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Professional Basketball Players: Athletic Profiles
The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1978The physical characteristics of basketball players are closely related to their position on the team, according to this study. The authors believe this type of information would be useful in the selection and training of players.
R B, Parr +4 more
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Ankle injuries in basketball players
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy, 1993AbstractWe carried out a retrospective study of the frequency of ankle sprains in basketball players. A questionnaire about previous ankle injuries, time off after such injuries, current ankle problems, personal data, number of practice hours and the use of prophylactic measures was sent out to 102 basketball players in a second division league in ...
J, Leanderson, G, Nemeth, E, Eriksson
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Back Injuries In Basketball Players
Clinics in Sports Medicine, 1993The basketball player with lower back or lower extremity radicular pain needs to be carefully evaluated. A complete history of any previous symptomatology and a specific history of the new injury are absolutely essential. A careful physical examination with an understanding of the anatomy as well as possible causes of the lower back pain is crucial. An
A, Herskowitz, H, Selesnick
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Osteoarthritis in Basketball Players
2020Osteoarthritis is the most common form of arthritis and is especially prevalent in basketball players. Due primarily to the high-intensity cyclic loading and regular occurrence of injuries that impact normal anatomic biomechanics, basketball players are at a unique risk for early onset osteoarthritis of the knees and ankle especially when compared with
Richard Danilkowicz +3 more
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2020
The number of female athletes, including female basketball players, at all levels of competition has steadily grown over the past several decades. Basketball remains the third most popular high school level sport for females [1]. Since the creation of the WNBA in 1996, the number of collegiate women’s basketball teams has grown.
Kenzie Johnston +5 more
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The number of female athletes, including female basketball players, at all levels of competition has steadily grown over the past several decades. Basketball remains the third most popular high school level sport for females [1]. Since the creation of the WNBA in 1996, the number of collegiate women’s basketball teams has grown.
Kenzie Johnston +5 more
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Osteitis Pubis in a Basketball Player
The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1988In brief:An 18-year-old male varsity basketball player complained of lower left abdominal pain of a month's duration. Laboratory tests were normal, and no hernia was present. A computed tomography scan showed no abnormality, and fraying of the pubic bone along the symphysis was too subtle to detect on x-ray.
R L, Pearson, C E, Nagle
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Facial Injuries In Basketball Players
Clinics in Sports Medicine, 1993As the popularity of basketball increases and the style of the game becomes more physical, there is an increasing number of basketball-related injuries. Although most facial injuries sustained while playing basketball are relatively minor, severe and permanent injuries do occur.
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Individual Recovery Profiles in Basketball Players
The Spanish Journal of Psychology, 2015AbstractIn the sport context, recovery has been characterized as a multifactor process (physiological, psychological, behavioral, social, etc.). This study takes a multidisciplinary approach to find psychophysiological markers of the stress-recovery process.
Jordi, Moreno +4 more
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2017
This chapter focuses on a defunct version of high school girls' basketball known as “six-on-six” and how it expressed community identity in Iowa. Throughout the twentieth century, more than a million Iowa high school girls played the half-court, two-dribble version of basketball known as “six-on-six.” Originally conceived to accommodate girls and women'
Jaime Schultz, Shelley Lucas
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This chapter focuses on a defunct version of high school girls' basketball known as “six-on-six” and how it expressed community identity in Iowa. Throughout the twentieth century, more than a million Iowa high school girls played the half-court, two-dribble version of basketball known as “six-on-six.” Originally conceived to accommodate girls and women'
Jaime Schultz, Shelley Lucas
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Pericarditis in a Collegiate Basketball Player
Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, 1996To present an uncommon cause of chest pain in an athlete.A 17-year-old black man suffered recurrent episodes of chest pain due to pericarditis. Based on presentation and serology, he was diagnosed as having unspecified connective tissue disease.Rheumatologic disease will often manifest over a period of time.
H A, Stiene, W S, Black
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