Fraser Melissa A, Grooms Dustin R, Guskiewicz Kevin M, Kerr Zachary Y
Human Movement Science Curriculum and.
Division of Athletic Training, School of Applied Health and Wellness, Ohio University, Athens.
J Athl Train. 2017 Jul;52(7):698-707. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-52.3.10. Epub 2017 May 23.
Surveillance data regarding injuries caused by ball contact in collegiate athletes have not been well examined and are mostly limited to discussions of concussions and catastrophic injuries.
To describe the epidemiology of ball-contact injuries in 11 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) sports during the 2009-2010 through 2014-2015 academic years.
Descriptive epidemiology study.
Convenience sample of NCAA programs in 11 sports (men's football, women's field hockey, women's volleyball, men's baseball, women's softball, men's and women's basketball, men's and women's lacrosse, and men's and women's soccer) during the 2009-2010 through 2014-2015 academic years.
Collegiate student-athletes participating in 11 sports.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Ball-contact-injury rates, proportions, rate ratios, and proportion ratios with 95% confidence intervals were based on data from the NCAA Injury Surveillance Program during the 2009-2010 through 2014-2015 academic years.
During the 2009-2010 through 2014-2015 academic years, 1123 ball-contact injuries were reported, for an overall rate of 3.54/10 000 AEs. The sports with the highest rates were women's softball (8.82/10 000 AEs), women's field hockey (7.71/10 000 AEs), and men's baseball (7.20/10 000 AEs). Most ball-contact injuries were to the hand/wrist (32.7%) and head/face (27.0%) and were diagnosed as contusions (30.5%), sprains (23.1%), and concussions (16.1%). Among sex-comparable sports (ie, baseball/softball, basketball, and soccer), women had a larger proportion of ball-contact injuries diagnosed as concussions than men (injury proportion ratio = 2.33; 95% confidence interval = 1.63, 3.33). More than half (51.0%) of ball-contact injuries were non-time loss (ie, participation-restriction time <24 hours), and 6.6% were severe (ie, participation-restriction time ≥21 days). The most common severe ball-contact injuries were concussions (n = 18) and finger fractures (n = 10).
Ball-contact-injury rates were the highest in women's softball, women's field hockey, and men's baseball. Although more than half were non-time-loss injuries, severe injuries such as concussions and fractures were reported.
关于大学生运动员因球类接触导致受伤的监测数据尚未得到充分研究,且大多局限于脑震荡和灾难性损伤的讨论。
描述2009 - 2010学年至2014 - 2015学年期间11项美国国家大学体育协会(NCAA)运动项目中球类接触损伤的流行病学情况。
描述性流行病学研究。
2009 - 2010学年至2014 - 2015学年期间,对11项运动项目(男子橄榄球、女子曲棍球、女子排球、男子棒球、女子垒球、男子和女子篮球、男子和女子长曲棍球以及男子和女子足球)的NCAA项目进行便利抽样。
参加11项运动的大学生运动员。
球类接触损伤率、比例、率比和比例比及其95%置信区间,基于2009 - 2010学年至2014 - 2015学年期间NCAA损伤监测项目的数据。
在2009 - 2010学年至2014 - 2015学年期间,共报告了1123例球类接触损伤,总体发生率为3.54/10000运动员暴露次数(AEs)。发生率最高的运动项目是女子垒球(8.82/10000 AEs)、女子曲棍球(7.71/10000 AEs)和男子棒球(7.20/10000 AEs)。大多数球类接触损伤发生在手/腕部(32.7%)和头部/面部(27.0%),诊断为挫伤(30.5%)、扭伤(23.1%)和脑震荡(16.1%)。在性别可比的运动项目(即棒球/垒球、篮球和足球)中,女性被诊断为脑震荡的球类接触损伤比例高于男性(损伤比例比 = 2.33;95%置信区间 = 1.63, 3.33)。超过一半(51.0%)的球类接触损伤为非失时损伤(即参与限制时间<24小时),6.6%为严重损伤(即参与限制时间≥21天)。最常见的严重球类接触损伤是脑震荡(n = 18)和手指骨折(n = 10)。
女子垒球、女子曲棍球和男子棒球的球类接触损伤发生率最高。尽管超过一半为非失时损伤,但仍报告了如脑震荡和骨折等严重损伤。