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  • Sports Medicine · Overview

    Handball Injuries

    Handball is fast, physical and full of jumps, throws and sudden stops — a combination that puts both the throwing shoulder and the landing knee at high risk. Smart preparation makes a real difference.

    summarize At a glance
    Most affected
    Knee, shoulder, fingers
    Injury type
    Acute & overuse
    Typical treatment
    Varies by injury
    Goal
    Safe return to play
    Handball medicine
    01

    Handball’s demands

    Handball blends explosive jumping and landing with repetitive overhead throwing and frequent contact. This dual demand means players face both knee injuries from cutting and landing, and shoulder injuries from throwing.

    It is a sport with one of the higher rates of ACL injury, particularly among female players, which makes structured prevention especially worthwhile.

    02

    Common handball injuries

    • checkACL tears from landing and cutting — a signature handball injury.
    • checkShoulder instability & cuff problems from repetitive forceful throwing.
    • checkFinger and thumb injuries from catching and blocking the ball.
    • checkAnkle sprains from jumps and contact.
    • checkKnee contusions from collisions in a physical game.
    03

    Getting the right diagnosis

    Knee injuries with swelling, giving way or a “pop” warrant prompt assessment and usually an MRI to identify ACL, meniscus or cartilage damage. Recurrent shoulder slipping in a thrower should be assessed for instability and labral injury, which guides whether rehabilitation or stabilisation is needed.

    04

    Treatment & prevention

    Treatment is tailored — from rehabilitation to arthroscopic reconstruction or stabilisation. Prevention is strongly evidence-based in handball:

    • Neuromuscular and landing-technique programmes to protect the knee.
    • Rotator cuff and shoulder-blade strengthening for throwers.
    • Progressive throwing-load management.
    • Full rehabilitation before any return to play.
    05

    Return to play

    Return to handball is criteria-based, guided by strength, movement quality and confidence rather than time alone. Given the sport’s high ACL risk, completing a structured prevention and rehabilitation programme is the best protection against re-injury.

    Medically reviewed by
    Dr. Yousef Muhammad, M.D.
    Senior Consultant · Orthopedic Surgery & Sports Medicine

    German board-certified orthopedic surgeon specialising in arthroscopic knee and shoulder surgery, sports injuries, and joint replacement.

    M.D. · PhD
    FEBOT · DGOOC
    AAOS · ESSKA
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    Every case is different. A precise diagnosis is the first step toward the most direct, evidence-based path back to the activities you care about.