Any Given Monday: Sports Injuries and How to Prevent Them for Athletes, Parents, and Coaches - Based on My Life in Sports Medicine
By James R. Andrews and Don Yaeger
()
About this ebook
Every year more than 3.5 million children will require medical treatment for sports-related injuries, the majority of which are avoidable through proper training and awareness. Any Given Monday is Dr. Andrews’s sport-by-sport guide to injury prevention and treatment, written specifically for the parents, grandparents, and coaches of young athletes. From identifying eating disorders to preventing career-ending ACL tears and concussions, Any Given Monday is a compendium of practical advice for every major sport, including football, gymnastics, judo, basketball, tennis, baseball, cheerleading, wrestling, and more. This invaluable guide reveals how young athletes can maximize their talent and maintain a lifetime of health both on the field and off.
James R. Andrews
James R. Andrews, MD, is an orthopedic surgeon in sports medicine and a pioneer in arthroscopic surgery. His patients and consultations include Albert Pujols, Drew Brees, Brett Favre, Roger Clemens, John Smoltz, Charles Barkley, Jack Nicklaus, Hope Solo, Bo Jackson, Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith, and both Manning brothers. Sports Illustrated recently named him as one of the top forty most influential people in the NFL. He is the team doctor for Auburn University, the University of Alabama, the Washington Redskins, and the Tampa Bay Rays. He is a founder of the American Sports Medicine Institute (ASMI) in Birmingham, Alabama, and the Andrews Research and Education Institute in Gulf Breeze, Florida.
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Any Given Monday - James R. Andrews
Part 1
Why It Matters
Chapter 1
The Epidemic
Approximately forty-five million children and adolescents are involved in organized athletics in the United States and, as I stated earlier, nearly three and a half million of them under the age of fourteen are treated for sports-related injuries each year, making athletics one of the leading health risks for children. The majority of injuries, of course, are relatively mild sprains, strains, and bruises, but a significant percentage will be more severe, with some even requiring hospitalization. What is even more troubling is that roughly 50 percent of all sports injuries are related to overuse, and studies show that at least 60 percent of overuse injuries can be prevented simply by employing a little common sense—and even more by taking just a few safety precautions. It must be the primary responsibility of the parents, grandparents, coaches, paramedical personnel, and young athletes themselves to help prevent these injuries the best they can.
These statistics are followed carefully by the American Sports Medicine Institute (ASMI) and the Andrews Research & Education Institute (AREI) in Gulf Breeze, two organizations of which I am the chairman. Each year, as new numbers come in, it is a sobering experience for many reasons. Injuries certainly reduce participation in sports and fitness activities, thus contributing to the childhood obesity epidemic as well as other social misgivings. Some injuries can be career ending or even life limiting well before the child or teen has had a chance to pursue his or her dreams. Even less serious injuries can have long-term implications, as damage to joints in childhood contributes exponentially to the chances of developing arthritis later in life. Additionally, there is no question that the evaluation, treatment, and rehabilitation of youth sports injuries is expensive and can lead to lost time and productivity at work for parents. Recent reports have placed the costs associated with youth sports injuries between $2.5 billion and $3 billion annually.
As stated above, many of these sports-related youth injuries are preventable through educational programs at the grassroots level. I will discuss some of the more common youth sports and associated injuries and provide some information related to their prevention, including rule changes, safety equipment, and preseason and in-season conditioning programs.
Our statistics at the American Sports Medicine Institute indicate a five- to seven-fold increase in injuries in youth sports since 2000. Further statistics show that in high school alone, each year some two million injuries result in five hundred thousand doctor visits and approximately thirty thousand hospitalizations for treatment. The statistics for certain sports are particularly troubling.
Cheerleading, for example, is out of control. There are three million young cheerleaders in the United States, ranging from squads of preteens at local cheer gyms, to approximately four hundred thousand at the high school level, to the college cheerleaders you see on TV, smiling and leaping on the sidelines at football and basketball games. The National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) medical reports indicate that of all the insurance monies spent on treatment for college athletes across roughly ninety sports, fully 25 percent is for cheerleading injuries. This might not seem as dramatic a number when compared to the 57 percent of NCAA medical expenses spent on football; however, football has ten times the participation of cheerleading. The rate of emergency room visits for cheerleaders at any level has increased sixfold since 1981. In 2008 alone, roughly thirty thousand young women and men landed in the ER as a result of injuries sustained while cheering. During the twenty-six years between 1982 and 2008, there were seventy-three catastrophic injuries reported in cheerleading, with two deaths. Gymnastics, which incorporates many of the same tumbling passes and boasts similar numbers of participants, had a total of nine catastrophic injuries during that same period. That’s a pretty drastic difference. Clearly, something needs to be done to protect cheerleaders from increasingly common and increasingly serious injuries. Football, too, deserves a critical examination. In 2007 there were 920,000 players under the age of eighteen treated in emergency rooms for injuries.
