In a 2007 study by Sports Training Magazine, Dick and colleagues studied male baseball injury rates using the NCAA injury monitoring system from 1988 to 2004.
Compared to Part 2 and Part 3, the first level players have higher injury rates in both competition and training.
Regarding the mechanism of damage, 45% of contacts with players other than players account for 42% of their damage. In game injuries that resulted in more than 10 days of rest, lower extremity trauma accounted for 19.7%, followed by shoulder and elbow trauma accounted for 3%. In fact, shoulder injuries are a major cause of many rest. With all shoulder and elbow injuries, pitching occupied 73.0% and 78.4% respectively.
The damage caused by hitting the ball accounts for 10% of all game injuries, and the third base man and midfielder make up over 42% of the damage of blows.
The average baseball injury rate found in this study was 85 injuries per 1000 athletes (A-Es), 78 injuries per 1000 A-Es. The study showed that baseball has the lowest practice injury rate and the third lowest injury rate compared to the other 14 sports that collected damage data through the NCAA surveillance system.
In a study conducted by Posner et al in the American Journal of Sports Medicine magazine in 2011, he did not use the information obtained from the disabled list of American professional baseball tournaments from 2002 to 2008. Maintenance of injury monitoring system
They found 61 general injury rates per 1000 A-Es. Pitcher injury rate is 34% higher than outfielder. In all injured players, the injured in the upper limb accounted for 51.4% and the injured in the lower limb accounted for 30.6%
Compared to the outfielder (32.1%), the injury rate of the pitcher's upper limb (67.0%) increased significantly, but the pitcher's lower leg injury (47.5%) was higher than the pitcher (16.9%).
The injury rate of the pitcher's upper limb is 79 times that of the outfielder and the injury rate of the lower limb is 0.48 times of the outfielder. Pitchers spend a lot of time on DL than outfielder, and injuries to upper limbs take many days to DL.
Baseball is one of the safest high school sports in the United States and the exposure rate per 1000 sports is reported to be 1.26 It is reported that the injury rate of baseball players in one week in 14 different sports at 14 high schools Next. However, although the overall damage rate is low, the degree of damage is relatively high. In baseball games, fractures occupy a higher proportion of total injured than other sports. Baseball is ranked second in the rate of injury and finishes sports for over seven days, with high school baseball and softball like youth baseball, head and face injuries (48%) 14, 15 other Compared to baseball-related injuries (6.8%) 14, due to ball impact (16.0%), these head and face injuries also require surgery (18.0%).
For baseball players of all ages engaged frequently and competitively, excessive damage is a very real part of life. There are specific tendencies to occur in batter but the most common baseball damage occurs in the pitcher. In this article I will list you the six most common conditions for a pitcher and give you some ideas on how to prevent baseball damage and how to deal with baseball damage. 2. Tearful tears: When the fibrous cartilage ring around the shoulder cannula is torn, shoulder damage occurs. This is one of the more common shoulder baseball injuries. Many pitchers explain the "catch" feeling of the shoulder joint when the lips are loose and the entire joint becomes unstable.
Most baseball elbow injuries are caused by noncontact injuries to the main arm caused by repeated pitching. 5% of young pitchers suffer serious injuries to the elbow or shoulder within 10 years (surgery or retirement from baseball is necessary). The risk factor most relevant to injuries is the amount of pitch. Specifically, the number of courts added per game, the number of pitches per season, and the number of annual pitches are all related to the increased risk of elbow injury. At the same time participating in team fatigue and throws will also increase the risk. At the same time, the pitcher playing the catcher also increases the risk of injury that may be due to the increase in the number of throws the pitcher catches. Another risk factor is that the biomechanics of pitching is bad. If the biomechanics are incorrect, the torque and force generated around the elbow may increase for each pitch