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1 roach for the fight against these threats to sport.
2 Netherlands Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport.
3 by the Dutch Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport.
4 chedules, as well as specialization into one sport.
5 eading cause of mortality in athletes during sport.
6 lision sport, and those who did not play any sport.
7 to 45 years of age during participation in a sport.
8 ions in real-world tasks such as driving and sports.
9 the most widely discussed injury in contact sports.
10 x and dynamic and static components of their sports.
11 and also compared with that in other Olympic sports.
12 sciplines and in contrast with other Olympic sports.
13 followed a trajectory of no participation in sports.
14 n the evening was confirmed across different sports.
15 unduplicated athletes participating in >/= 1 sports.
16 r arrhythmia- or shock-related injury-during sports.
17 basketball, and soccer were the most common sports.
18 ct the abuse of anabolic substances in human sports.
19 ure lend credence to contagious phenomena in sports.
20 sports and 58 occurred during noncompetitive sports.
21 important for high level performance in many sports.
22 ssing, and everyday activities, such as ball sports.
23 uncommon during participation in competitive sports.
24 day functioning, particularly in driving and sports.
25 cidents, the battlefield and in full-contact sports.
26 ith incident asthma, and of participation in sports (0.82 [0.77-0.89]), cycling (0.81 [0.76-0.87]), g
30 rison, 62 Italian players with similar ages, sport achievements, and training schedules were included
31 outcome of sudden cardiac death (SCD) during sport activities among women in the general population.
32 d or not) during competitive or recreational sport activities, 43 (5.2%) such events occurred in wome
33 udy examined the associations between common sporting activities and the incidence of falls, and whet
35 d at preventing sudden cardiac arrest during sports activities are thought to be able to identify at-
36 the 1247 SCA cases, 63 (5%) occurred during sports activities at a mean age of 51.1+/-8.8 years, yie
38 rrests that occurred during participation in sports activities within a specific region of Canada and
45 characteristics, and outcomes of SCA during sports among middle-aged residents of a large US communi
46 were collected on occupation and history of sport and leisure activities, physical activity, and acc
48 iterature on mTBI, with a focus on comparing sport and nonsport etiologies with regard to the latest
49 Research on mTBI has historically separated sport and nonsport etiologies, and the extent to which r
50 rt; of these, 16 occurred during competitive sports and 58 occurred during noncompetitive sports.
51 ave attracted great interest for healthcare, sports and defense applications due to their advantages
54 nd lay the foundation for the development of Sports and Exercise Cardiology in the United States.
55 e CV community to advance the integration of sports and exercise cardiology into mainstream CV care.
62 a whole, by allowing safest participation in sports and physical activity for all individuals who see
63 media exposure, children's participation in sports and recreational activities, children's media tim
70 l activity, walking, cycling, domestic work, sports, and gardening with CHD by using Cox proportional
71 ents, such as high altitude, air travel, and sports, and pathological conditions, such as solid tumor
72 ch as therapeutic drug monitoring, doping in sports, and pharmacological studies in various matrixes.
73 ed to avoid tobacco consumption, to practice sports, and to undergo regular pulmonary examinations.
