1.CURRENT TREND IN SKI INJURIES AND BOOT TOP FRACTURE
SETSURO KURIYAMA ; WATARU KAWASHIMA ; SHOKICHI UEMURA ; YOSHIKATSU KUROKI ; ETSUO FUJIMAKI ; YOSHIAKI MORI ; TOMOO KATAGIRI ; KEIZO SAKAMOTO ; HIDEMASA SEKI
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 1980;29(3):177-187
1) The objectives of author's present study were 42, 245 patients with ratio of males to females of 7 to 3 in 44, 327 affected locations, covering the period of 23 years from the December of 1956 to the end of March of 1979.
2) All the injuries thus treated can be classified into 18, 815 (42.5%) of sprains, 11, 838 (26.7 %) of fractures, 9, 650 (21.8%) of lacerations, 2, 812 (6.4%) of contusions, 752 (1.7%) of dislocations and 460 (1.0%) of others.
3) Looking from auther's statistical study of the ski injuries in the past 23 years, the development of the ski equipments have largely effected on the ski injuries.
4) The lacerations on the head, face and arm are increased when the safety bindings have come into wide use. So, we expect the effect of the ski-stopper replacing the strap, in order to decrease the lacerations.
5) Injuries of the ankle have been decreased because of the plastic ski boots. Especially, “the ski fractures”, or, the abducted and external rotated fractures of the lateral malleolus are decreased remarkably.
6) The knee sprains, or, the ligamentous strains of medial colateral ligament of knee joint have been increased, because the stiff and high backed plastic ski boots have come into wide use.
7) Fractures of the lower legs and boot top fractures have been increased, according the development of the ski boots, such as from the leather boots to buckled boots to plastic boots.