought to be contributing to the high rate of female anterior cruciate ligament injuries will be reviewed, important differences will be highlighted, and recommendations proposed to alleviate or minimize these risk factors among female athletes will be reported where appropriate.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1996

The Effects of Muscle Fatigue on Neuromuscular Function and Anterior Tibial Translation in Healthy Knees

Edward M. Wojtys; Bradford B. Wylie; Laura J. Huston

We investigated the effect of quadriceps and hamstring muscle fatigue on anterior tibial translation and muscle reaction time in 10 healthy subjects. The six men and four women had an average age of 21.3 years and had no known pathologic knee conditions. Each patient underwent a knee examination, arthrometer measure ments of tibial translation, subjective functional assess ment, and an anterior tibial translation stress test be fore and after quadriceps and hamstring muscle- fatiguing exercise. The recruitment order of the lower extremity muscles in response to anterior tibial trans lation did not change with muscle fatigue. However, the results showed an average increase of 32.5% in ante rior tibial translation (range, 11.4% to 85.2%) after fatigue. Muscle responses in the gastrocnemius, ham string, and quadriceps originating at the spinal cord and cortical level showed significant slowing and, in some cases, an absence of activity after the quadri ceps and hamstring muscles were fatigued. The in creases in displacement after fatigue strongly corre lated (0.62 to 0.96) with a delay in cortical-level activity (intermediate and voluntary). Muscle fatigue, which ap pears to affect the dynamic stability of the knee, alters the neuromuscular response to anterior tibial transla tion. Therefore, fatigue may play an important role in the pathomechanics of knee injuries in physically de manding sports.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2003

Gender Differences in Muscular Protection of the Knee in Torsion in Size-Matched Athletes

Edward M. Wojtys; Laura J. Huston; Harold J. Schock; James P. Boylan; James A. Ashton-Miller

Background: Female athletes who participate in sports involving jumping and cutting maneuvers are up to eight times more likely to sustain a rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament than are men participating in the same sports. We tested the hypothesis that healthy young women are able to volitionally increase the apparent torsional stiffness of the knee, by maximally activating the knee muscles, significantly less than are size-matched men participating in the same type of sport. Methods: Twenty-four NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) Division-I athletes (twelve men and twelve women) competing in sports associated with a high risk of injury to the anterior cruciate ligament (basketball, volleyball, and soccer) were compared with twenty-eight collegiate endurance athletes (fourteen men and fourteen women) participating in sports associated with a low risk of such injuries (bicycling, crew, and running). Male and female pairs were matched for age, height, weight, body mass index, shoe size, and activity level. Testing was performed with a weighted pendulum that applied a medially directed 80-N impulse force to the lateral aspect of the right forefoot. The resulting internal rotation of the leg was measured optically, to the nearest 0.25°, at 30° and 60° of knee flexion, both with and without maximal activation of the knee muscles. Results: Maximal rotations of the leg were greater in women than in men in both the passive and the active muscle state (16% and 27% greater [p = 0.01 and p = 0.02], respectively). Moreover, female athletes exhibited a significantly (18%) smaller volitional increase in apparent torsional stiffness of the knee under internal rotation loading than did the matched male athletes (p = 0.014); this was particularly the case for those who participated in sports involving jumping and pivoting maneuvers (42% difference between genders, p = 0.001). Conclusions: The collegiate female athletes involved in high-risk sports exhibited less muscular protection of the knee ligaments during external loading of the knee than did size and sport-matched male athletes. Clinical Relevance: Improving active muscle protection of the knee during training and rehabilitation might help to decrease rates of knee injury.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2010

Descriptive epidemiology of the Multicenter ACL Revision Study (MARS) cohort.

Laura J. Huston; Kurt P. Spindler; Warren R. Dunn; Amanda K. Haas; Christina R. Allen; Daniel E. Cooper; Thomas M. DeBerardino; A. Lantz; J Barton; Michael J. Stuart; Rick W. Wright

Background Revision anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction has worse outcomes than primary reconstructions. Predictors for these worse outcomes are not known. The Multicenter ACL Revision Study (MARS) Group was developed to perform a multisurgeon, multicenter prospective longitudinal study to obtain sufficient subjects to allow multivariable analysis to determine predictors of clinical outcome. Purpose To describe the formation of MARS and provide descriptive analysis of patient demographics and clinical features for the initial 460 enrolled patients to date in this prospective cohort. Study Design Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 2. Methods After training and institutional review board approval, surgeons began enrolling patients undergoing revision ACL reconstruction, recording patient demographics, previous ACL reconstruction methods, intra-articular injuries, and current revision techniques. Enrolled subjects completed a questionnaire consisting of validated patient-based outcome measures. Results As of April 1, 2009, 87 surgeons have enrolled a total of 460 patients (57% men; median age, 26 years). For 89%, the reconstruction was the first revision. Mode of failure as deemed by the revising surgeon was traumatic (32%), technical (24%), biologic (7%), combination (37%), infection (<1%), and no response (<1%). Previous graft present at the time of injury was 70% autograft, 27% allograft, 2% combination, and 1% unknown. Sixty-two percent were more than 2 years removed from their last reconstruction. Graft choice for revision ACL reconstruction was 45% autograft, 54% allograft, and more than 1% both allograft and autograft. Meniscus and/or chondral damage was found in 90% of patients. Conclusion The MARS Group has been able to quickly accumulate the largest revision ACL reconstruction cohort reported to date. Traumatic reinjury is deemed by surgeons to be the most common single mode of failure, but a combination of factors represents the most common mode of failure. Allograft graft choice is more common in the revision setting than autograft. Concomitant knee injury is extremely common in this population.

Collaboration


Dive into the Laura J. Huston's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rick W. Wright

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Warren R. Dunn

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert G. Marx

Hospital for Special Surgery

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge