Lower Extremity Injuries in Elite Snowsport Athletes: A Retrospective Survey
Buket Sevindik Aktas, Esedullah Akaras, E. Whitney G. Moore, Ersagun Kepir, Anthony Kulas, Gokhan Yagiz

TL;DR
This study examines lower extremity injuries in elite snowsport athletes, finding that ankle sprains are most common while MTSS and ACL injuries cause the most time lost from training and competition.
Contribution
The study provides sex- and sport-specific insights into injury incidence and burden in elite snowsport athletes, highlighting the need for targeted prevention strategies.
Findings
Ankle sprains were the highest-incident injury across most snowsport disciplines and sexes.
Medial tibial stress syndrome (MTSS) and anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries caused the greatest injury burden.
Injury patterns varied significantly by sex and snowsport discipline, with ACL damage being most burdensome for Alpine skiers.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Lower extremity injuries represent a major health concern in elite snowsport disciplines, where high mechanical loads, complex movement patterns, and demanding environmental conditions substantially increase injury risk. Understanding injury incidence and burden in this population is essential for developing sport- and sex-specific prevention strategies. This retrospective study determined lower extremity injury incidence and burden among elite snowsport athletes. Methods: Ninety-nine Turkish National Snowsport Teams Training Camp athletes (34 females; 65 males) consented to a review of their medical records for injury incidence. Overall, sex- and sport-specific injury incidence (number/10,000 h) and burden (weeks missing/10,000 h) were calculated. Results: Overall, medial tibial stress syndrome (MTSS) was the highest burden (9.5 ± 38.7), and ankle sprain (1.7 ±…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWinter Sports Injuries and Performance · Sports injuries and prevention · Foot and Ankle Surgery
