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Featured researches published by Sakari Orava.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1996

Incidence of Achilles tendon rupture

Juhana Leppilahti; Jaakko Puranen; Sakari Orava

We determined the incidence of a total Achilles tendon rupture in the city of Oulu and changes over the 16-year period 1979-1994. During this time, 110 ruptures occurred. The incidence increased from 2 ruptures/10(5) inhabitants in 1979-1986 to 12 in 1987-1994, with a mean of 7. The peak annual incidence, 18, was recorded in 1994. The incidence was highest in the age group 30-39 years. Male dominance was 5.5:1, and 81% of the ruptures were related to sports, with 88% occurring in ball games. The mean age was significantly lower for the sports injuries.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2001

Risk Factors for Recurrent Stress Fractures in Athletes

Raija Korpelainen; Sakari Orava; Jarmo Karpakka; Pertti Siira; Antero Hulkko

Our aim was to identify factors predisposing athletes to multiple stress fractures, with the emphasis on biomechanical factors. Our hypothesis was that certain anatomic factors of the ankle are associated with risk of multiple stress fractures of the lower extremities in athletes. Thirty-one athletes (19 men and 12 women) with at least three separate stress fractures each, and a control group of 15 athletes without fractures completed a questionnaire focusing on putative risk factors for stress fractures, such as nutrition, training history, and hormonal history in women. Bone mineral density was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry in the lumbar spine and proximal femur. Biomechanical features such as foot structure, pronation and supination of the ankle, dorsiflexion of the ankle, forefoot varus and valgus, leg-length inequality, range of hip rotation, simple and choice reaction times, and balance in standing were measured. There was an average of 3.7 (range, 3 to 6) fractures in each athlete, totaling 114 fractures. The fracture site was the tibia or fibula in 70% of the fractures in men and the foot and ankle in 50% of the fractures in women. Most of the patients were runners (61%); the mean weekly running mileage was 117 km. Biomechanical factors associated with multiple stress fractures were high longitudinal arch of the foot, leg-length inequality, and excessive forefoot varus. Nearly half of the female patients (40%) reported menstrual irregularities. Runners with high weekly training mileage were found to be at risk of recurrent stress fractures of the lower extremities.


Sports Medicine | 1997

Hamstring injuries. Current trends in treatment and prevention.

Urho M. Kujala; Sakari Orava; Markku Järvinen

SummaryPre-exercise stretching and adequate warm-up are important in the prevention of hamstring injuries. A previous mild injury or fatigue may increase the risk of injury.Hamstring muscle tear is typically partial and takes place during eccentric exercise when the muscle develops tension while lengthening, but variation in injury mechanisms is possible. Diagnosis of typical hamstring muscle injury is usually based on typical injury mechanism and clinical findings of local pain and loss of function. Diagnosis of avulsion in the ischial tuberosity, with the need for longer immobilisation, and a complete rupture of the hamstring origin, in which immediate operative treatment is necessary, poses a challenge to the treating physician. X-rays, ultrasonography or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be helpful in differential diagnostics.After first aid with rest, compression, cold and elevation, the treatment of hamstring muscle injury must be tailored to the grade of injury. Conservative treatment is based on a knowledge of the biological background of the healing process of the muscle. Experimental studies have shown that a short period of immobilisation is needed to accelerate formation of the granulation tissue matrix following injury. The length of the immobilisation is, however, dependent on the grade of injury and should be optimised so that the scar can bear the pulling forces operating on it without re-rupture. Mobilisation, on the other hand, is required in order to regain the original strength of the muscle and to achieve good final results in resorption of the connective tissue scar and re-capillarisation of the damaged area. Another important aim of mobilisation — especially in sports medical practice — is to avoid muscle atrophy and loss of strength and extensibility, which rapidly result from prolonged immobilisation.Complete ruptures with loss of function should be operated on, as should cases resistant to conservative therapy in which, in the late phase of repair, the scar and adhesions prevent the normal function of the hamstring muscle.


Sports Medicine | 1998

Total Achilles tendon rupture. A review.

