Abstract

Shoulder and elbow injuries are commonplace in high school baseball. Although altered shoulder range of motion (ROM) and humeral retrotorsion angles have been associated with injuries, the efficacy of preseason screening of these characteristics remains controversial. We conducted preseason screenings for shoulder internal and external rotation ROM and humeral retrotorsion on 832 high school baseball players and tracked their exposure and incidence on throwing-related shoulder and elbow injuries during a subsequent season. Poisson regression with robust error variance was used to determine whether preseason screening could identify injury risk in baseball players and whether the injury risk was higher for pitchers compared with players who do not pitch. Shoulder rotation ROM or humeral retrotorsion at preseason did not predict the risk of throwing-related upper extremity injury (P = .15-.89). Injury risk was 3.84 higher for baseball players who pitched compared with those who did not (95% confidence interval, 1.72-8.56; P = .001). Preseason measures of shoulder ROM and humeral retrotorsion may not be effective in identifying players who are at increased injury risk. Because shoulder ROM is a measure that fluctuates under a variety of influences, future study should investigate whether taking multiple measurements during a season can identify at-risk players. The usefulness of preseason screening may also depend on rigor of participation in sports. Future studies should investigate how preseason shoulder characteristics and participation factors (ie, pitch count and frequency, competitive level, pitching in multiple leagues) interact to predict injury risk in baseball players.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call