Argentina Bariloche XXXI congress (joined with ISSS)
August 4-10th 2013
The history of SITEMSH started 50 years ago in the 50's, when a group of
experts from Alpine Countries (Austria, France, Germany, Italy and Switzerland)
began to observe, collect and study the injuries occurring after winter
sport accidents. They decided to meet every two years on behalf of a new
Society named SITEMSH (Société Internationale de Médecine des Sports d’Hiver).
The 1st SITEMSH meeting took place in 1954 in Chambery-Courchevel in France.
Ligaments lesions of the knee, both with tibia fractures, were the most
frequent ski injuries. Knee surgery was not so efficient in these years,
and the typical knee lesion meant no more ski activity and chronic invalidity.
The history of SITEMSH goes parallel to the evolution of ski injuries.
In the next 20 years, the evolution of equipment and especially the safety
ski bindings brought a big improvement in tibia fractures prevention that
resulted to an 80% decrease of this kind of injuries. Furthermore the improvement
in ski design, the lower release settings, the improved boot design and
fitting, the better equipment maintenance, the increasing skier experience
and the improved trail grooming, resulted to a 50% decline in all injuries.
However the knee joint is still the most involved in ski injuries. The severity
of the lesions has not changed but fortunately knee arthroscopic surgery
made a huge improvement in the same period. Lower leg fractures are firmly
under 10%, but have not disappeared and unusual types of fractures have
appeared in the last years. Upper limb, spine, abdominal and thoracic injuries
are more common, due to the increase of snowboarding practice, collisions
and average speed on slopes.
Knee injuries remain a serious unsolved problem difficult to accept after
50 years of incredible technologic improvement. Probably today the best
prevention comes from safety campaigns on media and press that were proved
to be successful in many countries as Sweden, Spain and France.
Particular studies on this problem must be the next goal of SITEMSH and
ISSS (International Society for Skiing Safety), the only two Societies concerned
with ski injuries prevention.
Andorra, (1990), and Spain, (1993), were accepted as new countries of the
Society. Recently Greece (2006), Scotland, Hungary, Czech Rep, and Chile
(2007), Argentina (2009), Kazakstan, USA (2010) joined SITEMSH.