76 duction in activity on a 4-point scale), low sports aptitude (13% higher odds), and externalizing beh
77 e compact, wearable sensors for medicine and sports are shown and two examples are given: a tissue-ox
83 o shifts toward participation in competitive sports at earlier ages, increased training intensity and
84 ible risk of augmentation, separate food and sport (at least for 2 h), and carry an adrenaline autoin
85 ngly, specific populations such as collision sport athletes and certain military personnel are of par
86 ily physical activity, participation in team sports, attending physical education class, and TV viewi
87 mentation is a popular ergogenic strategy in sports because it can increase the intracellular carnosi
88 ly) were applied to a commercially available sport beverage, with and without 2% beta-cyclodextrin (b
90 pite low levels of activity compared to real sport, both aerobic and anaerobic energy systems should
93 , 2015, an international group of experts in sports cardiology, inherited cardiac disease, and sports
97 wing female representation in athletics, the sport community has become increasingly aware of the syn
99 limited to patient populations presenting to sport concussion clinics or to emergency departments (ED
100 tive mild traumatic brain injury (rmTBI; eg, sports concussions), whether repeated concussions cause
101 Despite recent increased awareness about sports concussions, little research has evaluated concus
104 2, 300 consecutive BAs (n=243 males) from 25 sporting disciplines were evaluated by use of ECG and ec
105 s (PubMed, PsycINFO, Embase, Web of Science, Sport Discus, and Scopus) from database inception until
106 ata for retrospective detection of suspected sports doping species in postanalysis human urine sample
107 olomics, environmental toxin identification, sports doping, petroleomics, and biofuel analysis, among
109 lager, orange juice, sparkling water, and a sports drink were not different from the response to wat
111 residues received considerable attention of sports drug testing authorities due to their ability to
114 several other settings, such as non-contact sports, elderly individuals, young children, military pe
115 level, children with access to playground or sport equipment (RR = 0.88, for both) tended to comply l
116 Netherlands Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sports; European Commission; and Municipality of Rotterd
117 d from May 31 to August 12, 2014, at various sporting events (basketball, soccer, baseball, and swimm
118 ctivities including attending concerts/clubs/sporting events (odds ratio = 1.82, 95% confidence inter
119 Organisers of future mass gatherings for sporting events should share best practice and their exp
120 ating in organized endurance and competitive sporting events, the incidence of sports-related sudden
126 e association between change in individuals' sport/exercise and leisure physical activity indices (ra
127 standard deviation increase in their wives' sport/exercise index, men's exercise index increased by
129 1.06 +/- 0.08 mug/g ww), 101 grebe eggs, 230 sport fish (predominantly largemouth bass and rainbow tr
132 xic equivalent (dlPCB-TEQ) concentrations in sport fish fillets and the whole body of juvenile fish.
133 hylmercury exposure of piscivorous birds and sport fish using mercury concentrations in prey fish.
134 ncentrations in grebe blood, grebe eggs, and sport fish were strongly related to mercury concentratio
135 te mercury exposure of piscivorous birds and sport fish when wildlife cannot be directly sampled.
139 Soccer, originally introduced as a safer sport for children and adolescents, has seen a rapid inc
141 ohort of athletes participating in endurance sports, for every serious cardiac adverse event, there w
143 Few items grab the public's attention like sports, from extremes of great victory to injury and def
144 on cardiovascular screening, are endorsed by sports governing bodies, but mandatory pre-participation
146 und inverse associations of participation in sports (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]: 0.85 [0.
147 musical execution, speech articulation, and sports; however, its neural mechanisms are primarily unk
148 to identify and monitor injury trends in the sport, identify areas of specific concern, and conduct e
149 erican football is the largest participation sport in US high schools and is a leading cause of concu
150 analytical applications, including doping in sports, in vivo tissue sampling, and therapeutic drug mo
152 nic traumatic encephalopathy can occur after sporting injuries, so we studied a helmet-to-helmet impa
154 ent indications for surgical intervention in sports injuries and an understanding of the anatomy, bio
159 gement of anticoagulation has become a "team sport" involving multiple specialties in multiple sites
164 problems, including infectious diseases, at sporting mass gatherings is small, the need for reassura
165 sion of infectious diseases at international sporting mass gatherings that attract many visitors from
167 er a sport-related injury to a concussion or sports medicine clinic at a single academic center were
168 s cardiology, inherited cardiac disease, and sports medicine convened in Seattle, Washington, to upda
169 elated muscle injuries, the main goal of the sports medicine physician is to return the athlete to co
170 trainers, physical therapists, primary care sports medicine physicians, and orthopedic surgeons have
172 erican Heart Association/American College of Sports Medicine's Preparticipation Questionnaire (AAPQ)
182 c arrests occurred during participation in a sport; of these, 16 occurred during competitive sports a
183 coordination of several people, as in music, sport or at work, and can be extended to account for oth
184 k of this neurodegenerative disease, not the sport or the circumstance in which the injury is sustain
185 een-time, increasing family participation in sports or recreation (boys) and promoting freedom to pla
189 The 4,052,369 athlete participations (in 30 sports over 10 years) incurred mortality risks as follow
190 % CI, 1.38-2.96) per year per million female sports participants for the 80th and 20th percentiles of
193 completed a questionnaire every 6 months on sports participation and daily time spent in television
194 ynecologic age, body mass index, and type of sports participation between groups, the risk of 2 or mo
198 onoccupational physical activity, and former sports participation in relation to colorectal cancer en
200 tion has been given to secondary issues like sports participation, pregnancy, work, and social-relate
201 grammes that are typical of recreational and sports participation, with no evidence of injury on biom
204 The use of technological aids to improve sport performance ('techno doping') and inclusion of Par
207 ay be developed into clinical tools to guide sport physicians in the medical counseling of athletes i
209 ngly associated with accelerometer data (for sports, r = 0.22; for gardening, r = 0.16; for housework
212 t study of adolescent and young women with a sport-related concussion (n = 68) or a nonhead sport-rel
214 e inextricably linked to conversations about sport-related concussion and mild traumatic brain injury
216 tterns in adolescent and young women after a sport-related concussion with those after sport-related
217 the United States has passed legislation for sport-related concussion, making this health issue impor
218 The number of athletes developing serious sport-related events and requiring hospitalization was k
219 1 years who presented within 30 days after a sport-related injury to a concussion or sports medicine
220 a sport-related concussion with those after sport-related orthopedic injuries to areas other than th
221 ort-related concussion (n = 68) or a nonhead sport-related orthopedic injury (n = 61) followed up par
226 otential as a scalable biological marker for sports-related concussion and other types of mild trauma
228 rotein B were also increased in players with sports-related concussion(median, 0.075 mug/L; range, 0.
