Publication | Closed Access
Head, Face, and Eye Injuries in Scholastic and Collegiate Lacrosse
117
Citations
10
References
2007
Year
Although permitting only incidental contact, women's lacrosse had higher rates of head, face, and eye injuries at both the high school and collegiate levels. Concussion was the most common injury. For men, the primary injury mechanism was player-to-player contact; women's injuries primarily resulted from stick or ball contact. High school injury rates were lower than were college rates, but the nature of injuries, body parts affected, and mechanisms were similar.
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