The Applied Sport Science and Medicine of Powerlifting and Para Powerlifting: A Systematic Scoping Review with Recommendations for Future Research
Kade Silverthorne, Matthew Morrison, Nicholas Cowley, Gabriella Munteanu, Mark W. Creaby, Ryan G. Timmins, Chieh-Ying Chiang, Jonathon Weakley

TL;DR
This review summarizes current research on powerlifting and para powerlifting to identify gaps and suggest future studies for improving performance and reducing injuries.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive scoping review and actionable recommendations to guide future research in powerlifting and para powerlifting.
Findings
Most research focuses on physical qualities and competition, with fewer studies on injury and psychology.
Only seven studies exclusively examined female athletes, highlighting a gap in gender-specific research.
Performance-enhancing drug use prevalence is unknown due to outdated data from 2003.
Abstract
Powerlifting is a strength sport featuring some of the world’s strongest athletes. Recent decades have seen an exponential increase in research into the applied sport science and medicine of powerlifting and its Paralympic counterpart, para powerlifting. A scoping review of the area would provide athletes, coaches, policymakers, and researchers with an overview of the existing evidence to support performance, reduce injury, and foster further growth of these sports. The primary objectives were to identify the current research into the applied sport science and medicine of powerlifting and para powerlifting, analyse the characteristics of the research, provide a brief summary of the research in each area of sport science and medicine, identify gaps in the current literature, and provide recommendations for future research. Systematic searches of SPORTDiscus, CINAHL, MEDLINE, and Scopus…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsSports injuries and prevention · Cardiovascular Effects of Exercise · Sports Performance and Training
