Human Kinetics Blog

Back injury risk for young athletes

Lower back injuries are the third most common injuries suffered in athletes under age 18, according to a study presented by ports medicine physician Neeru Jayanthi at the recent American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference and Exhibition in Orlando.

Many injuries are severe enough to sideline young athletes for one-to-six months, and put them at future risk for long-term back problems.

Sixty-one percent of back injuries were less serious, such as injuries in the lumbar facet and sacroiliac joints. But 39 percent were serious, including stress fractures and complications of stress fractures such as spondyloysis and spondylolisthesis.

“If a young athlete has lower back pain for two weeks or longer, it is imperative that the athlete be evaluated by a sports medicine physician,” Jayanthi said. “If a serious injury such as a stress fracture is not properly treated and does not heal properly, the athlete could be at risk for long-term back problems.”

Jayanthi said young athletes are at risk of back injury from hyperextension (arching of the lower back) and other improper techniques. Insufficient strength of the abdominal and back extensor muscles also may contribute to injuries. The greatest risk appears to be the amount of intensive training done by a developing young athlete.

The study found that young athletes with lower back injuries tended to spend more time playing sports than other kids who were injured. Those with back injuries spent an average of 12.7 hours per week playing sports, while the average for all kids who were injured was 11.3 hours per week, said study co-author Lara Dugas.

The study confirmed preliminary findings, reported earlier, that specializing in a single sport increases the risk of overall injury, even when controlling for an athlete’s age and hours per week of sports activity. “We should be cautious about intense specialisation in one sport before and during adolescence,” Jayanthi said.

Jayanthi offers the following tips to reduce the risk of injuries in young athletes:

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