438 results match your criteria: "Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre[Affiliation]"

After the buzzer sounds: Adults unveil the consequences of concussions sustained during adolescence.

Neuropsychol Rehabil

December 2024

School of Kinesiology and Physical Activity Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada.

Concussions are commonly occurring injuries in sport. The short-term impacts of concussions, including symptoms and recovery trajectories, often are the focus of concussion research. However, limited studies have explored the long-term consequences of concussions, especially in adolescents.

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Background: The objective was to summarize the methodology used to reach consensus for recommended minimum data elements that should be collected and reported when conducting injury surveillance research in military settings. This paper summarizes the methodology used to develop the international Minimum Data Elements for surveillance and Reporting of Musculoskeletal Injuries in the MILitary (ROMMIL) statement.

Methods: A Delphi methodology was employed to reach consensus for minimum reporting elements.

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Is your system fit for purpose? Female athlete health considerations for rugby injury and illness surveillance systems.

Eur J Sport Sci

December 2024

Amsterdam Collaboration on Health & Safety in Sports, Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam Movement Science, Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

This review discusses female-specific health considerations in injury and illness surveillance and provides rugby-specific recommendations for future surveillance. Identifying priority injury and illness problems by determining those problems with the highest rates within women's rugby may highlight different priorities than sex comparisons between men's and women's rugby. Whilst sports exposure is the primary risk for health problems in sports injury and illness surveillance, female athletes have health domains that should also be considered.

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Background: Little is known regarding long-term consequences (≥5 years) of sport-related concussion (SRC) sustained during adolescence. Adolescent SRC has been linked to athlete considerations of sport participation and subsequent retirement from sport during this critical developmental period. Prolonged SRC symptoms can reduce ability to perform physical activity, and research suggests inactivity can extend years post-injury.

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This cross-sectional study aims to identify the situational characteristics, ball-carrier technical variables, and recommended techniques associated with performance outcomes in elite women's Rugby Union. Using retrospective video analysis, 43 tackler and ball-carrier technical characteristics for 1500 tackle events in the 2022-23 Women's Six Nations Championship were assessed, considering match situation and performance outcomes. Rate ratio (RR) was determined using propensity rates.

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Implementing Lifestyle Medicine Competencies in Didactic and Clinical Settings for Allied Health Professionals: A Call to Action.

Am J Lifestyle Med

March 2024

Department of Physical Therapy Education, College of Health Sciences - Northwest, Western University of Health Sciences, Lebanon, OR, USA (AMR).

In this article, we discuss and reflect on the essential components of our concurrent session presentation at the American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) annual conference LM2023, "Implementing Lifestyle Medicine Competencies in Didactic and Clinical Settings for Allied Health Professionals." We illustrate the necessity of interdisciplinary lifestyle medicine approaches through a conscious fusion of analysis and storytelling. This review concludes with a call to action empowering the medical community to embrace interdisciplinary lifestyle medicine approaches in effort to increase access to equitable healthcare.

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This study applied alterations in partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide ( ) to challenge dynamic cerebral autoregulation (dCA) responses across the cardiac cycle in both biological sexes. A total of 20 participants (10 females and 10 males; aged 19-34 years) performed 4-min bouts of repeated squat-stand manoeuvres (SSMs) at 0.05 and 0.

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Occupational therapists (OT) are trained in interventions related to health and well-being, facilitating individuals in achieving occupational balance. This scoping review explored the current methods of disseminating Lifestyle Medicine (LM) knowledge in post-secondary health education and assessed the potential integration of LM principles into OT education. The review covered publications related to LM implementation in post-secondary health professions curricula.

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Multi-centre modified Delphi exercise to identify candidate items for classifying early-stage symptomatic knee osteoarthritis.

Osteoarthritis Cartilage

January 2025

Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; Research and Innovation Institute, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Canada. Electronic address:

Objective: To generate a list of candidate items potentially useful for discriminating individuals with Early-stage Symptomatic Knee Osteoarthritis (EsSKOA) from those with other conditions and from established osteoarthritis (OA), and to reduce this list based on expert consensus.

Design: We conducted a three-round online international modified Delphi exercise with OA clinicians and researchers ("OA experts"). In Round 1, participants reviewed 84 candidate items and nominated additional item(s) potentially useful for EsSKOA classification; those nominated by ≥3 participants were added.

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Article Synopsis
  • R2Play is a new assessment tool designed for youth recovering from concussions, simulating the complex physical and cognitive challenges found in sports to ensure more effective rehabilitation.
  • The study will assess the tool's feasibility, face validity, and content validity by gathering quantitative data from performance metrics and qualitative insights from interviews with clinicians and youth participants.
  • Results from this study aim to refine R2Play further and set the stage for a broader multicenter study to validate its effectiveness across multiple sites.
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Prior research provides little guidance on how to support return to school post-concussion. Peer support may be one strategy to enable adolescents to return to school post-concussion. The purpose of this study was to explore what high school students preferred in a school-based peer support program post-concussion.

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The intention-to-treat effect of changes in planned participation on injury risk in adolescent ice hockey players: A target trial emulation.

J Sci Med Sport

October 2024

Centre for Clinical Epidemiology, Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Canada; Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, Canada. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The study aims to evaluate how changing the duration of participation in ice hockey, using the acute:chronic workload ratio (ACWR), affects injury risk in adolescent players without recent injuries.
  • Conducted as a prospective cohort study over five years, data were collected from ice hockey players aged 13-17 in Canada, with various participation levels analyzed for injury risk.
  • Results showed that increasing participation duration consistently raises injury risk, with no optimal level identified; specifically, injury risk increased notably for ACWR values higher than 2, suggesting higher exposure leads to greater injury likelihood.
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Quantifying neurovascular coupling through a concurrent assessment of arterial, capillary, and neuronal activation in humans: A multimodal EEG-fNIRS-TCD investigation.

