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Epidemiology of Injuries in Olympic Sports

Authors :
Bernd Wolfarth
Ralph Akoto
Christophe Lambert
Sven Shafizadeh
Daniel Lachmann
Thomas R. Pfeiffer
Ramona Ritzmann
Maxime Lambert
Source :
International Journal of Sports Medicine. 43:473-481
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2021.

Abstract

Injuries effect the performance of athletes. Severity of injuries is determined by time loss and sporting performance reduction. To treat injuries adequately, it is necessary to get an overview of varied injuries types in different sports disciplines. In a retrospective study 7.809 athletes from Germany, Switzerland and Austria competing in competitive or recreational levels of sports were included. Injury prevalence was highest in team sports (75%), followed by combat (64%), racquet (54%) and track and field (51%). Knee (28%) and shoulder (14%) were the most at risk joints. Time loss in sporting activity after injury was longest in the region of knee (26 weeks). Of all reported injuries, 48% were accompanied by a reduced level of performance. The highest injury prevalence occurred in the year 2016 (45%). More injuries occurred during training (58%) compared to competition (42%). Across Olympic disciplines, a large number of injuries occurred during training sessions. Injury frequency increased as the Olympic games drew closer. Knee and shoulder injuries were the most severe injuries with respect to time loss and reduction sporting performance.

Details

ISSN :
14393964 and 01724622
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Sports Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....03e2118a1200e4f7496b32ebe3a11bcc