Abstract
Objectives:
Sport specialization has been shown to be associated with increased risk of musculoskeletal lower extremity injuries (LEI) in adolescent athletes presenting in clinical settings. However, the association of sport specialization and incidence of LEI has not been studied prospectively in a large population of adolescent athletes. The objective of this study was to compare the incidence of LEI in high school athletes identified as having low (LOW), moderate (MOD) or high (HIGH) levels of sport specialization.
Methods:
Subjects (male and female, interscholastic athletes, grades 9 - 12) were recruited from a diverse sample of 29 Wisconsin high schools during the 2015/16 school year to participate in the study. Subjects d a questionnaire identifying all of the interscholastic and club sports they participated in during the previous and current school years, history of previous LEI, their primary sport and the number of primary sport competitions in which they participated in within the previous 12 months. Sport specialization status was determined using a previously published 3 item specialization scale (total score: 0 - 1 = LOW, 2 = MOD, 3 = HIGH). Athletic trainers at each school reported all athletic exposures and LEI that occurred for each subject during each interscholastic sport season they participated in during the school year. Analyses included group proportions, Odds Ratios (OR, [95%CI]) and median days lost due to injury (Med [IQR 25th,75th]. Multivariate Cox Proportional Hazards Ratios (HR, [95%CI]) were calculated to investigate the association between the incidence of LEI and sport specialization level while controlling for gender, grade, history of previous LEI, primary sport and the number of primary sport competitions.
Results:
A total of N =1,544 subjects (Female = 50%, Age =16.1
Conclusion:
Interscholastic athletes with MOD or HIGH sport specialization were more likely to sustain a LEI than athletes with LOW specialization. Sports medicine providers need to educate officials of sport governing bodies, school coaches, parents and interscholastic athletes regarding the increased risk of LEI for athletes who specialize in a single sport.
