Basketball is a high-intensity sport associated with a wide range of musculoskeletal injuries, most commonly involving the lower extremities. These injuries frequently result from high-impact loading, rapid directional changes, and biomechanical inefficiencies such as poor neuromuscular control and abnormal movement patterns. Although acute injuries often occur through noncontact mechanisms during play, direct contact injuries have become more common over the years. Overuse injuries are also frequent in basketball and may develop silently and progress over time. Imaging plays a vital role in diagnosis, injury staging, treatment planning, and monitoring return-to-play readiness. This review explores the epidemiology, biomechanics, and imaging findings of common basketball-related injuries: ankle sprains, anterior cruciate ligament tears, patellar tendinopathy, Achilles tendon ruptures, and stress fractures.
Keywords basketball - magnetic resonance imaging - ankle sprain - anterior cruciate ligament tear - patellar tendinopathy Artificial Intelligence Tool Disclosure StatementArtificial intelligence (AI) tools (OpenAI ChatGPT with DALL·E image generation and Adobe Firefly) were used to generate illustrative figures depicting certain injury mechanisms for this article. We reviewed and verified all AI-generated content to ensure accuracy and relevance.
Publication HistoryArticle published online:
16 July 2025
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