26 After six-weeks of intensive ballet rehearsals changes in the achilles tendons structure appear whereas self-reported severity scores remain the same

IntroductionThe aim was to study whether six weeks of intensive dance exposure (Swan Lake rehearsals) is a significant contributor to structural changes, symptoms, clinical signs and pain in the Achilles tendon (AT).Materials and methodsBallet dancers from The Royal Danish Ballet Company (aged 18–41...

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Published inBritish journal of sports medicine Vol. 53; no. Suppl 1; p. A9
Main Authors Anker-petersen, Charlotte, Thorborg, Kristian, Antflick, Jarrod, Aagaard, Henrik, Myers, Chris, Boesen, Anders Ploug, Hølmich, Per, Juul-Kristensen, Birgit
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London BMJ Publishing Group LTD 01.04.2019
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Summary:IntroductionThe aim was to study whether six weeks of intensive dance exposure (Swan Lake rehearsals) is a significant contributor to structural changes, symptoms, clinical signs and pain in the Achilles tendon (AT).Materials and methodsBallet dancers from The Royal Danish Ballet Company (aged 18–41) were invited (n=79) of which sixty-three (80%) dancers participated. Baseline scans were collected with follow-up scans at six weeks. The primary outcome was quantification of AT structure with Ultrasound Tissue Characteristics (UTC) (echo-type I–IV). Secondary outcomes of interest were clinical signs and symptoms gathered from a clinical examination, self-reported symptoms, VISA-A questionnaire and pain during single-legged heel raise. UTC has previously shown to have satisfactory reproducibility and validity. Separate multilevel linear and logistic regression models were performed including time and demographic variables as covariates.ResultFrom baseline to follow-up there was significant decrease in distribution of UTC echo-type I (β=−3.6,p=0.001;95% CI:−5.8;−1.5) with significant increase in echo-type II (β=3.2,p<0.0001;95% CI:1.6;4.8). Significant effects were also seen, of limb (type I+III) and gender (type I+II). No significant changes were found in clinical outcomes/clinical signs and symptoms.ConclusionThe cohort of ballet dancers showed significant UTC changes, mainly a reduction of echo-type I distribution after six-weeks pre-season period rehearsing Swan Lake ballet. No changes were found in clinical outcomes/clinical signs and symptoms. However, early structural changes seem important to follow longitudinally for potential planning of secondary prevention strategies.
ISSN:0306-3674
1473-0480
DOI:10.1136/bjsports-2019-scandinavianabs.26