Article Text

This article has a correction. Please see:

Download PDFPDF

Hamstring muscle strain injuries: what can we learn from history?
  1. Bruce Hamilton
  1. Correspondence to Bruce Hamilton, Aspetar; Qatar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, Sports medicine, PO Box 29222, Doha, Qatar; bruce.hamilton{at}aspetar.com

Statistics from Altmetric.com

Request Permissions

If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.

Hamstring muscle strain injuries remain one of the most challenging issues facing sports medicine.1 Over the past 100 years, there has been a gradual evolution in our understanding and management of hamstring injuries, but the challenge of optimising the management of the acutely injured hamstring remains. In recent years, increasingly high-quality studies have addressed the aetiology, risk factors and management of hamstring strains.2,,6 Paradoxically, many popular treatment options have little evidence and remain controversial.7,,10 The history of hamstring injury management is characterised as a longstanding dissociation between popular clinical techniques and a limited evidence base. Taking a historical perspective on the management of hamstring muscle strains, this study aims to place the current management strategies in a temporal perspective.

“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it”. George Santayana, Philosopher, 1863 to 1952

By the mid-18th century, the importance of exercise for health was established, and the physical demands of different forms of exercise were recognised, in a manner not dissimilar to descriptions 200 years later.11 ,12 By the start of the 20th century, the Olympics had been re-invented, sport and exercise were recognised as a means of developing character13 and maintaining health in a world experiencing an explosion in leisure time.14,,16 Given the limitations of the training methodology of the time,17 it is possible that muscle strains were a common finding, but there is limited epidemiological literature available from the time.

In football we find injuries occur in a poorly conditioned, a fatigued or dazed man, or in a team that is demoralised and receiving a severe beating. These individuals are slowing up, not coordinating, and are apt to be injured.”18

Already in …

View Full Text

Linked Articles

  • Corrections
    BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Association of Sport and Exercise Medicine