@article{MuellerMuellerStolletal.2017, author = {M{\"u}ller, Juliane and M{\"u}ller, Steffen and Stoll, Josefine and Fr{\"o}hlich, K. and Otto, Christoph and Mayer, Frank}, title = {Back pain prevalence in adolescent athletes}, series = {Scandinavian journal of medicine \& science in sports}, volume = {27}, journal = {Scandinavian journal of medicine \& science in sports}, publisher = {Wiley}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0905-7188}, doi = {10.1111/sms.12664}, pages = {448 -- 454}, year = {2017}, abstract = {The research aimed to investigate back pain (BP) prevalence in a large cohort of young athletes with respect to age, gender, and sport discipline. BP (within the last 7days) was assessed with a face scale (face 1-2=no pain; face 3-5=pain) in 2116 athletes (m/f 61\%/39\%; 13.3 +/- 1.7years; 163.0 +/- 11.8cm; 52.6 +/- 13.9kg; 4.9 +/- 2.7 training years; 8.4 +/- 5.7 training h/week). Four different sports categories were devised (a: combat sports, b: game sports; c: explosive strength sport; d: endurance sport). Analysis was described descriptively, regarding age, gender, and sport. In addition, 95\% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated. About 168 (8\%) athletes were allocated into the BP group. About 9\% of females and 7\% of males reported BP. Athletes, 11-13years, showed a prevalence of 2-4\%; while prevalence increased to 12-20\% in 14- to 17-year olds. Considering sport discipline, prevalence ranged from 3\% (soccer) to 14\% (canoeing). Prevalences in weight lifting, judo, wrestling, rowing, and shooting were 10\%; in boxing, soccer, handball, cycling, and horse riding, 6\%. 95\% CI ranged between 0.08-0.11. BP exists in adolescent athletes, but is uncommon and shows no gender differences. A prevalence increase after age 14 is obvious. Differentiated prevention programs in daily training routines might address sport discipline-specific BP prevalence.}, language = {en} }