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Journal ArticleDOI

Athletic injuries: Comparison by age, sport, and gender

TLDR
For both sexes the most common areas injured were the knee and ankle, with sprains/strains the most com mon injuries and injuries involving the patellofemoral artic ulation were significantly more frequent among females.
Abstract
Injuries treated at the University of Rochester Section of Sports Medicine over a 7 year period were surveyed. Patients were drawn from professional, intercollegiate (Division III), high school, intramural, and unorganized athletics at the University and the surrounding community. Data on injury diagnosis was available for 4,551 cases, with data on age, gender, and sport of injury available for 3,431 of the cases. The average patient age was 21.6 years, with a peak in the 16 to 19 age group. Patients with fractures had an average age below the overall mean, while those with internal derangement of the knee, patellofemoral pain syndrome, and inflammatory injuries were significantly older than average. Males accounted for 80.3% of all injuries. For both sexes the most common areas injured were the knee and ankle, with sprains/strains the most common injuries. Injuries involving the patellofemoral articulation were significantly more frequent among females. The most common sport of injury was football, with greater than 12 times the number of injuries seen in the next most common sport.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic review on ankle injury and ankle sprain in sports.

TL;DR: In sports injuries throughout the countries studied, the ankle was the second most common injured body site after the knee, and ankle sprain was the most common type of ankle injury.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of knee joint motion patterns between men and women in selected athletic tasks.

TL;DR: Women on average may have certain motor control strategies that may alter their knee motion patterns that may contribute to the increased anterior cruciate ligament injury rate among women, according to a comparison between men and women recreational athletes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The knee meniscus: structure-function, pathophysiology, current repair techniques, and prospects for regeneration.

TL;DR: Although the problems accompanying meniscus tissue engineering research are considerable, the authors are undoubtedly in the dawn of a new era, whereby recent advances in biology, engineering, and medicine are leading to the successful treatment of meniscal lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hip Strength in Females With and Without Patellofemoral Pain

TL;DR: The results indicate that young women with patellofemoral pain are more likely to demonstrate weakness in hip abduction as well as external rotation than age-matched women who are not symptomatic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender differences in lower extremity mechanics during running.

TL;DR: Female recreational runners exhibit significantly different lower extremity mechanics in the frontal and transverse planes at the hip and knee during running compared to male recreational runners.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The injury rate in professional basketball

TL;DR: The authors conclude that the inci dence of severe injury in professional basketball is low, and time loss from play due to injury was amazingly consistent for each specific in jury.
Journal ArticleDOI

A chronicle of injuries of an American intercollegiate football team.

TL;DR: Conclusions are drawn from statistics compiled at Memphis State University from 1975 through 1979, which involved 265 athletes and found that the knee was most often involved and suf fered the most severe injuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Half a million hours of rugby football. The injuries

TL;DR: In 30 seasons at Rugby School half a million hours of Rugby football have led to 9,885 injuries, an incidence of 197.7 injuries per 10,000 player hours, which is compared with those from other school games, and with those of other series of RugbyFootball injuries.
Journal Article

Athletic injuries in adolescents.

TL;DR: In a survey of adolescent patients treated in the University of Rochester Section of Athletic Medicine, injuries to adolescent athletes comprised 12 per cent of all athletic injuries during an 18-month period.
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