232 etired athletes presenting with a history of sports-related concussions is linked to diffuse white ma
234 ted traumatic brain injury, possibly through sports-related concussive and subconcussive injuries.
235 ed annually to EDs in the United States with sports-related eye injuries; in more than 70% of these c
238 crucial to confirm and assess the extent of sports-related muscle injuries and may help to guide man
239 ain imaging modalities for the assessment of sports-related muscle injuries, including advanced imagi
241 ar trauma can lead to lifelong sequelae, and sports-related ocular injuries have been shown to dispro
243 the incidence and type of injuries seen with sports-related ocular trauma may be useful for resource
244 n Outcomes and Measures: Annual incidence of sports-related ocular trauma, broken down by age, sex, m
245 es, and 12 with missing data) presented with sports-related ocular trauma, which was the primary diag
250 ompetitive sporting events, the incidence of sports-related sudden death in older adults is expected
253 l from cardiac arrest was 2.5-fold higher in sports-related versus nonsports SCA (28% versus 11%; P=0
254 e B using novel solid-phase organic tagging (SPOrT) resin, exhibited a high affinity for V(2)R (4.0 n
258 8; 95% confidence interval, 2.50-139.56) for sports SCAs compared with all other SCAs (relative risk
259 typhus epidemic occurred within a week at a sports school in Mingguang County, Anhui Province, where
260 ed such a framework (borrowing concepts from sports science) and applied it to the upriver migration
265 ng light aerobic exercise (n = 795 [32.9%]), sport-specific exercise (n = 214 [8.9%]), noncontact dri
267 uantify the hormonal activity in 50 of these sports supplement samples using a validated estrogen RGA
268 the typical human omnivore diet in 33 of the sports supplements and higher than the acceptable daily
270 disruptors (EDs) were detected in 80% of 116 sports supplements investigated by biological in vitro r
273 sweat and blood samples was determined in a sport test using LOx/PtNp-CNF-PDDA/SPCEs and commercial
276 erformance of experts in diverse fields from sport to music, including new insights that could be use
278 provides information on the risk of playing sports today that have a similar risk of head trauma as
281 . 9% of juvenile mortality on shags, whereas sport trolling only slightly influenced total mortality
283 gaged in competitive or recreational leisure sports underwent a noncontrast and contrast-enhanced com
286 of sudden cardiac arrest during competitive sports was 0.76 cases per 100,000 athlete-years, with 43
289 a biological process under investigation by SPORT, we constructed a dual-modality DIC/fluorescence m
291 EMENT In many situations such as fast-moving sports, we must be ready to act fast in response to sens
292 occurred during participation in competitive sports were determined to have been potentially identifi
294 ge in mood-increasing activities (e.g., play sports) when they felt bad, and to engage in useful but
295 where engaging with the cognitive aspects of sport will help cognitive neuroscientists to confront th
297 at all levels were significantly greater in sports, with a high dynamic component in both sexes, exc
298 ICDs can engage in vigorous and competitive sports without physical injury or failure to terminate t
300 minutes per day), participation in organized sports (yes or no), and television viewing time (hours p
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