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Journal Article

Citation

Schwellnus MP, Thomson A, Derman W, Jordaan E, Readhead C, Collins R, Morris I, Strauss O, Van der Linde E, Williams A. Br. J. Sports Med. 2014; 48(17): 1306-1315.

Affiliation

Stormers Rugby Union, Cape Town, South Africa.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bjsports-2014-093745

PMID

24982503

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Professional Rugby Union is a contact sport with a high risk of injury.

OBJECTIVE: To document the incidence and nature of time-loss injuries during the 2012 Super Rugby tournament.

DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: 2012 Super Rugby tournament (Australia, New Zealand, South Africa). PARTICIPANTS: 152 players from 5 South African teams.

METHODS: Team physicians collected daily injury data through a secure, web-based electronic platform. Data included size of the squad, type of day, main player position, training or match injury, hours of play (training and matches), time of the match injury, mechanism of injury, main anatomical location of the injury, specific anatomical structure of the injury, the type of injury, the severity of the injury (days lost).

RESULTS: The proportion (%) of players sustaining a time-loss injury during the tournament was 55%, and 25% of all players sustained >1 injury. The overall incidence rate (IR/1000 player-hours) of injuries was 9.2. The IR for matches (83.3) was significantly higher than for training (2.1) and the IR was similar for forwards and backs. Muscle/tendon (50%) and joint/ligament (32.7%) injuries accounted for >80% of injuries. Most injuries occurred in the lower (48.1%) and upper limb (25.6%). 42% of all injuries were moderate (27.5%) or severe (14.8%), and tackling (26.3%) and being tackled (23.1%) were the most common mechanisms of injury. The IR of injuries was unrelated to playing at home compared with away (locations ≥6 h time difference).

CONCLUSIONS: 55% of all players were injured during the 4-month Super Rugby tournament (1.67 injuries/match). Most injuries occurred in the lower (knee, thigh) or upper limb (shoulder, clavicle). 42% of injuries were severe enough for players to not play for >1 week.


Language: en

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