Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlon

BACKGROUND: There is a need for ongoing scrutiny of injury and illness profiles of ultra-distance athletes. This study aimed to record the medical history, illness and injuries of athletes receiving medical attention during the 2014 Ironman South Africa (IMSA) triathlon, and to investigate the temporal presentation of medical encounters. METHODS: This was a retrospective, cross-sectional study. All athletes who required medical attention at the main medical tent and all of the medical posts or mobile units along the route were included in this study A total of 2 331 athletes started the race. Data included age, gender, time and stage of the race when medical attention was required, pre-race medical history and medication use, illness and injuries treated, special investigations performed, and weather conditions. RESULTS: Overall, 179 athletes (7.7%) required medical attention. The incidence of medical encounters was 7.8%. A significantly higher percentage of younger participants encountered medical problems (P = 0.04). Most patient encounters (80.1%) occurred after the race. The median duration of treatment was 26 minutes. Medication was used by 35.1% of patients during the race. The most common medical encounters were exertion-related (71.2%), gastrointestinal (16.4%), dermatological (11.9%), musculoskeletal (9.6%) and cardiorespiratory conditions (2.4%). CONCLUSION: Medical encounters occurred more frequently in later stages of the race. Most medical conditions were exertion-related. Potential higher risk may be associated with medication use, recent illness, and in younger participants. Temporal stacking of medical personnel, planning of resources according to expected conditions, preventative measures for high-risk behaviour, and on-going data collection with comparable methodology are recommended.

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Main Authors: Holtzhausen,L J, Smit,C R, Joubert,G, von Hagen,K
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: The South African Sports Medicine Association 2018
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1015-51632018000100003
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spelling oai:scielo:S1015-516320180001000032019-01-18Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlonHoltzhausen,L JSmit,C RJoubert,Gvon Hagen,K triathletes medical encounters medication use treatment event medical management BACKGROUND: There is a need for ongoing scrutiny of injury and illness profiles of ultra-distance athletes. This study aimed to record the medical history, illness and injuries of athletes receiving medical attention during the 2014 Ironman South Africa (IMSA) triathlon, and to investigate the temporal presentation of medical encounters. METHODS: This was a retrospective, cross-sectional study. All athletes who required medical attention at the main medical tent and all of the medical posts or mobile units along the route were included in this study A total of 2 331 athletes started the race. Data included age, gender, time and stage of the race when medical attention was required, pre-race medical history and medication use, illness and injuries treated, special investigations performed, and weather conditions. RESULTS: Overall, 179 athletes (7.7%) required medical attention. The incidence of medical encounters was 7.8%. A significantly higher percentage of younger participants encountered medical problems (P = 0.04). Most patient encounters (80.1%) occurred after the race. The median duration of treatment was 26 minutes. Medication was used by 35.1% of patients during the race. The most common medical encounters were exertion-related (71.2%), gastrointestinal (16.4%), dermatological (11.9%), musculoskeletal (9.6%) and cardiorespiratory conditions (2.4%). CONCLUSION: Medical encounters occurred more frequently in later stages of the race. Most medical conditions were exertion-related. Potential higher risk may be associated with medication use, recent illness, and in younger participants. Temporal stacking of medical personnel, planning of resources according to expected conditions, preventative measures for high-risk behaviour, and on-going data collection with comparable methodology are recommended.The South African Sports Medicine AssociationSouth African Journal of Sports Medicine v.30 n.1 20182018-01-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1015-51632018000100003en
institution SCIELO
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country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
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databasecode rev-scielo-za
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libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Holtzhausen,L J
Smit,C R
Joubert,G
von Hagen,K
spellingShingle Holtzhausen,L J
Smit,C R
Joubert,G
von Hagen,K
Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlon
author_facet Holtzhausen,L J
Smit,C R
Joubert,G
von Hagen,K
author_sort Holtzhausen,L J
title Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlon
title_short Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlon
title_full Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlon
title_fullStr Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlon
title_full_unstemmed Injury and illness profiles during the 2014 South African Ironman triathlon
title_sort injury and illness profiles during the 2014 south african ironman triathlon
description BACKGROUND: There is a need for ongoing scrutiny of injury and illness profiles of ultra-distance athletes. This study aimed to record the medical history, illness and injuries of athletes receiving medical attention during the 2014 Ironman South Africa (IMSA) triathlon, and to investigate the temporal presentation of medical encounters. METHODS: This was a retrospective, cross-sectional study. All athletes who required medical attention at the main medical tent and all of the medical posts or mobile units along the route were included in this study A total of 2 331 athletes started the race. Data included age, gender, time and stage of the race when medical attention was required, pre-race medical history and medication use, illness and injuries treated, special investigations performed, and weather conditions. RESULTS: Overall, 179 athletes (7.7%) required medical attention. The incidence of medical encounters was 7.8%. A significantly higher percentage of younger participants encountered medical problems (P = 0.04). Most patient encounters (80.1%) occurred after the race. The median duration of treatment was 26 minutes. Medication was used by 35.1% of patients during the race. The most common medical encounters were exertion-related (71.2%), gastrointestinal (16.4%), dermatological (11.9%), musculoskeletal (9.6%) and cardiorespiratory conditions (2.4%). CONCLUSION: Medical encounters occurred more frequently in later stages of the race. Most medical conditions were exertion-related. Potential higher risk may be associated with medication use, recent illness, and in younger participants. Temporal stacking of medical personnel, planning of resources according to expected conditions, preventative measures for high-risk behaviour, and on-going data collection with comparable methodology are recommended.
publisher The South African Sports Medicine Association
publishDate 2018
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1015-51632018000100003
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