2021
DOI: 10.32098/mltj.03.2021.25
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Injury risk and maturity status in Italian elite young football player

Abstract: Background. Football is one of the world's most popular sport with most players being younger than 18 years. Playing football can induce beneficial health effects in youth, but there is also a high risk of injury. In young football players, the relationship between injury risk in the different periods from peak height velocity (PHV) remains unclear. The objective of the study was to investigate the associations between the injury risk and injury burden in young Italian football players in different periods fro… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…One approach to determining the extent of injuries is to count how many players sustain at least one injury over a season. In boys, this has ranged from 38 to 85% ( 18 25 ), with 0.4–2.2 injuries per player per season ( 19 42 ). Only one study reported seasonal injury proportion for girls (37%) ( 43 ), with another finding an average of 4.3 injuries per player per season ( 44 ).…”
Section: Injury Patterns In High-level Youth Footballmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…One approach to determining the extent of injuries is to count how many players sustain at least one injury over a season. In boys, this has ranged from 38 to 85% ( 18 25 ), with 0.4–2.2 injuries per player per season ( 19 42 ). Only one study reported seasonal injury proportion for girls (37%) ( 43 ), with another finding an average of 4.3 injuries per player per season ( 44 ).…”
Section: Injury Patterns In High-level Youth Footballmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Expressing injuries relative to training and match hours is therefore recommended. Using the median of point estimates for reported injury rates (this does not consider the size of each study, nor the uncertainty in their estimates) and keeping methodological differences in mind, the number of injuries per 1,000 h appears similar between genders ( Figure 1 ): around 6.3 (range: 1.3–12.1) for boys ( 18 20 , 24 , 26 , 27 , 29 , 31 – 33 , 36 , 37 , 41 , 42 , 46 – 57 ) and 6.4 (2.1–9.1) for girls ( 44 , 55 , 58 60 ). Matches are consistently associated with greater risk compared to training sessions in both boys (match: 13.4, training: 4.0) and girls (match: 22.4, training: 4.6) ( 18 20 , 24 26 , 29 , 31 – 33 , 36 , 42 , 46 – 50 , 53 55 , 58 , 60 63 ).…”
Section: Injury Patterns In High-level Youth Footballmentioning
confidence: 99%