Injury aetiology models that have evolved over the previous two decades highlight a number of factors which contribute to the causal mechanisms for athletic injuries. These models highlight the pathway to injury, including (1) internal risk factors (eg, age, neuromuscular control) which predispose athletes to injury, (2) exposure to external risk factors (eg, playing surface, equipment), and finally (3) an inciting event, wherein biomechanical breakdown and injury occurs. The most recent aetiological model proposed in 2007 was the first to detail the dynamic nature of injury risk, whereby participation may or may not result in injury, and participation itself alters injury risk through adaptation. However, although training and competition ...
Injuries of runners reduce the ability to train and hinder competing. Literature shows that the rela...
Aims (1) To investigate whether a daily acute: chronic workload ratio informs injury risk in Austral...
The relationship between recent (acute) training load relative to long-term (chronic) training load ...
njury aetiology models that have evolved over the previous two decades highlight a number of factors...
Spikes in training and competition workloads, especially in undertrained athletes, increase injury r...
Causal pathways between training loads and the mechanisms of tissue damage and athletic injury are p...
There is dogma that higher training load causes higher injury rates. However, there is also evidence...
Background: Since 2000, there has been a rapid growth in training load and injury research. In the p...
peer-reviewedThere has been a recent increase in research examining training load as a method of mit...
Injuries of runners reduce the ability to train and hinder competing. Literature shows that the rela...
Abstract Managing injury risk is important for maximising athlete availability and performance. Alth...
Training loads contribute to sports injury risk but their mitigation has rarely been considered in a...
All members of a sport performance team, including coaches, strength and conditioning and medical st...
AIMS: (1) To investigate whether a daily acute:chronic workload ratio informs injury risk in Austral...
Background: The acute: chronic workload ratio (ACWR) is an index of the acute workload relative to t...
Injuries of runners reduce the ability to train and hinder competing. Literature shows that the rela...
Aims (1) To investigate whether a daily acute: chronic workload ratio informs injury risk in Austral...
The relationship between recent (acute) training load relative to long-term (chronic) training load ...
njury aetiology models that have evolved over the previous two decades highlight a number of factors...
Spikes in training and competition workloads, especially in undertrained athletes, increase injury r...
Causal pathways between training loads and the mechanisms of tissue damage and athletic injury are p...
There is dogma that higher training load causes higher injury rates. However, there is also evidence...
Background: Since 2000, there has been a rapid growth in training load and injury research. In the p...
peer-reviewedThere has been a recent increase in research examining training load as a method of mit...
Injuries of runners reduce the ability to train and hinder competing. Literature shows that the rela...
Abstract Managing injury risk is important for maximising athlete availability and performance. Alth...
Training loads contribute to sports injury risk but their mitigation has rarely been considered in a...
All members of a sport performance team, including coaches, strength and conditioning and medical st...
AIMS: (1) To investigate whether a daily acute:chronic workload ratio informs injury risk in Austral...
Background: The acute: chronic workload ratio (ACWR) is an index of the acute workload relative to t...
Injuries of runners reduce the ability to train and hinder competing. Literature shows that the rela...
Aims (1) To investigate whether a daily acute: chronic workload ratio informs injury risk in Austral...
The relationship between recent (acute) training load relative to long-term (chronic) training load ...