Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.

Water polo is a contact sport that is gaining popularity in the United States and carries a risk of repeated head impacts and concussion. The frequency and magnitude of sport-related head impacts have not been described for water polo. We aimed to compare patterns of empirically measured head impact...

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Main Authors: Nicholas J Cecchi, Derek C Monroe, Gianna M Fote, Steven L Small, James W Hicks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216369
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author Nicholas J Cecchi
Derek C Monroe
Gianna M Fote
Steven L Small
James W Hicks
author_facet Nicholas J Cecchi
Derek C Monroe
Gianna M Fote
Steven L Small
James W Hicks
author_sort Nicholas J Cecchi
collection DOAJ
description Water polo is a contact sport that is gaining popularity in the United States and carries a risk of repeated head impacts and concussion. The frequency and magnitude of sport-related head impacts have not been described for water polo. We aimed to compare patterns of empirically measured head impact exposure of male collegiate water polo players to patterns previously reported by a survey of current and former water polo athletes. Participants wore water polo caps instrumented with head impact sensors during three seasons of collegiate water polo. Peak linear acceleration (PLA) and peak rotational acceleration (PRA) were recorded for head impacts. Athlete positions were recorded by research staff at the occurrence of each head impact. Head impacts were sustained by athletes in offensive positions more frequently than in defensive and transition positions (246, 59.9% vs. 93, 22.6% vs. 72, 17.5%). 37% of all head impacts during gameplay were sustained by athletes playing the offensive center position. Impact magnitude (means ± SD: PLA = 36.1±12.3g, PRA = 5.0±2.9 krads/sec2) did not differ between position or game scenario. Among goalies, impact frequency and magnitude were similar between games (means ± SD: 0.54±.51 hits/game, PLA = 36.9±14.2g, PRA = 4.3±4.2 krads/sec2) and practices (means ± SD: 0.96±1.11 hits/practice, PLA = 43.7±14.5g, PRA = 3.9±2.5 krads/sec2). We report that collegiate water polo athletes are at risk for sport-related head impacts and impact frequency is dependent on game scenario and player position. In contrast, magnitude does not differ between scenarios or across positions.
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spelling doaj.art-352a9632c786479190f4da993b34208a2022-12-21T22:38:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01145e021636910.1371/journal.pone.0216369Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.Nicholas J CecchiDerek C MonroeGianna M FoteSteven L SmallJames W HicksWater polo is a contact sport that is gaining popularity in the United States and carries a risk of repeated head impacts and concussion. The frequency and magnitude of sport-related head impacts have not been described for water polo. We aimed to compare patterns of empirically measured head impact exposure of male collegiate water polo players to patterns previously reported by a survey of current and former water polo athletes. Participants wore water polo caps instrumented with head impact sensors during three seasons of collegiate water polo. Peak linear acceleration (PLA) and peak rotational acceleration (PRA) were recorded for head impacts. Athlete positions were recorded by research staff at the occurrence of each head impact. Head impacts were sustained by athletes in offensive positions more frequently than in defensive and transition positions (246, 59.9% vs. 93, 22.6% vs. 72, 17.5%). 37% of all head impacts during gameplay were sustained by athletes playing the offensive center position. Impact magnitude (means ± SD: PLA = 36.1±12.3g, PRA = 5.0±2.9 krads/sec2) did not differ between position or game scenario. Among goalies, impact frequency and magnitude were similar between games (means ± SD: 0.54±.51 hits/game, PLA = 36.9±14.2g, PRA = 4.3±4.2 krads/sec2) and practices (means ± SD: 0.96±1.11 hits/practice, PLA = 43.7±14.5g, PRA = 3.9±2.5 krads/sec2). We report that collegiate water polo athletes are at risk for sport-related head impacts and impact frequency is dependent on game scenario and player position. In contrast, magnitude does not differ between scenarios or across positions.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216369
spellingShingle Nicholas J Cecchi
Derek C Monroe
Gianna M Fote
Steven L Small
James W Hicks
Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.
PLoS ONE
title Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.
title_full Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.
title_fullStr Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.
title_full_unstemmed Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.
title_short Head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes.
title_sort head impacts sustained by male collegiate water polo athletes
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216369
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AT stevenlsmall headimpactssustainedbymalecollegiatewaterpoloathletes
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