- ►bmj.com N Shewchenko, C Withnall, M Keown, R … - British Medical Journal, 2005 - bjsm.bmj.com Methods: Head responses under ball impact (6–7 m/s) were measured with a
biofidelic numerical human model and controlled human subject trials (n = 3).
Three ball masses and four ball pressures were investigated for frontal ... Cited by 10 - Related articles - All 8 versions
- ►bmj.com N Shewchenko, C Withnall, M Keown, R … - British Medical Journal, 2005 - bjsm.bmj.com Methods: A controlled laboratory study was carried out with seven active
football players, aged 20–23 years who underwent medical screening and were
instrumented with accelerometers mounted in bite plates and ... Cited by 14 - Related articles - All 8 versions
- ►bjsportmed.com N Shewchenko, C Withnall, M Keown, R … - British journal of sports medicine, 2005 - bjsportmed.com Methods: A controlled laboratory study was carried out with seven active
football players, aged 20–23 and of average stature and weight. The subjects
were fitted with photographic targets for kinematic analysis and ... Cited by 13 - Related articles - All 9 versions
J Adams, CM Adler, K Jarvis, MP DelBello, … - Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, 2007 - pdfs.journals.lww.com Objective: The burgeoning popularity of youth soccer in the United States has
occurred with little discussion of the safety of soccer for young people.
Several studies however, have suggested that repeated head blows that occur ... Cited by 3 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions
A Al-Kashmiri, JS Delaney - Trauma, 2006 - tra.sagepub.com Epidemiology Head injuries are estimated to comprise from 4% to 22% of the total
injuries in football (Tysvaer, 1992; Powell and Barber-Foss, 1999; Kirkendall et
al., 2001). While most of the research regarding head injuries in football ... Cited by 3 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 2 versions
CF Babbs - TheScientificWorld Journal, 2001 - thescientificworld.com To better understand the risk and safety of heading a soccer ball, the author
created a set of simple mathematical models based upon Newton's second law of
motion to describe the physics of heading. These models describe the ... Cited by 11 - Related articles - All 3 versions
- ►bjsportmed.com H Zetterberg, M Jonsson, A Rasulzada, C Popa … - British Medical Journal, 2007 - bjsm.bmj.com Methods: 23 male amateur soccer players took part in a heading training session
involving heading a ball kicked from a distance of 30 m at least 10 m forward.
Ten players performed 10 and 13 players performed 20 approved headings. The ... Cited by 7 - Related articles - All 9 versions
- ►sonafe.org.br [PDF] RM Queen, PS Weinhold, DT Kirkendall, B Yu - Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2003 - journals.lww.com Address for correspondence: Robin M. Queen, MS, Department of Biomedical
Engineering, CB #7575, 152 Macnider Building, The University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7135; E-mail: rqueen@med.unc.edu. Cited by 20 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions
- ►sirc.ca [PDF] JS Delaney, R Frankovich - Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, 2005 - journals.lww.com Soccer has not always been perceived as a high-risk sport for head injuries or
concussions. 1-5 However, recent research suggests that soccer players have head
injury and concussion rates similar to those for football and ice hockey. ... Cited by 8 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 7 versions
RC Cantu, SA Herring, M Putukian… - The New England Journal of Medicine, 2007 - nejm.highwire.org To the Editor: In the Clinical Practice article on concussion by Ropper and
Gorson (Jan. 11 issue), 1 the discussion of sport-related concussion is outdated
— especially, the definition of concussion. The review is also inaccurate ... Cited by 2 - Related articles - All 4 versions