Hassebrock Jeffrey D, Patel Karan A, Makovicka Justin L, Chung Andrew S, Tummala Sailesh V, Peña Austin J, Williams Kyle E, Hartigan David E, Chhabra Anikar
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona, USA.
John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2019 Jan 23;7(1):2325967118820046. doi: 10.1177/2325967118820046. eCollection 2019 Jan.
Lumbar spine injuries in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) athletes have not been well studied.
To describe the epidemiology of lumbar spine injuries in NCAA athletes during the 2009/2010 through 2014/2015 academic years utilizing the NCAA Injury Surveillance Program (ISP).
Descriptive epidemiology study.
A voluntary convenience sample of NCAA varsity teams from 25 sports was examined. Mechanism of injury, injury recurrence, and time lost from sport were recorded. Injury rates were calculated as the number of injuries divided by the total number of athlete-exposures (AEs). AEs were defined as any student participation in 1 NCAA-sanctioned practice or competition. Injury rate ratios and injury proportion ratios were calculated to compare the rates within and between sports by event type, season, patient sex, mechanism, injury recurrence, and time lost from sport. Comparisons between sexes were made utilizing data that had both male and female samples.
An estimated 37,435 lumbar spine injuries were identified. The overall rate of injuries was 6.01 per 1000 AEs. The rate of injuries was 4.94 per 1000 AEs in men compared with 3.94 per 1000 AEs in women for sex-comparable sports. Men were 1.25 times more likely than women to suffer a lumbar spine injury. Men's football (24.62 injuries/1000 AEs) and women's gymnastics (11.46 injuries/1000 AEs) had the highest rates of lumbar spine injuries. Athletes were 1.83 and 3.71 times more likely to sustain a lumbar spine injury during the preseason than the regular season or postseason, respectively. Noncontact was the most common mechanism of injury (38%). Injury recurrence was most common in men's outdoor track (58%). Most injuries resulted in less than 24 hours of time loss from event participation (61%).
The rate of lumbar spine injuries was high in NCAA athletes, and injuries commonly recurred (20%). In general, men were more likely to sustain a lumbar spine injury compared with women. Higher injury rates occurred during competition and via a noncontact mechanism of injury. In addition to prevention programs, reconditioning programs should be considered to prevent these injuries.
美国大学体育协会(NCAA)运动员的腰椎损伤尚未得到充分研究。
利用NCAA损伤监测计划(ISP)描述2009/2010至2014/2015学年NCAA运动员腰椎损伤的流行病学情况。
描述性流行病学研究。
对来自25项运动的NCAA大学代表队进行自愿便利抽样检查。记录损伤机制、损伤复发情况以及运动缺失时间。损伤率计算为损伤数量除以运动员暴露总次数(AE)。AE定义为任何学生参与1次NCAA批准的训练或比赛。计算损伤率比和损伤比例比,以按事件类型、赛季、患者性别、机制、损伤复发情况和运动缺失时间比较各运动项目内部及之间的损伤率。利用同时包含男性和女性样本的数据进行性别间比较。
共识别出约37435例腰椎损伤。总体损伤率为每1000次AE中有6.01例。在性别可比的运动项目中,男性的损伤率为每1000次AE中有4.94例,女性为每1000次AE中有3.94例。男性发生腰椎损伤的可能性是女性的1.25倍。男子橄榄球(每1000次AE中有24.62例损伤)和女子体操(每1000次AE中有11.46例损伤)的腰椎损伤率最高。运动员在季前赛期间发生腰椎损伤的可能性分别是常规赛或季后赛期间的1.83倍和3.71倍。非接触是最常见的损伤机制(38%)。损伤复发在男子室外田径项目中最为常见(58%)。大多数损伤导致赛事参与缺失时间少于24小时(61%)。
NCAA运动员的腰椎损伤率较高,且损伤常复发(20%)。总体而言,男性比女性更易发生腰椎损伤。比赛期间以及通过非接触损伤机制时损伤率更高。除预防计划外,还应考虑康复计划以预防这些损伤。