Male athletes had a fivefold higher estimated rate of nontraumatic sports deaths compared to female athletes (7.47 vs 1.33 per million athletes per year, P<0.0001), mostly from cardiovascular causes.
Observational (n=160)
Yes
Nontraumatic sports death (n=160)
Male sex vs Female sex
Estimated death rate per million athletes per year — 5-fold higher, p=< 0.0001
Effect estimate: 5-fold higher
Absolute Event Rate: 7.47% vs 1.33%
p-value: p=< 0.0001
Nontraumatic deaths occur each year in organized high school and college athletics, resulting in considerable public concern. We conducted a study of the frequency and causes of nontraumatic sports deaths in high school and college athletes in the USA through the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research to define the magnitude of this problem and its causes. Over a 10-yr period, July 1983-June 1993, nontraumatic sports deaths were reported in 126 high school athletes (115 males and 11 females) and 34 college athletes (31 males and 3 females). Estimated death rates in male athletes were fivefold higher than in female athletes (7.47 vs 1.33 per million athletes per year, P < 0.0001), and twofold higher in male college athletes than in male high school athletes (14.50 vs 6.60 per million athletes per year, P < 0.0001). Cardiovascular conditions were more common causes of death than noncardiovascular conditions. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and congenital coronary artery anomalies were the most common causes of death. In high school and college athletes, males are at increased risk for nontraumatic sports deaths compared with females even after adjustment for participation frequency; college males are at greater risk than high school males. In all groups the deaths were primarily due to cardiovascular conditions.
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Steven P. Van Camp
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Colin M. Bloor
Cardiac Imaging
FREDERICK O. MUELLER
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise
University of California, San Diego
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Camp et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Nontraumatic sports death (n=160). Male sex vs. Female sex was evaluated on Estimated death rate per million athletes per year (5-fold higher, p=< 0.0001). Male athletes had a fivefold higher estimated rate of nontraumatic sports deaths compared to female athletes (7.47 vs 1.33 per million athletes per year, P<0.0001), mostly from cardiovascular causes.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a08dbef27ceb0c2a2d609ee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1249/00005768-199505000-00005