Brief reportInjury patterns with snowboarding
References (14)
- et al.
Snowboarding trauma
J Pediatr Surg
(1995) - et al.
Differing injury patterns in snowboarding and alpine skiing
Injury
(1996) - et al.
Severe snowboarding injuries
Injury
(1995) - et al.
Snowboarding injuries: A four-year study with comparison with alpine ski injuries
West J Med
(1996) - et al.
Spectrum of injuries from snowboarding
J Trauma
(1996) - et al.
Snowboard injuries
Am J Sports Med
(1989) - et al.
Australian snowboard injury data base study: A four-year prospective study
Am J Sports Med
(1993)
Cited by (35)
Retrospective analysis of 616 air-rescue trauma cases related to the practice of extreme sports
2016, InjuryCitation Excerpt :Several kinds of ESs are practised, and a substantial part of the prehospital rescue operations is consequently devoted to accidents and injuries related to these activities. Previous publications generally focused on a specific sport, such as airborne sports [6–8], rock climbing [9,10], skiing and snowboarding [11–13] or mountain biking [14], regardless of their way of practising (extreme or not) or the mechanism of the lesion (acute accidental or chronic) [15,16]. Those who practise ESs are required to test their courage and their own boundaries [4].
Head Injuries in Winter Sports: Downhill Skiing, Snowboarding, Sledding, Snowmobiling, Ice Skating and Ice Hockey
2009, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North AmericaCitation Excerpt :There are very few published data on the risk and nature of head injury among Nordic or cross-country skiers. Snowboarding is a downhill alpine sport that was initially assumed to have injury patterns similar to those of skiing, but recent studies have shown that the incidence of head and spinal injuries in snowboarding is higher than previously documented.15 Injuries to the head and face represent 25% of all snowboarding injuries, and the rate of head and neck injury among snowboarders is one and a half to three that of skiers.1,2,16,17
Head Injuries in Winter Sports: Downhill Skiing, Snowboarding, Sledding, Snowmobiling, Ice Skating and Ice Hockey
2008, Neurologic ClinicsCitation Excerpt :There are very few published data on the risk and nature of head injury among Nordic or cross-country skiers. Snowboarding is a downhill alpine sport that was initially assumed to have injury patterns similar to those of skiing, but recent studies have shown that the incidence of head and spinal injuries in snowboarding is higher than previously documented [15]. Injuries to the head and face represent 25% of all snowboarding injuries, and the rate of head and neck injury among snowboarders is one and a half to three that of skiers [1,2,16,17].
Self-inflicted splenic injury in snowboarders: postural analysis of forward falls of 10 consecutive patients
2006, American Journal of Emergency MedicineSnowboarding
2004, Sport Orthopadie TraumatologieEpidemiology of athletic head and neck injuries
2003, Clinics in Sports Medicine