OVERUSE INJURIES IN LONG DISTANCE RUNNING - A LITERATURE REVIEW ON RISK FACTORS
INTRODUCTION: In the past three decades, the incidence of running-related overuse injuries has signicantly increased because of the increasing number of recreational athletes and higher training intensity in competitive athletes. Long distance running has gained popularity in recent years, but between 19.4 and 79.3% of runners sustain a running related injury every year. Various risk factors contribute to the occurrence of this issue and shoe modications are thought to be an efcient tool in managing runningrelated over use injuries. The aim of this study was to collect and review information about the risks factors of overuse injuries long distance running. METHODOLOGY:Asystematic search of the electronic database of PUBMED, Bireme and PEDro which were selected that addressed clinical trials, control cases, prospective and cross-sectional studies. RESULTS: The search yielded 246 references. A predened inclusion criteria (case studies, clinical trials, prospective studies, cross sectional studies that addressed adult runners either amateur or professional) was used and 51 articles remained. 18 citations were excluded and 20 articles were after reading the abstract and full text. Therefore 13 studies that met the criteria for analysis were included. CONCLUSION:The overuse injuries are very much prevalent in long distance runners and the ethology is multifactorial. The distance, terrain, weekly sessions and history of previous injuries are the risk factors that inuence the occurrence of these injuries.