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Motor performance is not related to injury risk in growing elite-level male youth football players. A causal inference approach to injury risk assessment
Affiliation:1. Department of Movement and Sport Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium;2. Department of Movement and Sports Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium;3. Research Foundation – Flanders (FWO), Brussels, Belgium;4. Amsterdam Collaboration on Health and Safety in Sports, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;5. Department of Sport, Exercise, and Health, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland;6. Centre for Clinical Epidemiology, Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Canada;7. Department of Physical Therapy and Motor Rehabilitation, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
Abstract:ObjectiveTo identify the causal relation between growth velocity and injury in elite-level youth football players, and to assess the mediating effects of motor performance in this causal pathway.DesignProspective cohort study.MethodsWe measured the body height of 378 male elite-level football players of the U13 to U15 age categories three to four months before and at the start of the competitive season. At the start of the season, players also performed a motor performance test battery, including motor coordination (Körperkoordinationstest für Kinder), muscular performance (standing broad jump, counter movement jump), flexibility (sit and reach), and endurance measures (YoYo intermittent recovery test). Injuries were continuously registered by the academies’ medical staff during the first two months of the season. Based on the causal directed acyclic graph (DAG) that identified our assumptions about causal relations between growth velocity (standardized to cm/y), injuries, and motor performance, the causal effect of growth velocity on injury was obtained by conditioning on maturity offset. We determined the natural indirect effects of growth velocity on injury mediated through motor performance.ResultsIn total, 105 players sustained an injury. Odds ratios (OR) showed a 15% increase in injury risk per centimetre/year of growth velocity (1.15, 95%CI: 1.05–1.26). There was no causal effect of growth on injury through the motor performance mediated pathways (all ORs were close to 1.0 with narrow 95%CIs).ConclusionsGrowth velocity is causally related to injury risk in elite-level youth football players, but motor performance does not mediate this relation.
Keywords:Soccer  Injury prevention  Child  Adolescent  Youth sport  Puber
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