A Systematic Review for Guidelines: Sports and High-Grade Kidney Injuries in Children With Solitary Kidneys.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Acta Paediatrica Pub Date : 2025-02-19 DOI:10.1111/apa.70014
Jack Palmer, Lilian M Johnstone, Aniruddh Deshpande, Olivia Boyer, Thomas Blanc, Kiarash Taghavi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Aim: To determine the risk of Grades IV and V kidney injury due to common children's sports.

Methods: A systematic review of studies reporting traumatic kidney injuries (TKIs) associated with basketball, cycling, equestrian, motorsports, netball, rugby, Australian football or soccer. Studies with patients exclusively 18 years or older, non-TKIs or non-sport-related mechanisms were excluded.

Results: Twenty-five studies with 24 424 patients were included. The estimated risk of kidney loss from sports injuries is 0.37 per million child-years. However, the incidence of Grades IV and V injuries could not be calculated in at-risk populations due to limited prospective data. The prevalence of TKIs from sport-specific trauma was low, ranging from 0.6% to 2.2%. Few studies graded the severity of kidney injury, but in the small number reported, Grades IV and V injuries occurred in 33% of soccer TKIs, 26% of bicycling, 23% of Australian football, 20% of basketball and 17% of equestrian injuries. The high number of ungraded kidney injuries (5514/5607) impacts the reliability of findings.

Conclusion: Recommendations to exclude children with congenital single kidneys from specific sports lack a firm evidence-base. Given bio-psycho-social consequences, such recommendations must be carefully considered, particularly for equestrian and motorised vehicles, which carry a higher risk of trauma.

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来源期刊
Acta Paediatrica
Acta Paediatrica 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
5.30%
发文量
384
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Acta Paediatrica is a peer-reviewed monthly journal at the forefront of international pediatric research. It covers both clinical and experimental research in all areas of pediatrics including: neonatal medicine developmental medicine adolescent medicine child health and environment psychosomatic pediatrics child health in developing countries
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