בשל "הגנת זכויות יוצרים" מובא להלן קישור לתקציר המאמר. לקריאתו בטקסט מלא, אנא פנה/י לספרייה הרפואית הזמינה לך.
Strategies to identify lower extremity musculoskeletal (LEMSK) injury risk have been informed by prospectively identified biomechanical and neuromuscular risk factors.
Emergent evidence suggests that cognitive and oculomotor performance may also contribute to LEMSK injury.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether prospective cognitive and oculomotor measures identify adolescent athletes who sustain an in-season LEMSK injury.
Controlled laboratory and athletic event settings.
Four hundred eighty-eight adolescent male football and female soccer athletes aged 13 to 18 years.