Football helmets and neurotrauma--an epidemiological overview of three seasons.

Medicine and science in sports Pub Date : 1979-01-01
K S Clarke, J W Powell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

During the 1975, 1976, and 1977 football seasons, the National Athletic Injury/Illness Reporting System (NAIRS) obtained records of the nature and severity of injuries and illnesses experienced by an annual average of 5361 high school and college athletes. Associated circumstances, including type and brand of helmets being worn by the injured and non-injured, also were obtained. From these data, and against specified epidemiologic criteria for significance, the possibility that particular helmets were associated unduly with cerebral and spinal neurotrauma was examined. The results revealed that (1) one permanent severe neurological injury (cervical spinal cord) was experienced, the mechanism of which was unrelated to helmet design; (2) cerebral concussions were infrequent (one significant concussion per 10,000 athlete exposures) and of a consistent rate from year to year; and (3) no particular helmet was associated with a disproportionate number of concussions or cervical spine fractures within those experienced. Continuing surveillance with multivariate analysis of possible causal relationships among all factors associated with these injuries is in progress.

橄榄球头盔与神经创伤——三个赛季的流行病学综述。
在1975年、1976年和1977年的橄榄球赛季,国家运动损伤/疾病报告系统(NAIRS)获得了5361名高中和大学运动员每年平均受伤和疾病的性质和严重程度的记录。还获得了相关情况,包括受伤者和非受伤者所戴头盔的类型和牌子。根据这些数据,并根据特定的流行病学显著性标准,检查了特定头盔与脑和脊髓神经损伤过度相关的可能性。结果表明:(1)发生1例永久性严重神经损伤(颈脊髓),其机制与头盔设计无关;(2)脑脑震荡不常见(每10000名运动员暴露中有一例显著脑震荡),并且每年的发生率都是一致的;(3)没有特定的头盔与经历过脑震荡或颈椎骨折的比例不成比例相关。正在进行持续监测,并对与这些损伤相关的所有因素之间可能的因果关系进行多变量分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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