Incidence, severity, and outcomes of brain injuries involving bicycles

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Abstract

We performed a population-based study on bicycle-related brain injuries in San Diego, California, residents during 1981. Incidence rates among males were three times higher than for females and were highest at ages 10-14 years for males. Only one-third of bicycle-related brain injuries involved collision with a motor vehicle, and this proportion was independent of age or gender. Brain injuries from motor-vehicle collisions were more severe than those resulting from other causes. Over half the brain-injured bicyclists aged 15 and older who were blood alcohol tested were legally intoxicated.

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Kraus, J. F., Fife, D., & Conroy, C. (1987). Incidence, severity, and outcomes of brain injuries involving bicycles. American Journal of Public Health, 77(1), 76–78. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.77.1.76

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