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Journal Article

Citation

Martínez-Silván D, Díaz-Ocejo J, Murray A. Int. J. Sports Physiol. Perform. 2016; 12(Suppl 2): S2153-S2156.

Affiliation

Aspire Academy, Doha, Qatar.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Human Kinetics Publishers)

DOI

10.1123/ijspp.2016-0316

PMID

27918673

Abstract

PURPOSE: To analyse the influence of training exposure and the utility of self-report questionnaires on predicting overuse injuries in adolescent endurance athletes.

METHODS: 5 adolescent male endurance athletes (15.7 ± 1.4 yr) from a full-time sports academy answered 2 questionnaires (Recovery Cue; RC-q & Oslo Sports Trauma Research questionnaire; OSTRC-q) on a weekly basis for one season (37 wks) in order to detect (1) signs of overtraining and under-recovery (RC-q) and (2) early symptoms of lower limb injuries (OSTRC-q). All overuse injuries were retrospectively analysed in order to detect which variations in the questionnaires in the weeks preceding injury were best associated. Overuse incidence rates were calculated based on training exposure.

RESULTS: 73% of injuries were lower limb overuse injuries. The incidence rate for overuse training-related injuries was 10 injuries/1000h. Strong correlations were observed between individual running exposure and overuse injury incidence (r(2)=0.66), number of overuse injuries (r(2)=0.69) and days lost (r(2)=0.66). A change of 20% or more in the RC-q score in the preceding week was associated with 67% of the lower limb overuse injuries. Musculoskeletal symptoms were only detected in advance by the OSTRC-q in 27% of the episodes.

CONCLUSIONS: Training exposure (specially running exposure) was shown to be related to overuse injuries, suggesting that monitoring training load is a key factor for injury prevention. Worsening scores in the RC-q (but not the OSTRC) may be an indicator of overuse injury in adolescent endurance runners when used longitudinally.


Language: en

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