Research Topics
| W O RobertsSummaryAffiliation: University of Minnesota Country: USA Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Heat and cold: what does the environment do to marathon injury?William O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Sports Med 37:400-3. 2007..Cold conditions increase the drop-out rate along the course and, if associated with wet conditions, also increase the encounter rate...
Youth marathon runners and race day medical risk over 26 yearsWilliam O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Clin J Sport Med 20:318-21. 2010..To report the number of marathon finishers younger than 18 years and race day medical encounters at the same site and to compare them with adult finishers...
The influence of game scheduling on medical encounters at the USA Cup soccer tournamentNathan G Waibel
1414 Maryland Avenue East, St Paul, MN 55106, USA
Br J Sports Med 46:424-9. 2012..Players, coaches, parents and administrators can feel confident that this tournament format does not pose an additional risk of injury...
Exercise-associated collapse care matrix in the marathonWilliam O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Sports Med 37:431-3. 2007..Most runners are discharged from the medical area in the company of another person...
Exertional heat stroke in the marathonWilliam O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Sports Med 37:440-3. 2007..For optimal outcomes, it is best to treat immediately with on-site whole-body cooling if cardiorespiratory status is 'stable' and then to transfer the runner for additional evaluation and care...
Determining a "do not start" temperature for a marathon on the basis of adverse outcomesWilliam O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Med Sci Sports Exerc 42:226-32. 2010..The current race cancellation parameters may not reflect the safety profile of an individual race, and a universal temperature may not work an individual race...
Common threads in a random tapestry: another viewpoint on exertional heatstrokeWilliam O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA
Phys Sportsmed 33:42-9. 2005..On the other hand, the occurrence of exertional heatstroke in conditions that should be prime for all-out physical effort remains puzzling and problematic...
Field care of the injured toothW O Roberts
MinnHealth Family Physicians, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Phys Sportsmed 28:101-2. 2000..Dental injuries occur frequently in contact sports, and some require immediate attention...
Sideline airway access: emergency cricothyrotomyW O Roberts
MinnHealth Family Physicians, White Bear Lake, MN, 55110, USA
Phys Sportsmed 28:113-4. 2000..Cricothyrotomy is an emergency procedure that sideline providers should know and be ready to perform if airway access cannot be accomplished by positioning, rescue breathing, or endotracheal intubation...
Lateral epicondylitis injectionW O Roberts
MinnHealth Family Physicians, White Bear Lake, MN, USA
Phys Sportsmed 28:93-4. 2000..This muscle group acts in extension of the wrist, hand, and digits, and in supination of the wrist. Medial to the lateral epicondyle are the radial nerve and the radial recurrent artery...
Can children and adolescents run marathons?William O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Sports Med 37:299-301. 2007..Follow-up studies of these young runners would help evaluate the long-term health consequences of long distance running and shape future recommendations...
Death in the heat: can football heat stroke be prevented?William O Roberts
Department of Family Practice and Community Health, University of Minnesota Medical School, 1414 Maryland Avenue East, St Paul, MN 55106, USA
Curr Sports Med Rep 3:1-3. 2004
Exertional heat stroke during a cool weather marathon: a case studyWilliam O Roberts
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota Medical School Twin Cities, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Med Sci Sports Exerc 38:1197-203. 2006..Runners should be instructed not to compete when ill and should not use nonparticipant pacers during the runs...
A 12-yr profile of medical injury and illness for the Twin Cities MarathonW O Roberts
MinnHealth SportsCare, White Bear Lake, MN 55110, USA
Med Sci Sports Exerc 32:1549-55. 2000..To summarize the medical encounters (injury/illness) for runners and the meteorologic data collected in the medical area of a large marathon race...
Shoulder pain: a case study of acute injury in a collegiate hockey playerJason Byers
Phalen Village Clinic, 1414 Maryland Avenue East, St. Paul, MN 55106, USA
Curr Sports Med Rep 5:281-3. 2006
Youth ice hockey tournament injuries: rates and patterns compared to season playW O Roberts
MinnHealth SportsCare, White Bear Lake, MN 55110, USA
Med Sci Sports Exerc 31:46-51. 1999....
