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Advise on Sports-related Orofacial Injuries
The tremendous popularity of sports and the high level of competitiveness have resulted
in a significant number of dental and facial injuries. All sporting activities have
risk of orofacial injuries due to falls, collisions, contact with hard surfaces
and contact from sports- related equipment.
Dental and facial injuries can be reduced significantly by introducing mandatory
protective equipment. Injuries by the participation in baseball, basketball, soccer,
softball, wrestling, volleyball or in gymnastics, skateboarding, inline or roller
skating, and bicycling can be considerably reduced by wearing protective eqipment.
Consequences of orofacial trauma for children and their families are substantial
because of potential for pain, psychological effects and economic implications.
Children with trauma to permanent teeth need follow up care over a lifetime.
Traumatic dental injuries have additional indirect costs that include children's
hours lost from school and parents' hours lost from work.
Risk factors
Risk factorshave been defined that predict the chance of injury
including demographic information (age, gender, dental occlusion), protective equipment
(type/usage), velocity and intensity of the sport, level of activity and exposure
time, level of coaching and type of sports organization, whether the player is a
focus of attention in a contact or non-contact sport, history of previous sports-
related injury, and the situation (eg, practice vs game).
Behavioral risk factors(eg, hyperactivity) also have been associated
significantly with injuries affecting the face and/or teeth. The frequency of dental
trauma is significantly higher for children with increased overjet and inadequate
lip coverage.A dental professional may be able to modify these risk factors.Initiating
preventive orthodontic treatment in early- to middle- mixed dentition of patients
with an overjet >3 mm has the potential to reduce the severity of traumatic injuries
to permanent incisors.
Although some sports-related traumatic injuries are un-avoidable, most can be prevented.
Helmets, face masks, and mouth guardshave been shown to reduce both the frequency and severity
of dental and orofacial trauma. Initially used by professional boxers, the mouth
guard has been used as a protective device since the early 1900's. The mouth guard,
also referred to as a gumshield or mouth protector, is defined as a "resilient device
or appliance placed inside the mouth to reduce oral injuries, particularly to teeth
and surrounding structures.
The mouth guard was constructed to "protect the lips and intraoral tissues from
bruising and laceration, to protect the teeth from crown fractures, root fractures,
luxations and avulsions, protect the jaw from fracture and dislocations and to provide
support for edentulous space.The mouthguard works by "absorbing the energy imparted
at the site of impact and by dissipating the remaining energy.