1.Weight control practices of Philippine National Wushu Sanda Athletes: A study protocol.
Karen Leslie LEE-PINEDA ; Karen Anne ALEJO ; Paolo Rafael Santamaria ABELA ; Matthew AGUADO ; Ana Katrina AMBAL ; Marco Sebastian ATOS ; Miguel Angelo Castillo BALANKIG ; Sean Brix CUISON ; Ethaniel Tichangco ENCARNACION
Philippine Journal of Allied Health Sciences 2025;9(1):68-74
BACKGROUND
Combat sports are intense and physically demanding, and healthy weight control practices are necessary to ensure a safe and fair competition for all athletes involved.
OBJECTIVEThe study will determine the dietary and non-dietary weight control practices of Philippine National Wushu Sanda athletes. It will also aim to explore the perceived effects of these practices on performance and well-being.
METHODOLOGYA qualitative study using semi-structured interviews will be used to gain insights into the athletes' experiences, habits, and practices regarding their weight control practices. The semi-structured questionnaire will focus on daily food intake, weight control practices, and their effects on performance and well-being. Thematic data analysis will be used to analyze the data.
EXPECTED RESULTSWeight control practices of Wushu Sanda Athletes vary depending on the training phase. Both dietary practices, such as water intake, skipping meals, and food choices, and non-dietary practices, such as intense training and sweat suits, are expected to be observed to achieve their desired weight. These practices are anticipated to have been influenced by their coaches and senior athletes, having both positive and negative effects on the athlete’s physical, mental, and psychological well-being.
Human ; Martial Arts ; Sports ; Athletes
2.Echo intensity and shear wave elastography in athletes with previous hamstring injury: A systematic review protocol
Maria Belinda Cristina Fidel ; Charidy Ramos ; Helen Banwell ; Consuelo Gonzalez-Suarez
Philippine Journal of Allied Health Sciences 2024;7(2):58-62
Background:
Hamstring strain injury remains persistently high in sports, highlighting the need for additional investigation of its predisposing
variables. Despite hamstring injury being well investigated, there’s a lack of studies on changes in echo intensity and shear wave elastography of
hamstrings among athletes with a history of injury, which could be considered modifiable risk variables.
Objectives:
To examine echo intensity and shear wave elastography characteristics of previously injured hamstrings among athletes, assessing the differences between the injured leg and controls.
Methods:
This systematic review will focus on studies reporting echo intensity and shear wave elastography characteristics of athletes
with a history of hamstring strain injury compared to a control group. The search strategy will locate studies written in English from 1990 to 2023
using four electronic databases: PubMed, EBSCO (CINAHL and Medline), Science Direct, and Web of Science. Studies reporting measures using
imaging other than ultrasound and where no diagnosis of hamstring strain has been made will be excluded. Two independent reviewers will screen
and critically appraise the studies using the McMasters Critical Review Form. Two reviewers will independently extract relevant data and present
a descriptive synthesis. A meta-analysis will be conducted when two or more studies provide data for the same outcome measure.
Expected Results
This review can better understand hamstring maladaptation to injury. Utilizing echo-intensity and shear wave elastography as objective
outcome measures can inform clinical practice toward developing an effective rehabilitation program for injury prevention.
Wounds and Injuries
;
Sports
;
Rehabilitation
3.Global warming and the Summer Olympic and Paralympic games: a perspective from the Tokyo 2020 Games.
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2022;27(0):7-7
The Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games provided a significant opportunity to consider global warming as an issue to be seriously addressed to run the safe and fair games in the era of climate change. As the global temperature continuously rises and extreme hot-weather events increase in frequency and intensity, the future summer Olympic and Paralympic games will need to deal with the heat by applying thorough and appropriate countermeasures. In the recent decades, many mitigation measures to protect athletes from heat have been rapidly discussed by the sports community, including countermeasures to hold games at times and places with moderate temperature and climatic risk assessments with Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) during the games. However, the excessive heat conditions in the Tokyo 2020 Games affected not only athletes, but also all people concerned the events. While deliberate considerations by organizers had been given to mitigate extraordinary heat, the evaluations of these measures and epidemiological analyses of risk factors of patients must be further enhanced to develop efficient measures for the future. Therefore, we discussed the underlying climate-related problems of the summer Olympic and Paralympic Games in view of what we had experienced in the Tokyo 2020 Games. Facing with emerging global warming, future intervention against heat in the summer Olympic and Paralympic games will need to integrate systematic disease surveillance and evaluation of intervention with an effective combination with the approaches previously conducted. The Tokyo 2020 Games is a wake-up call to accelerate the public health measures towards the creeping global warming.
Biodiversity
;
Global Warming
;
Humans
;
Sports
;
Temperature
;
Tokyo
4.Current research progress on health problems and health management of E-sports players.
