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Journal Article

Citation

Tummala SV, Hartigan DE, Patel KA, Makovicka JL, Chhabra A. Orthop. J. Sports Med. 2018; 6(2): e2325967118756826.

Affiliation

Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/2325967118756826

PMID

29511704

PMCID

PMC5826001

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Up to 50% of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) football players have a history of shoulder injuries. The quarterback position has been shown to have a high prevalence of these injuries because of its unique exposures. There is little information regarding the shoulder injury type and mechanism in NCAA quarterbacks.

PURPOSE: To understand the 10-year epidemiology of specific shoulder injury rates in NCAA quarterbacks. STUDY DESIGN: Descriptive epidemiology study.

METHODS: Shoulder injury data for collegiate football quarterbacks from the 2004 through 2014 academic years were analyzed using the NCAA Injury Surveillance Program (ISP) data set.

RESULTS: Over the 10-year study period, a total of 133 shoulder injuries to collegiate quarterbacks were reported, with 157,288 quarterback exposures. There was approximately 1 shoulder injury per 1221 exposures. The most common injuries noted were acromioclavicular sprains (45.1%, n = 60), followed by shoulder contusions (9.0%, n = 12), clavicular fractures (7.5%, n = 10), and anterior instability (5.3%, n = 7). The majority of injuries were caused by contact with a player (60.2%, n = 80) or contact with a playing surface (28.6%, n = 38), and 88% (n = 117) were deemed nonsurgical in nature.

CONCLUSION: NCAA ISP data analysis suggests that collegiate quarterbacks sustain acute contact injuries 89% of the time and that they typically occur while being tackled, resulting in a time loss of less than 2 weeks. These injuries are commonly treated nonsurgically.

Keywords: American football


Language: en

Keywords

AC joint; football-related shoulder injuries; positional injuries; quarterback; shoulder contusion; shoulder injury

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