Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
The Wits-JBI Centre for Evidenced-Based Practice: A JBI Affiliated Group, Johannesburg, South Africa.
JBI Evid Synth. 2021 Oct;19(10):2847-2856. doi: 10.11124/JBIES-20-00465.
This review will evaluate the effectiveness of exercise intervention versus no intervention or alternate intervention to prevent shoulder injuries in athletes.
Injury-prevention research has proven the effectiveness of exercise in preventing sports injuries in general and in the lower limb specifically. However, the results have been extrapolated to sport-related shoulder injuries from limited evidence. Similar reviews have been faced with insufficient high-quality evidence and limited studies due to restrictive target populations, resulting in reduced generalizability.
Peer-reviewed randomized controlled trials, with adequate control arms, investigating shoulder-injury events after exercise intervention in athletes, both training or competing in sports, will be included. Studies with substitute end points for injury events and non-self-propelled athletes, or vehicle-assisted athletes, will be excluded.
A comprehensive search of multiple databases will be used to find relevant studies. The databases will be searched from inception to April 2021, with no language restrictions imposed. Keywords and derivatives of "sport," "exercise intervention," "prevention," "shoulder injury," and "randomized controlled trials" will be used.Sources will include Academic Search Ultimate (EBSCO), CINAHL Plus (EBSCO), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (Wiley), MasterFILE Premier (EBSCO), MEDLINE (PubMed), Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro), ProQuest Health and Medical Complete and Nursing and Allied Health Source (ProQuest Complete), ScienceDirect (Elsevier), Scopus (Elsevier), SPORTDiscus (EBSCO), and Web of Science (Clarivate Analytics). Data appraisal, extraction, and synthesis will follow JBI guidance for systematic reviews of effectiveness.
PROSPERO CRD42020204141.
本综述将评估运动干预与无干预或替代干预在预防运动员肩部损伤方面的效果。
预防损伤的研究已经证明,运动在预防一般运动损伤和下肢特定运动损伤方面是有效的。然而,由于证据有限,这些结果已经被推断为与运动相关的肩部损伤。由于目标人群受限,类似的综述由于高质量证据不足和研究有限,导致推广性降低。
纳入研究为同行评议的随机对照试验,具有充分的对照臂,调查运动员在运动干预后的肩部损伤事件,包括训练或参加运动的运动员。将排除替代损伤事件终点和非自行推进运动员或车辆辅助运动员的研究。
将使用全面的多数据库搜索来查找相关研究。数据库将从创建到 2021 年 4 月进行搜索,不施加语言限制。关键词和“运动”、“运动干预”、“预防”、“肩部损伤”和“随机对照试验”的衍生词将被使用。来源将包括 Academic Search Ultimate(EBSCO)、CINAHL Plus(EBSCO)、Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials(Wiley)、MasterFILE Premier(EBSCO)、MEDLINE(PubMed)、Physiotherapy Evidence Database(PEDro)、ProQuest Health and Medical Complete 和 Nursing and Allied Health Source(ProQuest Complete)、ScienceDirect(Elsevier)、Scopus(Elsevier)、SPORTDiscus(EBSCO)和 Web of Science(Clarivate Analytics)。数据评估、提取和综合将遵循 JBI 对有效性系统评价的指南。
PROSPERO CRD42020204141。