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Soccer Players May
Need Protective Eyewear
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - An
analysis of eye injuries in soccer players suggests that players
could benefit from protective eye gear, researchers report.
Because of the rapid rise in popularity
among school children, "it is possible that soccer may become
worldwide the most common cause of sports injury," according to
Dr. Joao C. Capao Filipe of the University of Porto School of
Medicine in Portugal and colleagues.
In their study, the researchers
looked at 163 soccer players who sustained an eye injury between
1992 and 2000. Although the injured ranged in age from 8 to 48,
the bulk of the patients were young men who sustained an eye injury
from a kicked ball while they were near the goal post.
Only three patients had permanent,
severe vision loss, but 12 percent required hospitalization and
14 percent of patients needed one or more surgical procedures,
usually for a detached retina. Overall, 76 percent of injuries
were classified as "severe."
"One of the most surprising results
of our data was that the age, sex, type of soccer, level of athletic
expertise and player position did not relate to the severity of
... injury," according to the report in the journal the Archives
of Ophthalmology.
"It is a common misconception that
experience in itself protects from injury," they write.
The findings suggest that protective
eyewear designed specifically for soccer is needed, the researchers
conclude.
This may be especially important
for players who require prescription lenses, those who have had
surgical procedures that weaken the eye or those who already have
severe vision loss in an eye, they said.
SOURCE: Archives of Ophthalmology
2003;121:687-694.
Reference
Source 89
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