Glass Label/Claim Audit

Overuse Injury Risk

Durable audit route for one claim-like target. This page shows source-use records, assessment rationale, active challenges, revisions, and graph edges tied to the same target identity.

evidence medium
Assessment Rationale

overuse injury risk is included with provisional confidence because the record has direct section evidence but still needs endpoint-specific interpretation before it should be read as a strong clinical claim.

The assessment is anchored to the cited practice effect record rather than inferred from the compound name alone.

Evidence Reviewed

Sources considered for this assessment[1]

Claim Scope
Endpoint
Overuse Injury Risk
Context
Practice Effect
Does not mean
  • - Practice effects depend on exposure pattern, population, and implementation quality
  • - Not a complete effect-size claim
  • - Not individualized medical guidance
Basis For Judgment
01Record supportMedium

The row has an explicit structured record and citation mapping.

02Endpoint directnessLow

The current seed evidence does not yet carry the same detailed endpoint interpretation as Taurine.

03CMS readinessMedium

The audit path is present; additional source interpretation can be added without changing the schema.

Raises confidence
  • - structured record exists
  • - citation support is mapped to this row
Limits confidence
  • - interpretation remains provisional
  • - effect size and population scope need fuller review
Disputable assumptions
  • - endpoint inference
  • - population generalization
  • - whether the row should be strengthened or narrowed
Source Use Records

Local evidence attached to this claim

DirectDirect Endpoint EvidenceDirect Human Endpoint2/5 quality fields

Training load, progression, and overuse injury risk in endurance exercise

Rapid volume increases and insufficient recovery are represented as a conditional overuse-injury risk signal for endurance training.

This source is used to support the Overuse Injury Risk effect row for this practice.

Endpoint
Overuse Injury Risk
Directness
Direct Human Endpoint