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Journal Article

Citation

Trinidad A, González-Garcia H, López-Valenciano A. PM R 2020; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1002/pmrj.12503

PMID

33010194

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To carry out a systematic review to update the scientific evidence on the incidence and prevalence of injuries in the swimming discipline, as well as the location, type and mechanism of the injuries, and to assess whether studies are meeting methodological recommendations for data collection and injury surveillance.

LITERATURE SURVEY: The databases of Pubmed and Sportdiscus were used to search for studies that describe the epidemiology of injuries in adult swimmers between 2010 to March 2020.

METHODOLOGY: Of the 864 articles identified, 14 studies were finally included in this review. The methodological quality of the studies was analysed with the Strobe scale and PRISMA guidelines were followed.

SYNTHESIS: The results showed a high prevalence of shoulder, knee and lower back injuries among swimmers due to overuse. These injuries were mainly short-term tendon-muscles, there were reported data differences between genders.

CONCLUSIONS: Despite the publication of an injury surveillance single and multi-sport events document and a consensus on data collection and injury surveillance in swimming, there are huge methodological limitations that do not allow firm conclusions. As such, more epidemiological studies following guidelines for data collection and injury surveillance are needed to establish differences by gender, age group, and swimming stroke. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Keywords: Drowning; Drowning Prevention; Water Safety


Language: en

Keywords

prevention; shoulder; risk factors; swimming; tendinopathy

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