Injuries in adolescent female players in European football: a prospective study over one outdoor soccer season
In this prospective study, injuries in 153 adolescent female soccer players were recorded during one outdoor season (April-October). The overall injury incidence rate was 6.8 per 1000 h soccer (games and practice) and the incidence rate of traumatic injury 9.1 and 1.5 per 1000 player-hours in games and practice, respectively. Sixty-three players (41%) sustained 79 injuries. Sixty-six percent of the injuries were traumatic and 34% were overuse injuries. Most of the traumatic injuries occurred during games. Eighty-nine percent of the injuries were located in the lower extremities and 42% occurred in the knee or ankle. The most frequent type of injury was ankle sprain (22.8%). Forty-one percent of the traumatic injuries and 56% of the ankle sprains were re-injuries. Most of the injuries were of moderate severity (52%), while 34% were minor and 14% were major. Most of the major injuries were traumatic such as knee ligament injuries and ankle sprains.
© Copyright 2001 Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports. Wiley. Kaikki oikeudet pidätetään.
Aiheet: | naispuolinen vamma juniori huippu-urheilu jalkapallo analyysi |
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Aihealueet: | urheilukilpailut biologiset ja lääketieteelliset tieteet junioriurheilu |
Julkaisussa: | Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports |
Julkaistu: |
2001
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Vuosikerta: | 11 |
Numero: | 5 |
Sivuja: | 299-304 |
Julkaisutyypit: | artikkeli |
Kieli: | englanti (kieli) |
Taso: | kehittynyt |