Christian Victoria
New York University
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Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2016
Victor Lopez; Richard Ma; Meryle Weinstein; Robert C. Cantu; Laurel S.D. Myers; Nisha S. Nadkar; Christian Victoria; Answorth A. Allen
PURPOSE There is a comparative lack of concussion incidence data on the new Olympic sport Rugby 7s. This study aimed to determine the incidence (number of concussions per 1000 playing hours [ph]), mean and median severity (days absence), and cause of concussive injuries. METHODS This is a prospective epidemiology study, amateur to elite/national candidate, male (9768) and female (3876) players in USA Rugby sanctioned tournaments, compliant with the international consensus statement for studies in rugby union. RESULTS Concussions in US Rugby 7s were 7.7/1000 ph (n = 67). Women encountered concussions at 8.1/1000 ph, and men at 7.6/1000 ph (risk ratio [RR] = 1.10, P = 0.593). Elite/national-level players encountered concussions at higher rates (18.3/1000 ph) than lower levels (6.4/1000 ph; RR = 5.48, P < 0.001). Nonelite backs had higher concussive injury rates compared with forwards (7.7/1000 ph; 3.6/1000 ph; RR = 1.28, P = 0.024). Women missed 36.7 d absence from play, meanwhile men missed 27.9 d (P = 0.245). Retrospective history recall reflected previous concussive injuries occurred in 43% of the current studys cohort; of these, 57% encountered multiple concussions within 1 yr. The incidence of repetitive concussions was not statistically different between genders (RR = 1.09, P = 0.754). Most concussions occurred from tackles (63%) and collisions (24%) (P = 0.056). CONCLUSIONS Sports-related concussions occurred with frequency among US amateur Rugby 7s players. US Elite tournament players sustained concussions at much higher rates than international male Rugby 7s counterparts. A substantial portion of US players who sustained a concussion had previous concussion injuries. Given the high rate of concussion, including repetitive concussive injuries, US Rugby 7s may benefit from concussion prevention measures similar to other contact sports such as instruction on proper tackling techniques, in-game and postgame medical assessment, and a standardized return-to-play protocol.
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2016
Richard Ma; Victor Lopez; Meryle Weinstein; James L. Chen; Christopher M. Black; Arun T. Gupta; Justin D. Harbst; Christian Victoria; Answorth A. Allen
PURPOSE The objective of this study is to determine incidence (injuries/1000 playing hours (ph)), severity (days of absence), and cause of match injuries in US womens Rugby-7s. METHODS We performed a prospective epidemiological study (2010-2013) of injury of 3876 under-19 to elite/national female Rugby-7s players (nonelite = 3324, elite = 552) on 323 teams (nonelite = 277, elite = 46), applying methodology and injury definitions compliant with the international consensus statement on rugby research. Injuries occurred in USA Rugby-sanctioned tournament series: USA Rugby Local Area (2010), Territorial Union (2011-2013), National and All-Star Sevens Series, and USA Sevens Invitational (2011-2012) and Collegiate Rugby Championships (2012). RESULTS One hundred and twenty time-loss injuries were encountered (elite, n = 15; 13%) with an injury rate of 46.3 injuries/1000 ph. Injury rates in nonelite were 49.3/1000 ph, and in national level (elite) candidates, 32.6/1000 ph (RR = 1.5, P = 0.130). Mean days missed found elite level players at 74.9 d per injury, whereas nonelite at 41.8 d (P = 0.090). Acute injuries were significant (95%, RR = 1.9, P < 0.001), resulting in immediate removal from the pitch (56%, P < 0.001). The main mechanism of injury occurred when tackling players (73%, P < 0.001). The most common type of injury seen were ligament sprains (37%, 13.9/1000 ph), involving the lower extremity (45%, 20.5/1000 ph). The most common body parts injured were the knee and head/face (16%, 7.3/1000 ph). CONCLUSIONS Time-loss injuries occurred with frequency in the US womens Rugby-7s tournaments. Overall injury rates in US women are lower than those in international elite men and womens Rugby-7s. The head and neck area in our female players was injured at greater rates (16%) than in international male Rugby-7s (5%). Injury prevention in US womens Rugby-7s must focus on injuries of the knee, head, and neck. Understanding risk factors will allow safe return-to-play decisions and formulate injury prevention protocols.
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2018
Christian Victoria; Victor Lopez; Richard Ma; Meryle Weinstein; James L. Chen; Arun T. Gupta; Samuel Y. Haleem; Answorth A. Allen
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2018
Richard Ma; Victor Lopez; Meryle Weinstein; Christian Victoria; James L. Chen; Arun T. Gupta; Martena T. Mettry; Answorth A. Allen
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2017
Christian Victoria; Victor Lopez; Richard Ma; Meryle Weinstein; Patria A. Hume; Robert C. Cantu; Sophie C. Queler; Answorth A. Allen
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2017
Richard Ma; Victor Lopez; Meryle Weinstein; Patria A. Hume; Robert C. Cantu; Christian Victoria; Sophie C. Queler; Khalil J.A. Webb; Answorth A. Allen
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2017
Laurel S.D. Myers; Victor Lopez; Richard Ma; Meryle Weinstein; Patria A. Hume; Robert C. Cantu; Christian Victoria; Erica D. Marcano; Michael S. Wilinski; Answorth A. Allen
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2017
Victor Lopez; Richard Ma; Meryle Weinstein; Patria A. Hume; Robert C. Cantu; Christian Victoria; Jake Marshall; Tony Locrotondo; Nisha S. Nadkar; Answorth A. Allen
British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2017
Victor Lopez; Richard Ma; Meryle Weinstein; Patria A. Hume; Robert C. Cantu; Christian Victoria; Erica D. Marcano; Allen Answorth
British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2017
Victor Lopez; Richard Ma; Meryle Weinstein; Patria A. Hume; Robert C. Cantu; Laurel S.D. Myers; Christian Victoria; Nisha Nadkar; Allen Answorth