Juhana Leppilahti; Sakari Orava

SummaryThere are only a few epidemiological studies on the incidence of Achilles tendon (AT) ruptures. These show an increase in incidence in the West during the past few decades. The main reason is probably the increased popularity of recreational sports among middle-aged people. Ball games constitute the cause of over 60% of AT ruptures in many series. The 2 most frequently discussed pathophysiological theories involve chronic degeneration of the tendon and failure of the inhibitory mechanism of the musculotendinous unit. There are reports of AT ruptures related to the use of corticosteroids, either systemically or locally, but the role of corticosteroids in large patient series is marginal. In addition, recent studies do not confirm earlier findings of blood group O dominance in patients with AT rupture.Comparable series have been published with surgical versus nonsurgical treatment and postoperative cast immobilisation versus early functional treatment. Although conservative treatment has its own supporters, surgical treatment seems to have been the method of choice in the late 1980s and the 1990s in athletes and young people and in cases of delayed ruptures. Early ruptures in non-athletes can also be treated conservatively. In small series of compliant, well motivated patients, functional postoperative treatment has been reported to be well tolerated, safe and effective. The lack of a universal, consistent protocol for subjective and objective evaluation of AT ruptures has prevented any direct comparison of the results. The results have been often assessed according to the criteria of Lindholm or Percy and Conochie, but no scoring is available for the analysis. We assessed a new scoring method and analysed the prognostic factors related to the results. There is also no single, uniformly accepted surgical technique. Although early ruptures have been treated successfully with simple end-to-end suture, many authors have combined simple tendon suture with plastic procedures of various types. No randomised study comparing simple suture technique and repair with augmentation could be found in the literature.The major complaint against surgical treatment has been the high rate of complications. Most are minor wound complications, which delay improvement but do not influence the final outcome. Major complications are rare, but often difficult to treat with minor procedures. For instance, large postoperative skin and soft tissue defects in the Achilles region can be treated successfully with a microvascular free flap reconstruction. The complications of conservative treatment include mostly reruptures and residual lengthening of the tendon, which may result in significant calf muscle weakness.It has been postulated that a physically inactive lifestyle leads to a decrease in tendon vascularisation, while maintenance of a continuous level of activity counteracts the structural changes within the musculotendinous unit induced by inactivity and aging. Proper warm-up and stretching are essential for preventing musculotendinous injuries, but improper or excessive stretching or warming-up can predispose to these injuries.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2000

Chronic Achilles Tendon Overuse Injury: Complications After Surgical Treatment An Analysis of 432 Consecutive Patients

Mika Paavola; Sakari Orava; Juhana Leppilahti; Pekka Kannus; Markku Järvinen

We analyzed the complications after surgical treatment of Achilles tendon overuse injuries in 432 consecutive patients. The patients underwent a clinical examination 2 weeks, and 1, 2, and 5 months after the surgery. If a complication appeared, the patient was followed up clinically for at least 1 year. There were 46 (11%) complications in the 432 patients: 14 skin edge necroses, 11 superficial wound infections, 5 seroma formations, 5 hematomas, 5 fibrotic reactions or scar formations, 4 sural nerve irritations, 1 new partial rupture, and 1 deep vein thrombosis. Fourteen patients with a complication had reoperations: four patients for skin edge necrosis, two for superficial wound infection, two for seroma formation, one for hematoma formation, two for fibrotic reaction or scar formation, two for sural nerve irritation, and one for a new partial rupture. About every 10th patient treated surgically for chronic Achilles tendon overuse injury suffered from a postoperative complication that clearly delayed recovery. However, the majority of patients with a complication healed and returned to their preinjury levels of activity. To reduce this morbidity, it is essential that the surgeon be continuously aware of the possibility of postoperative complications and use proper surgical techniques.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1999

Rupture of the Distal Biceps Tendon A Report of 19 Patients Treated With Anatomic Reinsertion, and a Meta-Analysis of 147 Cases Found in the Literature

Jussi Rantanen; Sakari Orava

We present a series of 19 avulsions of the distal tendon of the biceps brachii muscle after a follow-up of 2 to 11 years. Ten patients with delayed diagnosis and treatment (3 weeks to 5 months) were compared with nine patients treated early (within 8 days after injury). Excellent or good results at follow-up were obtained in 9 of 10 patients in the delayed-treatment group and in all 9 patients in the early-treatment group. Nine of 10 patients in the delayed-treatment group and all patients in the early-treatment group had been able to return to their preinjury levels of activity. For reference, a meta-analysis of 147 cases reported previously was performed. Ninety percent of the patients treated with an anatomic reinsertion had excellent or good results after an average follow-up of 3 years, while similar results after 3 years were seen in 60% of the patients who had nonanatomic tendon reinsertion and in 14% of the patients who were treated nonoperatively. The delay of up to 3 years between injury and anatomic reinsertion had not compromised the result. From these data we concluded that anatomic reinsertion of the avulsed distal biceps tendon to the radius is the preferred treatment in acute as well as chronic injuries.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1998

Outcome and prognostic factors of achilles rupture repair using a new scoring method.

