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Incidence of Injuries, Illness and Related Risk Factors in Cross-Country Marathon Mountain Biking Events: A Systematic Search and Review

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SPORTS MEDICINE-OPEN
卷 7, 期 1, 页码 -

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40798-021-00357-z

关键词

Mountain biking; Injury; Illness; Accidents; Cycling

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Cross-country mountain biking events present challenges with remote venues and isolated courses, often providing on-site medical care for injuries and illnesses. Studies have shown that 4 to 71% of participants sustain injuries during these events, with skin injuries being the most common, followed by bony injuries and concussion. Gastrointestinal symptoms post-event were reported by 5 to 47% of cyclists, and the prevalence of illness during events ranged from 0.5% to 23.0%.
Background Cycling is a popular global sport and method of transportation and a significant contributor to admissions to hospital emergency units following an injury. Mountain biking events present additional challenges with remote venues and isolated courses, for which on-site medical care is often provided, for both injury and illness occurring during races. National health data may not represent these unique events, and specific data on incidence of injury and illness in mountain biking events are essential. Therefore, the aim of this study was to review the available injury and illness literature, reporting methods and risk factors in cross-country mountain biking. Methods Search engines PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL (EBSCOhost), Scopus, PEDro and the Cochrane Library were systematically searched, and a grey literature search was performed. Narrative analyses of the types, severity and area of injuries and illness type and severity were performed as pooling of data was impossible due to insufficient high-quality studies with the same injury and illness definitions. Results Seven studies comprising 28,021 participants were included for analysis. Four to 71% of participants sustained an injury in a cross-country mountain bike event. Injuries to the skin were the most common, followed by bony injuries and concussion. Five to 47% of cyclists reported the onset of gastrointestinal symptoms post-event. The prevalence of illness during events ranged from 0.5 to 23.0%. Conclusion The injury and illness definitions were varied and prevented clear comparisons between studies. Injury and illness present a concern in cross-country marathon mountain biking and should be investigated further to provide the true burden of these during race events. Registration: This protocol has been registered with PROSPERO International prospective register of systematic reviews (No: CRD42019134586).

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