Jun TAN ; Xiao Ting SUN ; De Rong PENG
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2022;40(5):392-395
Electronic sports (E-sports) are series of competitive activities different from the traditional physical sports, and E-sports athlete is becoming a new profession. Along with the fast development of E-sports industry, the number of E-sports athletes increased tremendously. The early retirement of some top-ranking athletes caused by occupational injuries has aroused the societal attentions on the health problems of E-sports athletes. Facing special occupational exposure, E-sports athletes encounter different health issues comparing to the counterparts of their ages. It is necessary to scientifically identify their health hazards and common health issues, in order to conduct effective health management for this particular professional group. This review summarized global literature on health issues and health management on E-sports athletes. The research on their health issues were mainly descriptive and there was a paucity on interventional research and health management. These provide references and directions on the future health services and research on E-sports athletes.
Athletes
;
Athletic Injuries/prevention & control*
;
Electronics
;
Humans
;
Occupational Injuries
;
Sports
5.Epidemiology of Sports-Related Sudden Death in Guangdong Province.
Cheng-Dong MA ; Qiu-Ping WU ; Qian-Hao ZHAO ; YIN-KUN ; Nan ZHOU ; Sai-Qun WU ; Jian-Ding CHENG
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2022;38(2):246-253
OBJECTIVES:
By retrospective study of the epidemiological characteristics of sports-related sudden death (SrSD), the risk factors associated with SrSD were analyzed and explored to provide a scientific basis for comprehensive prevention and treatment of SrSD.
METHODS:
The personal information (sex, age, occupation, etc.), case information (time, place, type of sports, relative time between SrSD occurrence and exercise, etc.), death related information (sign or prodrome, medical history and surgical history, etc.), rescue situation (witnesses, on-site assistance, the availability of paramedics, etc.) of 374 SrSD cases in Guangdong Province from 2017 to 2021 were collected. Statistical analysis was conducted aiming at the key factors.
RESULTS:
In the 374 cases, there were significantly more males than females (19.78:1); the number of people aged between >39 and 59 was the largest (151, 40.37%); non-manual workers (68.98%) were more than manual workers; the top three sports with the highest number cases were basketball (34.49%), running (19.52%) and badminton (12.03%); from 3 pm to 9 pm (63.10%) was the time period with the highest incidence of events; sudden death mainly occurred during exercise (75.27%) and within 1 h after exercise (20.05%); the on-site rescue rate was very low (6.15%); the rate of autopsies was extremely low (1.07%); sudden cardiac death was the most common cause (67.11%).
CONCLUSIONS
SrSD is most common in males aged >39 to 59 years old, mostly in non-manual workers, and usually occurs in basketball and running. Sudden death is more likely to occur during exercise and within 1 h after exercise. Therefore, the above potential risk factors should be focused on and studied in daily comprehensive prevention and treatment to provide scientific basis for accurate prevention and first aid of such sudden death.
Adult
;
Autopsy
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Death, Sudden, Cardiac/prevention & control*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Sports
6.Anesthesia management of athletes' operation in Beijing Olympic Winter Games.
Zhi Yu KANG ; Lei Lei WANG ; Yong Zheng HAN ; Xiang Yang GUO
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences) 2022;54(4):770-773
According to literature reports, the injury rate of the athletes in Olympic Winter Games recent years was as high as 10%-14%. Combined with the background of corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the medical insurance work of the 24th Olympic Winter Games held in Beijing had put forward more complicated requirements and more severe challenges. In order to better optimize anesthesia management, this article summarized the perioperative treatment of athletes in Olympic Winter Games, the safety protection strategy of medical staff under general anesthesia, and the potential impact of peri-operative drugs on athletes. Anesthesiologists, as the core members of the rescue team, should be familiar with the particularity of operative anesthesia of athletes, sum up relevant experience to ensure the safety of perioperative patients. So all kinds of technical measures should be taken in the process of operation to minimize the indoor pollution caused by the patient's cough. For example, all the patients should wear N95 masks from the ward to the operating room, and after the operation, wear the N95 masks back to the ward. Although the International Olympic Committee had banned more than 200 drugs for participants and athletes who had to strictly follow International Olympic Committee requirements during anesthesia, the athletes were no longer participating in this Olympic Winter Games, so opioids (sufentanil and remifentanil) and glucocorticoid (dexamethasone) could be used according to the actual needs of surgery and anesthesia. Five athletes in Yanqing competition area underwent surgical anesthesia in Peking University Third Hospital Yanqing Hospital. All the five patients received general anesthesia, of whom four underwent orthopaedic surgery and one underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy. General anesthesia with laryngeal mask airway was the first choice in the five patients. And the pain after orthopaedic surgery was severe and nerve block technique could effectively relieve the pain after surgery. Three patients received ultrasound-guided nerve block analgesia, the postoperative analgesia lasted 36 h. After the operation, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) was infused intravenously in the ward and all the patients recovered uneventfully. As the core member of the trauma rescue team, anesthesiologists should be familiar with the particularity of the athletes' surgical anesthesia, do a good job in medical security, and summarize relevant experience to ensure the life safety of the perioperative patients.