Neuroimage

November 2024

Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Integrated Concussion Research Program, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Department of Radiology, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Background: This study explored a novel multimodal neuroimaging approach to assess neurovascular coupling (NVC) in humans using electroencephalography (EEG), functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), and transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD).

Methods: Fifteen participants (nine females; age 19-32) completed concurrent EEG-fNIRS-TCD imaging during motor (finger tapping) and visual ("Where's Waldo?") tasks, with synchronized monitoring of blood pressure, capnography, and heart rate. fNIRS assessed microvascular oxygenation within the frontal, motor, parietal, and occipital cortices, while the middle and posterior cerebral arteries (MCA/PCA) were insonated using TCD.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study compared the incidence of physical contacts, including head contacts and suspected injuries, between youth ringette and female ice hockey players during their 2021-2022 season in Alberta.
  • Results showed that ringette players experienced significantly higher rates of body checking (2.6 times more) and head contacts (2 times more) than hockey players, along with a 3.4-fold increase in suspected injuries.
  • Despite regulations prohibiting body checking and head contacts in both sports, very few instances were penalized, prompting a call for further research on different youth age groups.
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Objectives: To determine the rates, severity and burden of knee injuries in professional male rugby union from the English Premiership.

Methods: Injury and exposure data were captured over 20 seasons using a prospective cohort design. Knee injury incidence, days' absence and burden were recorded for each injury type and by pitch surface type for match and training.

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Effect of Aerobic Exercise on Symptom Burden and Quality of Life in Adults With Persisting Post-concussive Symptoms: The ACTBI Randomized Controlled Trial.

Arch Phys Med Rehabil

October 2024

Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada; Hotchkiss Brain Institute (HBI), University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada; Alberta Children's Research Institute (ACHRI), University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.

Objective: To evaluate a 6-week sub-symptom threshold aerobic exercise protocol (AEP) versus a stretching protocol (SP) on symptom burden and quality of life (QoL) in adults with persisting post-concussive symptoms (PPCS).

Design: The Aerobic exercise for treatment of Chronic symptoms following mild Traumatic Brain Injury (ACTBI) Trial was a randomized controlled trial with 2 groups.

Setting: Outpatient brain injury, pain, and physiotherapy clinics.

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Article Synopsis
  • - This review synthesizes research using multimodal neuroimaging to study the relationship between neuronal activity and blood flow during tasks, emphasizing the importance of neurovascular coupling and accounting for physiological factors.
  • - It includes a comprehensive analysis of 364 studies published before July 31, 2023, focusing on combinations like EEG and fMRI, predominantly during cognitive and visual tasks.
  • - The review highlights that most studies poorly controlled for factors like blood pressure and heart rate, underscoring the need for improved methodology and suggesting further research into sex differences and other physiological influences.
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Article Synopsis
  • Cervicogenic headaches (CGH) often occur after concussions and whiplash, leading to a decreased quality of life, and existing treatments like exercises and physiotherapy have had limited success.
  • This trial will test the combination of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) with exercise therapy (ET) in adults aged 18-65, assessing its feasibility and safety, with participants receiving either active or sham tDCS over six weeks.
  • The study aims to show that tDCS is a safe and practical approach to treat CGH, potentially improving pain, strength, function, and overall quality of life for affected individuals.
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Article Synopsis
  • There are different opinions on how high the frequency cut-off point of dynamic cerebral autoregulation (CA) is, with one method suggesting it's around 0.07 Hz and another saying it could be as high as 0.24 Hz.
  • A study looked at how these limits are accurate by having 16 people perform squat-stand exercises at different frequencies while measuring blood flow in their brains.
  • The results showed that while there were some differences between males and females, the overall upper frequency limit for CA was similar regardless of sex, the type of blood vessel, or the heartbeat phase.
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Article Synopsis
  • Evidence suggests a link between a bacterial infection called Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis (MAP) in animals and Crohn's disease (CD) in humans, and there's an ongoing clinical trial focused on treating CD with antibiotics.
  • Researchers conducted a study with 199 subjects to develop MAP-based tests that help identify which CD patients also have a MAP infection, using multiple MAP antigens.
  • Results showed that combining certain MAP antigens and cytokine levels significantly improved the effectiveness of diagnosing CD compared to using any single MAP antigen alone.
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Article Synopsis
  • Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) measures how blood vessels respond to stimuli, with this study focusing on differences during the cardiac cycle rather than just average data.
  • Involving 71 participants, techniques included assessing responses to increased and decreased CO2 levels, revealing that CVR was higher during systole while relative responses varied across diastole and systole.
  • Results indicated that females showed stronger absolute CVR responses, particularly in certain cardiac phases, suggesting that sex-related biological factors may influence these vascular responses.
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Background: The optimization of athlete training load is not a new concept; however in recent years, the concept of "load management" is one of the most widely studied and divisive topics in sports science and medicine.

Purpose: Discuss the challenges faced by sports when utilizing training load monitoring and management, with a specific focus on the use of data to inform load management guidelines and policies/mandates, their consequences, and how we move this field forward.

Challenges: While guidelines can theoretically help protect athletes, overzealous and overcautious guidelines may restrict an athlete's preparedness, negatively influence performance, and increase injury risk.

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