Running-related injuries in recreational athletes.
lncidence, risk factors and effectiveness of an injury-prevention programme
Abstract
Running as a form of physical activity continues to grow in popularity and is accompanied by a number of health benefits, but one of the greatest threats that challenge these benefits is running-related injuries. The overall aim of this thesis is to identify the proportion of runners who sustain a running-related injury (incidence), possible reasons as to why they sustain these injuries (risk factors) and, finally, whether general injury-prevention guidelines can be effective in reducing the number of running-related injuries in recreational runners. This thesis comprises four studies.
Studies I and II of this thesis are prospective cohort studies comprising more than 200 recreational runners from the Gothenburg Half Marathon. Baseline testing prior to study start included range of motion and flexibility tests, a running analysis and isometric strength tests. Weekly training and injury information was collected during a 52-week period. The cumulative incidence proportion of running-related injuries after 52 weeks was 46%. The results revealed that runners with a late timing of maximal eversion, or low hip abductor strength compared with hip adductor strength, sustained more injuries compared with their counterpart runners (Study I). Additionally, runners with a previous injury were found to be almost twice as likely to sustain a new injury compared with runners with no previous injury (Study II).
Studies III and IV of this thesis are prospective, observational, comparative studies comprising 433 male and female recreational runners recruited from the Gothenburg Half Marathon. Participants were allocated to either an intervention group (n=228) or a control group (n=205) and submitted weekly information on their training habits and any running-related injury/pain for 18 weeks. The intervention group performed an injury-prevention programme consisting of neuromuscular control and foam-rolling exercises, twice a week for the duration of the study. No significant differences were found when investigating exposure states of weekly running distance and running-related injuries. However, increasing the weekly running distance by more than 30% appeared to be accompanied by a higher risk of injury, compared with keeping within a 10% increase or decrease, despite these findings lacking statistical significance (Study III). When exploring the effects of the intervention programme, we found that runners with high compliance with the intervention were 85% less likely to sustain an injury compared with the control group (Study IV).
Parts of work
I. Associations between biomechanical and clinical/anthropometrical factors and running-related injuries among recreational runners: a 52-week prospective cohort study. Jonatan Jungmalm, Rasmus Østergaard Nielsen, Pia Desai, Jón Karlsson, Tobia Hein, Stefan Grau.
Injury Epidemiology 2020;7(1):10. ::doi::10.1186/s40621-020-00237-2 II. Recreational runners with a history of injury are twice as likely to sustain a running-related injury as runners with no history of injury: a one-year prospective cohort study. Pia Desai, Jonatan Jungmalm, Mats Börjesson, Jón Karlsson, Stefan Grau.
Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy 2020;1-23.
::doi::https://doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2021.9673 III. The association between weekly changed in running volume and the risk of running-related injuries. Pia Desai, Jonatan Jungmalm, Mats Börjesson, Jón Karlsson, Stefan Grau.
In manuscript IV. Two sessions of neuromuscular control and foam-rolling exercises per week significantly reduce the risk of running-related injuries after 18 weeks. Pia Desai, Jonatan Jungmalm, Mats Börjesson, Jón Karlsson, Stefan Grau.
In manuscript
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Clinical Sciences. Department of Orthopaedics
Disputation
Fredag den 3 December 2021, kl 09.00, sal BE 036, Pedagogen, Hus B, Göteborgs Universitet
Date of defence
2021-12-03
pide1901@gmail.com
Date
2021-11-09Author
Desai, Pia
Keywords
Running-related injuries
Neuromuscular control
Injury prevention
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-466-5 (TRYCK)
978-91-8009-467-2 (PDF)
Language
eng