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Journal Article

Citation

Colby MJ, Dawson B, Peeling P, Heasman J, Rogalski B, Drew MK, Stares J. Int. J. Sports Physiol. Perform. 2018; 13(9): 1130-1135.

Affiliation

West Coast Eagles Football Club, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Human Kinetics Publishers)

DOI

10.1123/ijspp.2017-0696

PMID

29543079

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To assess the effect of multiple high risk scenario (HRS) exposures on non-contact injury prediction in elite Australian footballers.

DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study.

METHODS: Sessional workload data (session-rating of perceived exertion; GPS-derived distance, sprint distance, maximum velocity) from one club (n= 60 players) over 3 seasons were collated; several established HRS were also defined. Accumulated HRS sessional exposures were calculated retrospectively (previous 1-8 weeks). Non-contact injury data was documented. Univariate and multivariate Poisson regression models determined injury incidence rate ratios (IRR) while accounting for moderating effects (pre-season workload volume, playing experience). Model performance was evaluated using receiver operating characteristics (area under curve: AUC).

RESULTS: Very low (0-8 sessions: IRR=5.76, 95% CI=1.69-19.66) and very high (>15 sessions: IRR=4.70, 95% CI=1.49-14.87) exposures to >85% of an individual's maximal velocity over the previous 8 weeks were associated with greater injury risk compared to moderate exposures (11-12 sessions), and displayed the best model performance (AUC=0.64). A single session corresponding to a very low chronic load condition over the previous week for all workload variables was associated with increased injury risk, with sprint distance (IRR=3.25, 95% CI=1.95-5.40) providing the most accurate prediction model (AUC=0.63).

CONCLUSIONS: Minimal exposure to high velocity efforts (maximum speed exposure, sprint volume) was associated with the greatest injury risk. Being under-loaded may be a mediator for non-contact injury in elite Australian football. Pre-season workload and playing experience were not moderators of this effect.


Language: en

Keywords

area under curve; high-velocity; injury risk; team sports; Australian football

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