AI Article Synopsis

  • Transient traumatic neuropraxia, known as "stingers" or "burners," is a common injury in football affecting the brachial plexus or cervical nerve roots, often occurring during gameplay.
  • A study analyzed NFL injury data from the 2015-2019 seasons, revealing that stingers were more prevalent during regular season games compared to preseason, with running backs and linebackers experiencing the highest rates.
  • Of the 691 stingers recorded, most players (76.41%) did not miss any significant game time, with those who did missing an average of 4.79 days due to the injury.

Article Abstract

Background: Transient traumatic neuropraxia of either the brachial plexus or cervical nerve root(s) is commonly described as a "stinger" or "burner" by the athlete. Stingers in American Football commonly occur acutely as isolated injuries; however, concomitant injuries, including cervical spine pathologies, have also been reported.

Hypothesis: Among National Football League (NFL) athletes, the incidence rate of stingers is higher during the regular season than during the preseason and among positions with high velocity impacts such as running backs, linebackers, defensive backs, and receivers.

Study Design: Retrospective epidemiology study.

Level Of Evidence: Level 4.

Methods: Aggregation of all in-game injuries with a clinical impression of "neck brachial plexus stretch" or "neck brachial plexus compression" entered into the NFL injury surveillance database through the centralized league-wide electronic medical record system over 5 years (2015-2019 seasons). Incidence rates per player-play were calculated and reported.

Results: A total of 691 in-game stingers occurred during the study period, with a mean of 138.2 per year. Average single-season injury risk for incident stinger was 3.74% (95% CI, 3.46%-4.05%). The incidence rate was higher during regular season games than during preseason games (12.26 per 100,000 player-plays [11.30-13.31] vs 8.87 [7.31-10.76], < 0.01, respectively). The highest reported stinger incidence rates were among running backs and linebackers (both >15 per 100,000 player-plays). Among stingers, 76.41% did not miss time. Of those that resulted in time lost from football activities, mean time missed due to injury was 4.79 days (range, 3.17-6.41 days). Concomitant injuries were relatively low (7.09%).

Conclusion: In-game stinger incidence was stable across the study period and occurred most frequently in running backs and linebackers. Stingers were more common during the regular season, and most players did not miss time. Concomitant injuries were relatively rare.

Clinical Relevance: An improved understanding of the expected time loss due to stinger and concomitant injuries may provide insight for medical personnel in managing these injuries.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11195847PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/19417381231223413DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

concomitant injuries
16
brachial plexus
12
regular season
12
running backs
12
backs linebackers
12
national football
8
football league
8
incidence rate
8
higher regular
8
"neck brachial
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!