September 18,
2006
Taking
Sports to Extremes
By Thomas G. Dolan
For The Record
Vol. 18 No. 19 P. 44
Too much too soon can spell doom for aspiring athletes.
“Winning is everything” can be a losing
philosophy, especially when it comes to children in sports. At least,
that’s the considered opinion of the experts interviewed for this
article, all of whom work with children who have suffered sports injuries.
Although they don’t point to any statistics, these experts say
that, on the basis of their day-to-day experiences as well as their
contacts with colleagues in the field, the incidents of sports-related
injuries in children are on the rise.
Kevin D. Plancher, MD, MS, FACS, FAAOS, associate clinical
professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and director of Plancher
Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine in New York City, says, “More
children are engaged in watching adults participate in sports and want
to emulate them. Playing sports in itself can be a good thing for it
can help keep children healthy. But too often, they don’t go through
the proper warm-ups adults do or participate in a way inappropriate
for their age.”
“One key reason we see so many children in the
emergency room is increased sports activity without supervision or proper
equipment,” says Julia Retureta-Soler, MD, assistant medical director
in the pediatric emergency department (ED) at Coral Springs (Fla.) Medical
Center.
Yet, even children who participate in team sports with
proper supervision and equipment are suffering more injuries, says Cynthia
LaBella, MD, medical director of the Institute for Sports Medicine at
Children’s Memorial Hospital in Chicago. “Previously, someone
in junior or senior high school might have played sports three days
a week in hour-long sessions. Now, they play five days a week in two-hour
sessions,” she says. “Competition and pressure add to the
number of hours. It’s too much too soon.”
“I think one of the big factors is that kids start
specializing at a younger age and start playing the same sport all year-round
on multiple teams,” says Keith May, a physical therapist and certified
athletic trainer at Children’s Hospital of Atlanta. “A good
example is baseball. They start in Little League and then go on to play
on multiple school and club teams, fall, spring, and summer ball. Kids
are trying to look for that edge earlier on. Some of it can be related
to parent and coach pressure—the desire to win at all costs.”
May says there continues to be the usual assortment
of typical sports injuries: torn ligaments, sprained ankles, dislocated
shoulders. “But we’re seeing more and more overuse injuries,
such as tendonitis, or growth plate injuries. We’re seeing the
same elbow and shoulder stress injuries in baseball from kids using
the same motions over and over.”
Plancher points out that most Major League hurlers adhere
to pitch counts. “You see the coach take out a player in the fifth
inning and you wonder why because he’s been pitching so well,”
he says. “But the fact is that he has only so many pitches he
can throw without damaging his arm. Parents and coaches should recognize
the number of pitch counts in their children and not let them be exceeded.”
Sports, such as baseball, tennis, and volleyball, that
rely heavily on overhead motions, carry the risk of repetitive motion
injuries, says LaBella. She points out that parents often steer their
children toward soccer rather than football to avoid injuries. However,
although collision injuries can occur in younger children, most of these
sorts of injuries take place in high school where children have more
strength and collisions have greater impact. In younger children, soccer
injuries number about the same as in football and are mostly due to
sudden twists and turns.
“Yesterday, I had a teenage girl in for knee surgery,”
says Retureta-Soler. “It used to be that we would only see adults
with an overuse of knee joints. Soccer is a big sport for damaging knees.”
Other seemingly innocuous sports have also led more
youngsters to the operating table. “Cheerleading is not what it
used to be, all dancing and pom-poms,” Retureta-Soler says. “Now,
there are very dangerous pyramid stunts in which a cheerleader will
‘fly’ from one person to the next. We’re seeing a
lot of neck and head injuries.”
Away from the playing fields, aspiring dancers are also
pulling up lame. “They are not supposed to start point shoes until
they are 12. Now, they regularly get started at age 9, which can result
in ankle problems,” Retureta-Soler says.
Basic exercises that are supposed to get you into shape
to avoid injuries can pose their own dangers, says Plancher. For instance,
he says weight training should not start until the child is at least
9, and then only with supervision. Weights are built for 5’10”
males, so a lot of injuries happen when a younger child handles the
barbell at the extremes. Multiple repetitions at a low rate are much
better and much less dangerous than the impressive lift of a heavy weight.
The standing military overhead press should never be done by a younger
child; the incline press executed while laying on the bench is preferred.
Retureta-Soler, who sees fractures on a daily basis,
explains that those injuries occur differently in children than they
do in adults because of variables in bone density, porosity, and elasticity.
A simple fracture may be put into a temporary splint with a follow-up
with an orthopedic doctor. More serious fractures include a bowing fracture
which causes deformity by bending the plastic part of the bone; a buckle
fracture in which the cortical, or outside, part of the bone becomes
scrunched up; and a green stick, so called because of the elastic aspect
of the young bone which will cause it to bend before it breaks.
