Abstract:The incidence of injuries varied substantially between different types of Athletics championships and between discipline categories. Special attention should be paid to combined events, running disciplines and (thigh) strain to better understand the injury mechanisms and risk factors and develop related preventive measures.
“…When comparing the results of this study to those of other investigations involving the sport of athletics, it is noted that injury patterns involving able-bodied athletes also reveal a higher incidence of injuries in competition than in training, although able-bodied athletes experienced a higher incidence of time-loss injuries (36% of total injuries across 13 international athletics championships) compared with the athletes in the current study. 10 Additionally, in ambulant athletes without an impairment, the most frequently observed diagnosis was a thigh strain, 1-4,10 similar to the findings of this study in which the thigh was the most common anatomic region injured in ambulant athletes with an impairment. Given the varied definitions of the injury IR and IP across studies, it is somewhat difficult to create a direct comparison of these descriptors for athletes with and without an impairment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…44, No. 6 DOI: 10.1177/0363546516629949 Ó 2016 The Author(s) This includes athletes with amputation, a spinal cord injury, cerebral palsy (CP), visual impairment, and intellectual impairment, among others.…”
This is the first prospective cohort study examining injury IRs and associated factors in the sport of athletics at the Paralympic Games. Injury patterns were specific to the event discipline and athlete impairment. The majority of injuries occurred to the thigh (ambulant athletes) or shoulder/clavicle (wheelchair or seated athletes) and did not result in time loss.
“…When comparing the results of this study to those of other investigations involving the sport of athletics, it is noted that injury patterns involving able-bodied athletes also reveal a higher incidence of injuries in competition than in training, although able-bodied athletes experienced a higher incidence of time-loss injuries (36% of total injuries across 13 international athletics championships) compared with the athletes in the current study. 10 Additionally, in ambulant athletes without an impairment, the most frequently observed diagnosis was a thigh strain, 1-4,10 similar to the findings of this study in which the thigh was the most common anatomic region injured in ambulant athletes with an impairment. Given the varied definitions of the injury IR and IP across studies, it is somewhat difficult to create a direct comparison of these descriptors for athletes with and without an impairment.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…44, No. 6 DOI: 10.1177/0363546516629949 Ó 2016 The Author(s) This includes athletes with amputation, a spinal cord injury, cerebral palsy (CP), visual impairment, and intellectual impairment, among others.…”
This is the first prospective cohort study examining injury IRs and associated factors in the sport of athletics at the Paralympic Games. Injury patterns were specific to the event discipline and athlete impairment. The majority of injuries occurred to the thigh (ambulant athletes) or shoulder/clavicle (wheelchair or seated athletes) and did not result in time loss.
“…To this end, surveillance studies have been conducted at 13 international Athletics championships in recent years,2–7 using standardised methods developed by the IOC1 and IAAF 2 3. Thus, important data on injury and illness incidences and characteristics in elite athletes during international Athletics competition have been reported and, as demonstrated in the paper by Feddermann et al ,5 successfully monitored over time.…”
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.