Juhana Leppilahti; Kari Forsman; Jaakko Puranen; Sakari Orava

A new clinical scoring system, including subjective assessment of symptoms and evaluation of ankle range of motion and isokinetic measurement of ankle plantar flexion and dorsiflexion strengths, is presented in 101 patients (86 men, 15 women) who had repair of a closed Achilles tendon rupture. Twenty-one patients were competitive athletes and 70 were recreational athletes. Eighty-one percent of the ruptures were related to sports, and 32% occurred while playing volleyball. Twenty-six patients had previous Achilles tendon symptoms. At followup, an average of 3.1 years after repair, the overall result scores were excellent in 34 cases, good in 46, fair in 17, and poor in four. Only age was a predictor of overall results. The isokinetic strength scores were excellent or good in 72 cases, fair in 18, and poor in 11. Presence of systemic diseases, activity level, previous Achilles tendon symptoms, and later return to physical exercise were predictors of strength results. Gender, body weight, height, period between rupture and operation, surgeon, rupture site, operative method, complications, and thickness, width, and area of the Achilles tendon at followup were not related significantly to the outcome.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2004

Rupture of the Pectoralis Major Muscle

Ville Äärimaa; Jussi Rantanen; Jouni Heikkilä; Ilmo Helttula; Sakari Orava

Background Total or near-total rupture of the pectoralis major muscle is a rare injury. Fewer than 200 cases have been reported in literature, many of them in single case reports. There is discrepancy regarding whether this kind of injury should be treated operatively. Hypothesis Early surgical treatment is necessary to obtain optimal functional recovery following total or near-total ruptures of the pectoralis major muscle. Study Design A case series of 33 operatively treated pectoralis major ruptures combined with a meta-analysis of the previously published cases in the English literature. Methods The authors have retrospectively analyzed 33 operatively treated cases of total or near-total ruptures of the pectoralis major muscle. They have also analyzed the previously published cases and the final outcomes of their treatment. The difference in outcome between groups of acute operation, delayed operation, and conservative treatment in both their own material and meta-analysis was statistically analyzed. Results Both the case series and the analysis of the cases from the literature showed that early operative treatment is associated with better outcome than delayed treatment. The delayed operation was associated with better outcome than the conservative treatment. Conclusion Early surgical treatment by anatomic repair gives the best results in the treatment of total and near-total ruptures of the pectoralis major muscle.


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2006

Surgical treatment of partial tears of the proximal origin of the hamstring muscles

Lasse Lempainen; Janne Sarimo; Jouni Heikkilä; Kimmo Mattila; Sakari Orava

Background: Hamstring injuries are common especially in athletes. Partial and complete tears of the proximal origin may cause pain and functional loss. Objective: To evaluate the results of surgical treatment for partial proximal hamstring tears. Methods: Between 1994 and 2005, 47 athletes (48 cases, 1 bilateral) with partial proximal hamstring tears were operated on. The cases were retrospectively analysed. Before surgery, 42 of the patients had undergone conservative treatment with unsatisfactory results, whereas in five patients the operation was performed within four weeks of the injury. Results: The mean length of the follow up was 36 months (range 6–72). The result of the operation was rated excellent in 33 cases, good in nine, fair in four, and poor in two. Forty one patients were able to return to their former level of sport after an average of five months (range 1–12). Conclusion: In most cases, excellent or good results can be expected after surgical repair of partial proximal hamstring tears even after conservative treatment has failed.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1988

Delayed unions and nonunions of stress fractures in athletes

Sakari Orava; A. Hulkko

From 1971 to 1985, 369 athletes presented to us with stress fractures. Of these patients, 10% (37) were treated for development of delayed unions or non unions. Twenty-seven of the patients were male and 10 were female. Their mean age was 23.1 years (range, 17 to 39). About half of the athletes were involved in endurance sports. The diagnostic criteria for a delayed union or nonunion were clinical and radiological evi dence. There was a diagnostic delay of about 3.5 months in the series. Plain radiographs, tomography, and isotope scans were used in the diagnosis. Special radiographic views were also used. In 15 cases (10 hallux sesamoid bone fractures, 1 midtibial shaft frac ture, 1 metatarsal V base fracture, 1 tarsal navicular fracture, 1 olecranon fracture, and 1 proximal tibial shaft fracture) nonoperative treatment was used. Operative treatment was used 22 times (5 sesamoid fractures, 5 midtibial fractures, 5 metatarsal V base fractures, 3 tarsal navicular fractures, 3 olecranon fractures, and 1 proximal tibial shaft fracture). Results were good or excellent in 32 cases (86.5%), moderate in 4 cases, and poor in 1 case.

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Jouni Heikkilä

Turku University Hospital

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Urho M. Kujala

University of Jyväskylä

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Jaakko Puranen

Oulu University Hospital

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Kimmo Mattila

Turku University Hospital

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Jouko Alanen

Turku University Hospital

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