Anesthesia/methods*
;
Anniversaries and Special Events
;
Athletic Injuries/surgery*
;
Beijing/epidemiology*
;
COVID-19/prevention & control*
;
Humans
;
Pain Management/methods*
;
Sports
7.Incidence and risk factors for musculoskeletal injuries among Indonesian Junior Badminton Athletes during a National Elite Championship
Finna A Suryanto ; Indah Suci Widyahening ; Ade Jeanne Tobing
Acta Medica Philippina 2022;56(1):37-41
Objective:
This study aimed to investigate the incidence and risk factors for musculoskeletal injuries among junior badminton athletes during a national championship.
Methods:
A retrospective cohort study was conducted among 128 junior badminton athletes who were members of one Indonesian badminton club and participated in the National Premier Circuit held in June 2019 in West Java, Indonesia. Data on demographic characteristics, history of previous and current injuries, physical examination, diagnosis (type, anatomical structure involved, and location), and treatment of injuries were collected along with data on the format of the game (single, double, or combination), and the number of matches for each respective athlete. Measures of injury frequency used were the incidence proportion and clinical incidence. Determinant factors for incidence were investigated.
Results:
Twenty-four injury events involving 23 athletes were recorded, with an incidence proportion of 23/128 athletes (18%) and a clinical incidence of 24/128 athletes or 18.8 per 100 athletes. Acute injuries were more frequent (13/24, 54.2%) than chronic/overuse injuries. More than half (14/24, 58.3%) of the injuries occurred in the lower extremities. Factors that increased the risk of injury were age ≥ 15 years (relative risk [RR] = 6.26, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.96, 20.04, p < 0.001), and the number of matches ≥ 3 (RR = 3.79, 95% CI 1.61, 8.92, p = 0.001).
Conclusion
Musculoskeletal injuries occurred frequently among Indonesian junior badminton athletes during the national elite championship. An effective injury-prevention program specific to young athletes should be developed to maintain their future participation and performance in competition.
Racquet Sports
;
Wounds and Injuries
;
Epidemiology
;
Athletes
;
Adolescent
8.Engagement in different sport disciplines during university years and risk of locomotive syndrome in older age: J-Fit
Shaoshuai SHEN ; Koya SUZUKI ; Yoshimitsu KOHMURA ; Noriyuki FUKU ; Yuki SOMEYA ; Hisashi NAITO
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2021;26(1):36-36
BACKGROUND:
Among former Olympic-level athletes, engagement in different sport disciplines has been associated with mortality risk in subsequent years. However, limited evidence is available on whether engagement in different sport disciplines at a young age is associated with locomotive syndrome (LS) risk later in life. This study examined the relationship between engagement in different sport disciplines during university years and LS risk in older age among former university athletes.
METHODS:
Participants were 274 middle-aged and 294 older men alumni who graduated from a school of physical education in Japan. LS risk was defined as answering "yes" to any of the Loco-check questions. Data on university sports club membership were collected using questionnaires. University clubs were classified into three groups of cardiovascular intensity (low, moderate, high), following the classification system of sport disciplines by the American College of Cardiology. This classification considers the static and dynamic components of an activity, which correspond to the estimated percent of maximal voluntary contraction reached and maximal oxygen uptake achieved, respectively. University clubs were grouped based on the risk of bodily collision (no, yes) and extent of physical contact (low, moderate, high). Relationships between engagement in different sport disciplines and LS risk were analyzed using Cox proportional hazards models, and adjusted for age, height, weight, joint disease, habitual exercise, and smoking and drinking status.
RESULTS:
Adjusted hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals associated with the low, moderate, and high cardiovascular intensity sports were 1.00 (reference), 0.48 (0.22-1.06, P = 0.070), and 0.44 (0.20-0.97, P = 0.042) in older men, respectively; however, there was no significant association between these parameters among middle-aged men. Engagement in sports associated with physical contact and collision did not affect LS risk in either group.
CONCLUSIONS
Engagement in sports associated with high cardiovascular intensity during university years may reduce the risk of LS in later life. Encouraging young people to participate in such activities might help reduce LS prevalence among older populations.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Athletes/statistics & numerical data*
;
Exercise
;
Geriatric Assessment
;
Humans
;
Japan/epidemiology*
;
Locomotion
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Mobility Limitation
;
Motor Disorders/etiology*
;
Postural Balance
;
Prevalence
;
Proportional Hazards Models
;
Risk Factors
;
Sports/statistics & numerical data*
;
Syndrome
;
Young Adult
10.Hoist the sails, promote the hopes.
Chinese Medical Journal 2021;134(24):2899-2900


Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail