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. 2024 Feb 1;59(2):112-120.
doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-0083.23.

Injury Patterns in Highly Specialized Youth Athletes: A Comparison of 2 Pathways to Specialization

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Injury Patterns in Highly Specialized Youth Athletes: A Comparison of 2 Pathways to Specialization

Patrick F Murday et al. J Athl Train. .

Abstract

Context: Sport specialization, commonly defined as intensive year-round training in a single sport to the exclusion of other sports, has been associated with an increased risk for overuse injury. Two pathways to becoming highly specialized are recognized: (1) having only ever played 1 sport (exclusive highly specialized) and (2) quitting other sports to focus on a single sport (evolved highly specialized). Understanding the differences in injury patterns between these groups of highly specialized athletes will inform the development of injury-prevention strategies.

Objective: To compare the distribution of injury types (acute, overuse, serious overuse) among evolved highly specialized athletes, exclusive highly specialized athletes, and low-moderately specialized athletes.

Design: Cross-sectional study.

Setting: Tertiary care pediatric sports medicine clinic between January 2015 and April 2019.

Patients or other participants: A total of 1171 patients (age = 12.01-17.83 years, 59.8% female) who played ≥1 organized sports, presented with a sport-related injury, and completed a sports participation survey.

Main outcome measure(s): Distribution of injury types (acute, overuse, serious overuse).

Results: The percentage of injuries due to overuse was similar between the exclusive and evolved highly specialized athletes (59.2% versus 53.9%; P = .28). Compared with low-moderately specialized athletes, exclusive and evolved highly specialized athletes had a higher percentage of overuse injuries (45.3% versus 59.2% and 53.9%, respectively; P = .001). Multivariate analysis of the highly specialized groups revealed sport type to be a significant predictor of a higher percentage of injuries due to overuse, with individual-sport athletes having increased odds of sustaining an overuse injury compared with team-sport athletes (odds ratio = 1.95; 95% CI = 1.17, 3.24).

Conclusions: The distribution of injury types was similar between evolved and exclusive highly specialized youth athletes, with both groups having a higher percentage of injuries due to overuse compared with low-moderately specialized athletes. Among highly specialized athletes, playing an individual sport was associated with a higher proportion of overuse injuries compared with playing a team sport.

Keywords: evolved high specialization; exclusive high specialization; overuse injuries; pediatric athletes; sport specialization.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A total of 1647 charts were analyzed; 1171 met the inclusion criteria of participating in an organized sport, fully completing the sports participation survey, and having a sport-related injury.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Individual 1-way analyses of variance comparing the overuse injury distributions among the 3 specialization groups demonstrated no difference in the proportion of overuse injuries between the exclusive highly specialized (59.2%) and evolved highly specialized (53.9%) groups, whereas both groups had a higher proportion of overuse injuries than the low-moderately specialized group (45.3%).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Individual 1-way analyses of variance comparing the proportion of overuse injuries classified as serious revealed no difference in the proportion of serious overuse injuries among the exclusive highly specialized (10.0%), evolved highly specialized (10.5%), and low-moderately specialized (9.4%) groups.

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