Temporal artery temperature measurements do not detect hyperthermic marathon runnersKevin Ronneberg
Fairview Sports and Orthopedic Care, Wyoming, MN, USA
Med Sci Sports Exerc 40:1373-5. 2008..The objective of this study is to compare TAT measurement with T(rectal) measurement in collapsed marathon runners...
Medicine, medical education, and the collegeWilliam O Roberts
Department of Family Practice, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, MN, USA
Med Sci Sports Exerc 35:1075. 2003
Inter-association task force recommendations on emergency preparedness and management of sudden cardiac arrest in high school and college athletic programs: a consensus statementJonathan A Drezner
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Clin J Sport Med 17:87-103. 2007..This consensus statement summarizes our current understanding of SCA in young athletes, defines the necessary elements for emergency preparedness, and establishes uniform treatment protocols for the management of SCA...
Impact of weather on marathon-running performanceMatthew R Ely
U S Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, MA 01760, USA
Med Sci Sports Exerc 39:487-93. 2007..Marathon running performance slows in warm weather conditions, but the quantitative impact of weather has not been established...
American College of Sports Medicine position stand. Exertional heat illness during training and competitionLawrence E Armstrong
Med Sci Sports Exerc 39:556-72. 2007..Muscle cramping usually responds to rest and replacement of fluid and salt (sodium). Prevention strategies are essential to reducing the incidence of EHS, heat exhaustion, and exercise associated muscle cramping...
American College of Sports Medicine roundtable on hydration and physical activity: consensus statementsDouglas J Casa
Department of Kinesiology, University of Connecticut, 2095 Hillside Road, U-1110, Storrs, CT 06269-1110, USA
Curr Sports Med Rep 4:115-27. 2005
Heat injury prevention practices in high school footballAnthony C Luke
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94143 0728, USA
Clin J Sport Med 17:488-93. 2007..To survey high school American football programs regarding current prevention measures for reducing heat injuries during the football season...
Youth football: heat stress and injury riskMichael F Bergeron
Med Sci Sports Exerc 37:1421-30. 2005
Children and running: at what distance safe?William O Roberts
Clin J Sport Med 15:109-10; author reply 110-1. 2005
Inter Association Task Force recommendations on emergency preparedness and management of sudden cardiac arrest in high school and college athletic programs: a consensus statementJonathan A Drezner
University of Washington Seattle, WA 98105, USA
Prehosp Emerg Care 11:253-71. 2007..This consensus statement summarizes our current understanding of SCA in young athletes, defines the necessary elements for emergency preparedness, and establishes uniform treatment protocols for the management of SCA...
Inter-association Task Force recommendations on emergency preparedness and management of sudden cardiac arrest in high school and college athletic programs: a consensus statementJonathan A Drezner
University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98105, USA
J Athl Train 42:143-58. 2007..This consensus statement summarizes our current understanding of SCA in young athletes, defines the necessary elements for emergency preparedness, and establishes uniform treatment protocols for the management of SCA...
Evidence for decreasing occurrence of sudden cardiac death associated with the marathonWilliam O Roberts
J Am Coll Cardiol 46:1373-4. 2005
Management of lower extremity malalignment during running with neuromuscular retraining of the proximal stabilizersNelly Lugo-Larcheveque
Center of Health Promotion, University of Connecticut, School of Allied Health, 358 Mansfield Road, U-2101, Storrs, CT 06269-2101, USA
Curr Sports Med Rep 5:137-40. 2006....
Inter-association task force recommendations on emergency preparedness and management of sudden cardiac arrest in high school and college athletic programs: a consensus statementJonathan A Drezner
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98105, USA
Heart Rhythm 4:549-65. 2007..This consensus statement summarizes our current understanding of SCA in young athletes, defines the necessary elements for emergency preparedness, and establishes uniform treatment protocols for the management of SCA...
Recommendations and considerations related to preparticipation screening for cardiovascular abnormalities in competitive athletes: 2007 update: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association Council on Nutrition, Physical Activity, and MetabolBarry J Maron
Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation, USA
Circulation 115:1643-455. 2007
Fractured fairy tales: hyponatraemia and the American College of Sports Medicine fluid recommendationsWilliam O Roberts
Br J Sports Med 41:109; author reply 109-11. 2007
