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Br J Sports Med 2008;42:937-938
  • SportsMedUpdate

SportsMedUpdate

  1. Professor Martin P Schwellnus
  1. University of Cape Town, South Africa

      RISK FACTORS FOR STRESS FRACTURE AMONG YOUNG FEMALE CROSS-COUNTRY RUNNERS

      ‣Kelsey JL, Bachrach LK, Procter-Gray E, . Med Sci Sports Exerc 2007;39:1457–63.

      Background:

      The risk factors for the development of stress fractures in female athletes have only been investigated in a few prospective cohort studies.

      Research question/s:

      What are the risk factors for stress fractures among young female distance runners?

      Methodology:

      Subjects: 127 competitive female distance runners (mean age 22 years, 18–26 years) who were part of a randomised trial among 150 runners of the effects of oral contraceptives on bone health.

      Experimental procedure: All the subjects underwent baseline assessment (history, dietary history, menstrual history, training history, anthropometry, and lower whole by mineral content (BMC) and bone mineral density (BMD). Subjects were followed for a mean of 1.85 years for the development of stress fractures (confirmed on x ray, bone scan or MRI), and 18 subjects developed at least one stress fracture.

      Measures of outcome: Risk factors for stress fractures (multivariate analysis).

      Main finding/s:

      A history of irregular menstrual periods was associated with increased risk, but not significantly, while training-related factors were not associated with increased risk.

      Conclusion/s:

      Strong predictors for stress fractures among young female runners are previous stress fractures and a lower bone mass — younger age, decreased …

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