Whenever possible, Retureta-Soler says, the child is
taken to the ED where the youngster can be treated more comfortably
and efficiently. Retureta-Soler also says orthopedic doctors can generally
handle most of these cases, although in some instances, a specialized
pediatric orthopedic physician may be required.
Plancher says many doctors who claim to be able to practice
sports medicine may have limitations. “Sports medicine has become
a kind of catch-all phrase, and not every doctor has the background
to be able to practice it effectively,” he says. “A nonsurgeon
is not in the position to recommend surgery, and a surgeon may recommend
it when it is not necessary. A qualified orthopedic physician will be
more likely to find the middle ground.” Plancher also advises
that a magnetic resonance imaging scan be administered to provide objective
evidence of the nature of the injury, with the treatment plan based
on those results.
Trouble Ahead
The doctors agree that the key warning sign to potentially serious injury
is pain, whether it be sharp and immediate or low-intensity and chronic.
“Pain is a great warning sign,” May says. “A lot of
coaches expect kids to ignore it. But pain is your body’s way
of telling you something is wrong. Any time there is swelling or soreness,
that’s a sign. There may also be a decrease in performance. For
instance, a baseball pitcher may not be able to throw as hard as he
could before.”
Lower-grade chronic pain is more likely to be a symptom
of repetitive motion damage, says Retureta-Soler, who adds, “You
shouldn’t really feel numbness, either.”
“Any time you have difficulty moving any part
of your body, such as your elbow not straightening out, is also a warning
sign,” adds Plancher.
The child losing interest in a sport could also be a
signal of a physical ailment, says LaBella. “This happens when
he [or she] is just going from practice to game to practice with less
and less enthusiasm,” she says. “This indicates that he
[or she] has not enough time for his [or her] homework, hanging out
with friends, or other things that kids do. This can show that he [or
she] is literally not feeling good because of the sport and is also
more vulnerable to other injuries.”
Outside an obvious injury, the best and most effective
remedy, the experts say, is rest. Plancher recommends RICE (rest, ice,
compression, and elevation) for 48 hours. If the pain doesn’t
subside, then have your child check with a sports medicine or orthopedic
doctor.
Generally, the experts say, younger children with less
developed bodies are more at risk than older children, who have grown
stronger, especially if they have had training and conditioning along
the way. The danger to older children results from increased competition
and more pressure from peers, parents, and coaches. Society accords
a great respect to athletes, especially in terms of financial awards.
Excellent high school athletes often feel pressure to maintain their
performance levels to give them a shot at earning a college scholarship.
Whereas there is always the danger that an athlete can
overdo it by going from one sport to another, the bigger danger, says
LaBella, is specializing in one sport. “I’m a big fan of
playing more than one sport and being exposed to a variety of different
activities,” she says. “It balances out the neuro-muscular
framework, both physically and psychologically. Year-round sport is
a risk. This is especially true of sports like gymnastics and skating,
which can be taught all year-round both outdoors and indoors. Performing
seasons are very intense. At the minimum, every sport should have at
least one day off a week and one month off a year—contact sports
especially. Professional football players understand this. They understand
that rest and recovery is a part of training.”
Proper equipment is important. “One of the big
advantages of organized sports is that kids benefit from adult supervision
and required equipment,” LaBella says. “Rough contact sports
like football, hockey, and lacrosse have requirements that manufacturers
must meet. The equipment must be scientifically tested. So it’s
important that kids be fitted with the most advanced and improved equipment.”
LaBella adds that parents may provide the right equipment
but not take into consideration how fast their children are growing.
A football helmet that fits one year may be too small the next. The
same with shoes. On the other hand, she says, sometimes parents try
to compensate for rapid growth by buying a shoe one half size too big,
which poses its own dangers.
Also, as May points out, “equipment may protect
from more acute, dramatic injuries, such as a football helmet preventing
head injuries. But equipment won’t prevent the injuries resulting
from overuse.”
Retureta-Soler mentions that many sports, especially
the most popular ones, have committee recommendations for safe amateur
play, and that parents should seek them out and follow them.
“Parents often trust the coach and think he [or
she] has the child’s best interests in mind,” Retureta-Soler
says. “But they have to use their own good judgment. If the sport
does not look safe, then it probably is not. At the end, it’s
the parents who end up paying the orthopedic bills.”
One serious injury can wreck a fledging career, but
constant pounding can be just as devastating, according to May, who
says overused and stressed muscles should not be ignored. “Students
often don’t realize their potential in high school and have their
future in college sports ended as well,” May says. “Typically,
if you catch a condition in time, and you follow the prescription of
rest or rehabilitation, you can recover. But if the wear and tear goes
too far, it cascades into other things, and the once star athlete will
never be the same.”
“What should never be forgotten,” says Plancher,
“is that sports, especially at a young age, should be fun. If
the fun is taken out of it, then something is wrong. Having fun doesn’t
mean the child shouldn’t have instruction and practice. But the
sport should contribute to the child’s health, not his [or her]
detriment.”
— Thomas G. Dolan is a medical/business writer
based in the Pacific Northwest

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