Sports Medicine: Just the Facts

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CHAPTER 79 • CREW 473

REFERENCES


Caine D, Caine C, Linder K: Epidemiology of Sport Injuries.
Champaign, IL, Human Kinetics, 1996.
Jordan BD: Boxing. in Jordan BJ, Tsairis P, Warren RF (eds.):
Sports Neurology, 2nd ed. New York, NY, Lippincott-Raven,
1998.
U.S. Amateur Boxing: Ringside Physicians Certification
Manual. Colorado Springs, CO, U.S. Amateur Boxing, 2003.


79 CREW


Andrew D Perron, MD

OVERVIEW


•Whether on the water or with rowing machines
(ergometers), the sport of rowing is rapidly growing at
both the recreational and competitive levels. Today,
competitive rowing occurs at the Olympic, elite, col-
legiate, club, and high school levels.
•Virtually all rowing injuries are caused by overuse,
and the vast majority of these can be traced to training
errors or equipment problems (Karlson, 2000; Hickey,
1997; Edgar, 1995; Redgrave, 1995).


MECHANICS AND EQUIPMENT



  • Boats have one, two, four, or eight rowers, who may
    have either one oar (sweep rowing) or two oars
    (sculling). Each rower sits in a sliding seat and places
    his or her feet in a pair of fixed shoes. The oar is held
    in an outrigger that can be adjusted in multiple ways
    that can vary the height, position, angle, and load per
    stroke.

  • The rowing stroke begins at the catch, where the back
    and legs are maximally flexed and the arms extended.
    It is at this point where the oar enters the water.
    During the drive(power) phase of the stroke, the legs
    are extended, the back opened, and the arms flexed to
    the chest. At the finishthe oar is removed from the
    water and the blade feathered, or turned parallel to the
    water. Finally, during the recoveryphase, the body
    returns to the catch position with legs and back flexed
    and arms extended.

  • Races are usually run over 1000 to 2000 m courses
    during the sprintseason of spring and summer. These


races are contested with boats side-by-side, and are
run at near maximal aerobic capacity, beginning and
ending with an anaerobic sprint. A typical sprint race
will last 5–8 min. In the fall, headraces are normally
run over a 3 mi course, where the individual boat
races against the clock. These competitions are run at
a lower intensity than sprint races, with the competi-
tor staying within aerobic capacity, and generally run
15–20 min in duration.

TRAINING

•Rowing, acknowledged as one of the most strenuous
sports (Hagerman, 1984), requires high levels of both
strength and aerobic capacity. With both a sprint
season, and a head season, rowers train nearly year-
round. A typical yearly training cycle mandates
strength and distance training in the fall, weights and
machine training in the winter, and anaerobic work in
the spring and summer racing seasons.


  • The successful rower usually has a high aerobic
    capacity, with elite rowers demonstrating VO2max
    levels of 65 to 70 mL/kg/min (Secher, 1993). The
    sport favors taller athletes with an extended reach, as
    they can cover more distance per individual stroke.


COMMON INJURIES

LOW BACK PAIN


  • The rowing stroke places a great deal of stress on the
    low back. It is maximally loaded at the catch, or fully
    flexed position, which places large forces on both the
    musculature of the back, and the intervertebral disks
    (Karlson, 2000; Hickey, 1997; Edgar, 1995). One
    review on the sport found that back and knee injuries
    were by far the most common injuries to collegiate
    rowers (Boland and Hosea, 1991).
    •With sweep (one oar) rowing, the back is not only
    maximally flexed at the catch, but it is also twisted
    prior to maximal loading in order to extend the ath-
    lete’s reach. This maximal loading with the back
    flexed and twisted may result in even more back
    injury in this patient population (Stallard, 1980),
    although this has been disputed (Karlson, 2000).

  • Back injury syndromes that can be seen include mus-
    cular and ligamentous strains, spondylolysis/spondy-
    lolysthesis, and lumbar disk herniation (Karlson,
    2000; Stallard, 1980; Thomas; George, 2002)

  • Specifically for the rower, training errors of distance,
    technique, or intensity should be addressed. Additio-
    nally, a search for mechanical errors should occur,

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