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Risk Factors and Prevention of Musculoskeletal Injuries in Adolescent and Adult High-Performance Tennis Players: A Systematic Review

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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/50921
dc.contributor.author Amor-Salamanca, María Soledad
dc.contributor.author Rodríguez-González, Eva María
dc.contributor.author Rosselló, Domingo
dc.contributor.author de Lluc-Bauza, María
dc.contributor.author Hermosilla-Perona, Francisco
dc.contributor.author Martín-Castellanos, Adrián
dc.contributor.author Herrera-Peco, Ivan
dc.date.accessioned 2025-11-13T16:27:58Z
dc.date.available 2025-11-13T16:27:58Z
dc.date.created 2025
dc.date.issued 2025
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/50921
dc.description.abstract Background: High-performance tennis exposes players to repetitive high-load strokes and abrupt directional changes, which substantially increase musculoskeletal injury risk. This systematic review synthesized evidence on epidemiology, risk factors, and physiotherapy-led preventive strategies in elite adolescent and adult players. Methods: Following a PROSPERO-registered protocol, MEDLINE, Web of Science, and Scopus were searched (2011¿2024) for observational studies reporting epidemiological outcomes in high performance tennis. Methodological quality was appraised with NIH tools, and certainty of evidence was graded with GRADE. Results: Thirty-seven studies met inclusion criteria: 16 in adolescents, 18 in adults, and 3 mixed. Incidence ranged from 2.1 to 3.5 injuries/1000 h in juniors and 1.25 to 56.6/1000 h in adults. Seasonal prevalence was 46¿54% in juniors and 30¿54% in professionals. Lower-limb trauma (48¿56%) predominated, followed by lumbar (12¿39%) and shoulder overuse syndromes. Across age groups, abrupt increases in the acute-to-chronic workload ratio (¿1.3 in juniors; ¿1.5 in adults) were the strongest extrinsic predictor of injury. Intrinsic contributors included reduced glenohumeral internal rotation, scapular dyskinesis, and poor core stability. Three prevention clusters emerged: (1) External load control, four-week ¿ramp-up¿ strategies reduced injury incidence by up to 21%; (2) Kinetic-chain conditioning, core stability plus eccentric rotator-cuff training decreased overuse by 26% and preserved shoulder mobility; and (3) Technique/equipment adjustments, grip-size personalization halved lateral epicondylalgia, while serve-timing modifications reduced shoulder torque. Conclusions: Injury risk in high-performance tennis is quantifiable and preventable. Progressive load management targeted kinetic-chain conditioning, and tailored technique/equipment modifications represent the most effective evidence-based safeguards for adolescent and adult elite players. es_ES
dc.format application/pdf es_ES
dc.language eng es_ES
dc.publisher MDPI es_ES
dc.rights CC-BY es_ES
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.es es_ES
dc.source Sports es_ES
dc.title Risk Factors and Prevention of Musculoskeletal Injuries in Adolescent and Adult High-Performance Tennis Players: A Systematic Review es_ES
dc.type Artículo es_ES
dc.description.curso 2025 es_ES
dc.rights.accessrights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess es_ES
dc.identifier.dl 2025
dc.identifier.location N/A es_ES


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