TY - JOUR
PY - 2022//
TI - Dance related musculoskeletal injury leading to forced time-loss in elite pre-professional dancers - a retrospective study
JO - Physician and sportsmedicine
A1 - Mendes-Cunha, Sofia
A1 - Moita, J. P.
A1 - Xarez, L.
A1 - Torres, J.
SP - ePub
EP - ePub
VL - ePub
IS - ePub
N2 - INTRODUCTION: Young ballet dancers place themselves at risk of injury on a daily basis, often pushing their training beyond limits, ultimately leading to pain and injury. When signs and symptoms of injury are ignored, functional ability and overall health may be seriously compromised and absence from dance practice may forcibly take place.
OBJECTIVES: Describe the epidemiology of dance-related musculoskeletal injury leading to forced time-loss in elite pre-professional dancers and provide descriptive data on the prevalence concerning diagnoses, location and injury type, stratified by gender and skill level.
METHODS: Retrospective cohort, over a 3-year period on a full-time pre-professional Portuguese dance school featuring 70 both gender students with a mean age of 14.87 years. A total of 110 injuries were analysed. Non-parametric statistics were used.
RESULTS: The most prevalent diagnosis leading to forced time-loss in female dancers were Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome (MTSS), 14.29%, and Posterior Ankle Impingement Syndrome (PAIS), 7.14%, whereas in male dancers these were Hallux Sprain, 17.50%, and Lumbar Spine Joint Injuries, 7.50%. Differences were found in injuries' anatomical location between genders and in Incidence Proportion and Clinical Incidence between skill levels. 72.20% of chronic and 50.00% of acute injuries occurred in Level III students.
CONCLUSIONS: With respect to forced time-loss injuries, male dancers were found to sustain more acute traumatic injuries and female dancers overuse, respectively sprains and MTSS and PAIS. Identifying which injuries are most likely to lead to forced time-loss, may be useful for helping healthcare professionals in clinical decision-making and in developing more effective injury prevention and management strategies.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0091-3847 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00913847.2022.2129503 ID - ref1 ER -