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Relationship Between Sport Specialization and Short-Term Health-Related Quality of Life in Youth Athletes After Injury.

Stover D, Verma R, DeMaio E, Render A, Shenvi N, Easley KA, Stracciolini A, Jayanthi N, LaBella C.

Resumen ejecutivo en español

📌 TL;DR: Estudio revela que la especialización deportiva no afecta negativamente la calidad de vida post-injuria en jóvenes atletas.

🔬 Puntos clave:

🎯 Aplicación clínica para LATAM:
En la práctica deportiva en Panamá y América Latina, este estudio sugiere que el seguimiento adecuado de las mujeres atletas es crucial después de una lesión. Es importante considerar estos hallazgos al diseñar estrategias de atención médica.

⚠ Limitaciones:
El estudio se realizó en un grupo de jóvenes atletas con especialización deportiva, lo que limita la generalizabilidad a otros grupos poblacionales.

Este resumen ejecutivo resume los puntos clave del artículo sin repasar detalles específicos del estudio.

Abstract original

Background

Researchers have examined associations between sport specialization and injury. However, no studies have investigated associations between sport specialization and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) after injury.

Hypothesis

Among injured youth athletes, level of sport specialization is not associated with differences in HRQoL approximately 1 month after sport-related injury.

Study design

Cross-sectional study.

Level of evidence

Level 4.

Methods

A multicenter, cross-sectional study was performed at 3 primary care sports medicine clinics. Eligible 8- to 18-year-old athletes who presented for musculoskeletal injury or concussion were enrolled. At the initial clinic visit, patients completed the Player Development Survey (PDS) to determine sport specialization level. Approximately 1 month after enrollment, patients completed the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) to determine HRQoL measures.

Results

Of 720 athletes invited to participate, 336 (age, 14.2 ± 2.4 years) completed the PDS and PROMIS surveys; 22% were highly specialized, 39% were moderately specialized, and 39% were low specialized athletes. Overall, there were no differences in HRQoL scores across the 3 levels of sport specialization. In subgroup analysis based on sex, female HRQoL scores were worse than male HRQoL scores irrespective of sport specialization level in 3 categories: pain interference (mean difference between female and male scores [± SEM] = 2.3 ± 1.1; P = 0.04), depression/sadness (2.9 ± 1.1; P = 0.01), and anxiety/fear (2.8 ± 1.2; P = 0.02).

Conclusion

Higher level of sport specialization is not associated with worse HRQoL approximately 1 month after sport-related injury. Female athletes have worse short-term HRQoL after an injury irrespective of sport specialization level. While sex differences were statistically significant, the magnitude of differences was small.

Clinical relevance

Sport specialization is not associated with differences in HRQoL after injury. Injured female athletes may need closer monitoring due to possibly worse short-term HRQoL, but further investigation is needed.

Cómo citar:
Stover D, Verma R, DeMaio E, Render A, Shenvi N, Easley KA, Stracciolini A, Jayanthi N, LaBella C. (2026). Relationship Between Sport Specialization and Short-Term Health-Related Quality of Life in Youth Athletes After Injury.. Sports health.
DOI: 10.1177/19417381251410544 ↗
PMID: 41629770 ↗
Acceso al paper: Ver completo ↗

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