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Injury in rugby league

Journal

JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND MEDICINE IN SPORT
Volume 9, Issue 1-2, Pages 46-56

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsams.2006.03.013

Keywords

rugby league; sports injury; epidemiology

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It was the purpose of this review to document the range, incidence, location and mechanism of injury occurring in the sport of rugby league. Rugby league is a collision sport played in Europe and the Pacific regions including Austratia. The sport is well established and has competitions ranging from junior to elite professional. Due to the contact nature of the game, injury is relatively common. The most common injuries are musculotendinous in nature and afflict the lower limb more frequently than elsewhere. Despite the high incidence of minor (sprains/ strains) to moderate musculosketetal injury (fracture, ligament and joint injury) and minor head injuries such as lacerations, nasal fractures and concussions, rare more serious spinal cord and other injuries causing death have also been recorded. The literature on rugby league injury is small but growing and suffers from a tack of consistent definition of what an injury is, thereby causing variability in the nature and incidence/prevatence of injury. Information is lacking on the injury profiles of different age groups. Importantly, there has been little attempt to establish a coordinated injury surveillance program in rugby league in the junior or professional levels. The implementation of such programs would require a universal definition of injury and a focus on important events and competitions. The implementation could provide important information in the identification and prevention of risk factors for injury. (c) 2006 Sports Medicine Australia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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