Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative Review

Physical activity is known to be beneficial for bone; however, some athletes who train intensely are at risk of bone stress injury (BSI). Incidence in adolescent athlete populations is between 3.9 and 19% with recurrence rates as high as 21%. Participation in physical training can be highly skeletal...

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Main Authors: Belinda Beck, Louise Drysdale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Sports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4663/9/4/52
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spelling doaj-ef5539c7d5d543ae9915e4443d076fba2021-04-16T23:02:16ZengMDPI AGSports2075-46632021-04-019525210.3390/sports9040052Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative ReviewBelinda Beck0Louise Drysdale1School of Health Sciences and Social Work, Griffith University, Gold Coast, QLD 4222, AustraliaSchool of Health Sciences and Social Work, Griffith University, Gold Coast, QLD 4222, AustraliaPhysical activity is known to be beneficial for bone; however, some athletes who train intensely are at risk of bone stress injury (BSI). Incidence in adolescent athlete populations is between 3.9 and 19% with recurrence rates as high as 21%. Participation in physical training can be highly skeletally demanding, particularly during periods of rapid growth in adolescence, and when competition and training demands are heaviest. Sports involving running and jumping are associated with a higher incidence of BSI and some athletes appear to be more susceptible than others. Maintaining a very lean physique in aesthetic sports (gymnastics, figure skating and ballet) or a prolonged negative energy balance in extreme endurance events (long distance running and triathlon) may compound the risk of BSI with repetitive mechanical loading of bone, due to the additional negative effects of hormonal disturbances. The following review presents a summary of the epidemiology of BSI in the adolescent athlete, risk factors for BSI (physical and behavioural characteristics, energy balance and hormone disruption, growth velocity, sport-specific risk, training load, etc.), prevention and management strategies.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4663/9/4/52bone stress injuryadolescentathletesstress fractureinjury managementrisk factors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Belinda Beck
Louise Drysdale
spellingShingle Belinda Beck
Louise Drysdale
Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative Review
Sports
bone stress injury
adolescent
athletes
stress fracture
injury management
risk factors
author_facet Belinda Beck
Louise Drysdale
author_sort Belinda Beck
title Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative Review
title_short Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative Review
title_full Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative Review
title_fullStr Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative Review
title_full_unstemmed Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Management of Bone Stress Injuries in Adolescent Athletes: A Narrative Review
title_sort risk factors, diagnosis and management of bone stress injuries in adolescent athletes: a narrative review
publisher MDPI AG
series Sports
issn 2075-4663
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Physical activity is known to be beneficial for bone; however, some athletes who train intensely are at risk of bone stress injury (BSI). Incidence in adolescent athlete populations is between 3.9 and 19% with recurrence rates as high as 21%. Participation in physical training can be highly skeletally demanding, particularly during periods of rapid growth in adolescence, and when competition and training demands are heaviest. Sports involving running and jumping are associated with a higher incidence of BSI and some athletes appear to be more susceptible than others. Maintaining a very lean physique in aesthetic sports (gymnastics, figure skating and ballet) or a prolonged negative energy balance in extreme endurance events (long distance running and triathlon) may compound the risk of BSI with repetitive mechanical loading of bone, due to the additional negative effects of hormonal disturbances. The following review presents a summary of the epidemiology of BSI in the adolescent athlete, risk factors for BSI (physical and behavioural characteristics, energy balance and hormone disruption, growth velocity, sport-specific risk, training load, etc.), prevention and management strategies.
topic bone stress injury
adolescent
athletes
stress fracture
injury management
risk factors
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4663/9/4/52
work_keys_str_mv AT belindabeck riskfactorsdiagnosisandmanagementofbonestressinjuriesinadolescentathletesanarrativereview
AT louisedrysdale riskfactorsdiagnosisandmanagementofbonestressinjuriesinadolescentathletesanarrativereview
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