| Literature DB >> 31734706 |
Tobias Wörner1, Kristian Thorborg2, Frida Eek3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The prevalence of hip and groin problems in professional male ice hockey is unknown and suspected to differ between playing positions. The purpose of this study was to explore potential differences in the seasonal prevalence of hip and groin problems between playing positions in male elite ice hockey players and to explore the relationship between symptom duration and hip and groin function at the beginning of the new season.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Groin pain; Hip arthroscopy; Hip pain; Ice hockey
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31734706 PMCID: PMC7347705 DOI: 10.1007/s00167-019-05787-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc ISSN: 0942-2056 Impact factor: 4.342
Fig. 1Flow of participants into the study
Demographics of study sample and target population
| Goalkeepers sample ( | Goalkeepers population ( | Defenders sample ( | Defenders population ( | Forwards sample ( | Forwards population ( | Sample total ( | Population total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years [Mean (SD)] | 21.8 (5.0) | 21.4 (5.1) | 24.8 (5.3) | 21.5 (5.1) | 24.8 (5.0) | 21.8 (5.0) | 24 (5.3) | 22 (5.1) |
| Height (cm) [Mean (SD)] | 185.9 (5.1) | 184.6 (5.1) | 184.8 (5.8) | 182.6 (10.2) | 183.1 (5.4) | 181.9 (5.7) | 184 (5.6) | 182 (7.5) |
| Weight (kg) [Mean (SD)] | 85.2 (6.2) | 81.5 (7.1) | 87.5 (6.4) | 82.4 (9.3) | 86.3 (7.5 | 81.7 (7.8) | 86.4 (6.9) | 82 (8.2) |
| Playing ice hockey (years) [Mean (SD)] | 5.3 (5.4) | – | 9.6 (6.9) | – | 9.7 (6.6) | – | 8.5 (6.7) | – |
| Playing level [ | ||||||||
| SHL | 26 (28.3) | 40 (29.0) | 44 (47.3) | 134 (29.6) | 73 (50.7) | 232 (29.1) | 143 (43.5) | 406 (29.3) |
| Hockey allsvenskan | 26 (28.3) | 47 (34.1) | 37 (39.8) | 125 (27.7) | 54 (37.5) | 243 (30.5) | 117 (35.6) | 415 (29.9) |
| J-20 SuperElit | 40 (43.5) | 51 (37.0) | 12 (12.9) | 193 (42.7) | 17 (11.8) | 321 (40.3) | 69 (21.0) | 565 (40.8) |
Data on the total population retrieved from the Swedish Ice Hockey Association (https://stats.swehockey.se)
NB “Population total” represents all players listed as potential players by their clubs before the season and differs from the total number of players actually starting the season (see Fig. 1), SD standard deviation, SHL Swedish Hockey League, J-20 under 20 years
Seasonal prevalence of hip and groin problems by player position (n = 329)
| Goalkeepers ( | Defenders ( | Forward ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
Any problem (TL/NTL) % (95% CI) | 53.3 (43–63) | 53.8 (44–64) | 52.8 (44–61) | ns |
TL problem % (95% CI) | 22.8 (15–32) | 30.1 (21–40) | 33.3 (26–41) | ns |
| Duration of TL problem in weeks [Median (IQR)] | 1.5 (1–4) | 3 (1–5.3) | 2 (1–2.75) | ns |
NTL problem % (95% CI) | 48.9 (39–59) | 48.4 (39–58) | 47.2 (39–55) | ns |
| Duration of NTL problem in weeks [Median (IQR)] | 2 (1–4) | 3 (1–8) | 3 (1.5–5.5) | ns |
TL time loss, NTL non time loss, IQR interquartile range, CI confidence interval
*Chi-square test for any/TL-/NTL-problems; Kruskal–Wallis test for duration (significance level .05)
Fig. 2HAGOS scores in the beginning of the new season in players with different hip and groin pain durations during the previous season. HAGOS hip and groin outcome score, IQR inter quartal range, ADL activities of daily living, PA physical activity, QOL quality of life. All groups differed significantly from each other on all HAGOS subscales (p ≤ 0.002 [Kruskal–Wallis test (significance level 0.05)]