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Journal Article

Citation

Kolstrup LA, Koopmann KU, Nygaard UH, Nygaard RH, Agger P. Eur. J. Sport Sci. 2016; 16(8): 1167-1175.

Affiliation

c Department of Clinical Medicine , Aarhus University Hospital , Aarhus , Denmark.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/17461391.2016.1205145

PMID

27439027

Abstract

Four percent of the world's population, or 265 million people, play football [soccer], and many players are injured every year. The present study investigated more than 1800 injuries in over 45,000 youth players participating in three consecutive international football tournaments in Denmark in 2012-2014. The aim was to investigate the injury types and locations in children and adolescent football players and the differences between genders and age groups (11-15 and 16-19 years of age). An overall injury rate of 15.3 per 1000 player hours was found. The most common injury location was lower extremities (66.7%), and the most common injury type was contusion (24.4%). Girls had a relative risk of injury of 1.5 compared with boys, p < .001, and they had a higher proportion of injuries to knee and lower leg, 23.8%, than boys, 19.0%, p < .01. Boys had a higher proportion of fracture, 6.8%, as opposed to 3.3% among girls, p < .001. In conclusion, we found the youngest girls to have a higher incidence of almost all injury categories than any other group. In general, the incidence of injury decreased with age. The study provides a detailed insight into the injuries that may be expected at a large youth football tournament. These findings are of great value for organizations and healthcare professionals planning similar events and for planning injury prevention strategies, which would be of special interest in the youngest female players in general.


Language: en

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