• PURPOSE
    • The aims of this prospective study were to define sport specific incidence rates in a large Osgood-Schlatter-disease group, to follow the natural course, and to determine late effects, i.e., changes in sport activities and resting pain.
  • METHODS
    • A total of 126 consecutive patients with functional pain in and after physical activity and local TT swelling were included in a longitudinal study. Physical examination, ultrasound, and a lateral X-ray were performed in a standardized clinically common manner. Sport participation, growth rate, BMI, and muscle status were recorded and assigned statistically. Follow-up took place after subsidence of functional pain.
  • RESULTS
    • Exactly 101 boys and 25 girls showed a mean age at diagnosis of 12.8 years (boys 13.2, girls 11.4 years) complaining an average period of pain of 6.7 months before diagnosis. A sport distribution displayed 64 football (soccer) players, 18 basketball players, seven athletes in track and field, six martial arts sportsmen, and five handball players, all participating in organized sport clubs, 16 patients in other and ten patients in no sports. The standing leg was affected in 69.6% of all football players, whereas the other disciplines did not show any significance. A total of 105 patients could be followed up after a median of 3.6 years; six of them were still symptomatic. Final outcome could be recorded for 99 patients (79 boys, 20 girls). Osgood-Schlatter disease (OSD) symptoms in or after sport activity were reported to last an average of 19.1 months (3-48 months) without differences according to sex nor sport. Exactly 50% of the patients may expect to be free of functional symptoms after the 16th month, 75% after the 25th month. A total of 78.8% of the patients still complained of persistent but not impairing pain in kneeling or on direct TT contact. Exactly 28.3% of all patients responded having switched their sport activity to other disciplines due to OSD.
  • CONCLUSION
    • OSD affects mainly adolescent boys active in football and basketball and represents a structural answer to repeated biomechanical stress. Only in football, the statically dominant side is more prone to develop OSD. Age at onset, growth rate, BMI, and muscle imbalance are not significantly predisposing. OSD runs a self-limiting course without specific treatment.