# The Influence of Early Gymnastic Exposure on the Triangular Fibrocartilage Complex in the Adolescent Wrist

**Authors:** Anne-Sophie van der Post, Sjoerd Jens, Laura S. Kox, Miryam C. Obdeijn, Roelof-Jan Oostra, Mario Maas

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jhsg.2026.100969 · 2026-02-24

## TL;DR

This study found that early gymnastics does not change wrist cartilage appearance on MRI, but there's a link between cartilage thickness and wrist bone structure in gymnasts.

## Contribution

Shows that gymnastics doesn't alter TFCC appearance but reveals a relationship between cartilage thickness and ulnar variance in adolescents.

## Key findings

- No differences in TFCC appearance between gymnasts and controls on MRI.
- Substantial correlation between central TFC thickness and ulnar variance in both groups.
- Ulnar variance and bone age predict TFC thickness in nongymnasts but not in gymnasts.

## Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC) appearance on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and the correlation between central triangular fibrocartilage (TFC) thickness and ulnar variance (UV) in adolescent asymptomatic gymnasts.

This retrospective analysis of a prospective cohort selected 12–18 years old asymptomatic gymnasts and healthy controls from the Physeal MRI study, which is a single-center study on physeal injury that included gymnasts with wrist pain, asymptomatic gymnasts and healthy nongymnasts from June 2015 until November 2017. A standardized scoring form was used for assessment of TFCC morphology on MRI. Bone age and UV were determined on radiographs. TFCC morphology was assessed on 3T MRI and categorized. Statistical differences between groups were calculated using a chi-square test or Fisher exact test. Spearman’s correlation coefficient was calculated between central TFC thickness and calendar/bone age, UV, height, and weight. Correlations were interpreted as poor (≤0.20), fair (0.21–0.40), moderate (0.41–0.60), substantial (0.61–0.80), and excellent (0.81–1.00). Multiple linear regression was performed to determine predictors of central TFC thickness.

Forty-one adolescents (23 nongymnasts, 18 gymnasts, median age 14 years, 21 female) were included. No differences were found in TFCC appearance. Correlations between central TFC thickness and UV were substantial in both groups. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that UV and bone age together were significant predictors for central TFC thickness in nongymnasts (P < .001). However central TFC thickness could not be predicted by UV and bone age in gymnasts.

Early gymnastic exposure does not influence TFCC appearance on MRI. However, a misbalance between central TFC thickness and UV appears to exist for adolescent gymnasts and this should be taken into consideration when assessing gymnastic wrist injury.

Diagnostic III

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** physeal injury (MESH:D014947), wrist pain (MESH:D010146), wrist injury (MESH:D014954)

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12973695/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12973695