4.4 Article

The burden of injuries according to maturity status and timing: A two-decade study with 110 growth curves in an elite football academy

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SPORT SCIENCE
卷 23, 期 2, 页码 267-277

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TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17461391.2021.2006316

关键词

Epidemiology; football; growth and development; maturation; injury and prevention; injury burden

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Injuries have a negative impact on the development of football players. A study was conducted to examine the injury burden of male academy football players based on their maturity status and timing. The results show that as maturity status increases, the overall injury burden also increases. Growth-related injuries are more burdensome during the period of approaching maturity, while muscle and joint/ligament injuries have a higher impact after maturity and in adults. Monitoring maturity is crucial for designing targeted injury prevention programs.
Injuries have a negative impact on the development of football players. Maturation is a potential risk factor for football injuries but available data on this topic provide limited evidence due to methodological shortcomings. The aim of this study was to describe the injury burden of male academy football players according to growth curve-derived maturity status and timing. Injury and growth data were collected from 2000 to 2020. Longitudinal height records for 110 individual players were fitted with the Super-Imposition by Translation and Rotation model to estimate age at peak height velocity (PHV). Players were clustered according to maturity status (pre-, circa-, post-PHV, or adults) and timing (early, on-time, late maturers). Overall and specific injury burdens (days lost/player-season) and rate ratios for comparisons between groups were calculated. Overall injury burden increased with advanced maturity status; pre-PHV players had 3.2-, 3.7-, and 5.5-times lower burden compared with circa-PHV, post-PHV, and adult players, respectively. Growth-related injuries were more burdensome circa-PHV, while muscle and joint/ligament injuries had a higher impact post-PHV and in adults. Further, in the pre-PHV period, late maturers showed lower burden of overall, growth-related, anterior inferior iliac spine osteochondrosis, and knee joint/ligament injuries compared with on-time maturers. In adult players, however, injuries were less burdensome for early maturers than on-time and late maturers. In addition, joint/ligament injuries of adult late maturers were 4.5-times more burdensome than those of early maturers. Therefore, monitoring maturity seems crucial to define each player's maturation profile and facilitate design of targeted injury prevention programmes.

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