One factor that contributes significantly to the rate of injury is specialization. In other words, children are pigeonholed into one sport fairly early on, which means that they have little variation in terms of the muscles and joints employed and skills practiced, which can lead to fatigue and a much higher rate of injury. And one of the main causes of early specialization is parents who stress the pursuit of one specific sport for the sake of gaining college scholarships and professional recruiting buzz. It should be noted, though, that the odds of a football player actually making it to the NFL—not as a starter or even taking the field at any point in his life, but just making it on a professional roster—is greater than 6,000 to 1.
I don’t mean to come down too hard on parents here; after all, we all want the best possible opportunities for our children. And most parents are very responsible in the emphasis they place on pursuing sports. But at some point, there needs to be a reality check. Ambitious parents and coaches need to understand that encouraging a child’s talent is one thing but controlling it or obsessing over it is quite another. Before you pin your future retirement plans on how well your child performs athletically, consider this: The National Federation of State High School Associations estimates that less than 0.1 percent of kids who participate in sports at school will receive a scholarship to continue that sport in college.
The American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM) initiated the STOP Sports Injury Campaign in 2010 to prevent overuse and trauma injuries among young athletes. The STOP acronym, which stands for Sports Trauma and Overuse Prevention, makes clear the organization’s intentions. As president of the society from 2009 to 2010, I expressed my desire to launch a national program for preventing injuries in youth sports. The AOSSM unanimously agreed that the time was right to begin our education campaign.
Founding partner organizations in the STOP Sports Injury Campaign include the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS), the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM), the National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA), the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America (POSNA), the Sports Physical Therapy Section of the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA), Safe Kids USA, and the Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society (PBATS). Today there are more than 250 other local and national organizations that have taken the pledge to prevent youth sports injuries at the grassroots level.
When it comes to sports injury prevention, we must establish a priority in basic research principles. The STOP program’s mission is fourfold: Number one is to establish the extent of the problem. Number two is to identify the risk factors and the mechanism of the injuries. Number three is to develop preventive interventions. And number four is to evaluate the effects and results of those interventions from a scientific standpoint. The STOP program has all of these objectives in its mission and focus. The AOSSM has identified several areas of research that need to be undertaken to take prevention to a scientific conclusion and to be able to show definitive results.
The first high-priority proposal addresses the prevention of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) knee injuries in young female athletes, who have a three to six times ACL injury rate when compared to their male counterparts. This study will emphasize cutting
sports, which require a sudden change of direction or darting to one side while running, such as basketball, lacrosse, soccer, and volleyball. Cheerleading and gymnastics will also be included.
The second priority is the prevention of repeated concussions and related complications. Approximately two million to three million young athletes suffer concussions each year in America. A number of long-term studies have shown that repeated concussions have an impact on mental health later in life, especially among former athletes.
The third priority is related to overuse injuries of the shoulder and elbow and their prevention in youth baseball and youth softball for both pitchers and fielders. The number of young men and women who require surgical repair to their pitching arms because of overuse damage is on the rise. This is a serious problem and one that is especially close to my heart, as it is now one of the most common procedures I have to perform on young people. When I started in this career, I never imagined that it would become routine for a fifteen-year-old to have to undergo such drastic treatment.
In a study published in the September 2009 issue of the American Journal of Sports Medicine, researchers examined severe injuries broken down by specific sports and injury type. Researchers captured injury data during the 2005–06 and 2006–07 school years from one hundred nationally represented US high schools. Information was collected for various sports, including football, soccer, volleyball, basketball, wrestling, baseball, and softball. Severe injury
was defined as any mishap that resulted in an athlete losing more than twenty-one days of sports participation; according to the study, over the course of those two years, severe injuries accounted for 14.9 percent of all high school sports–related injuries. After football injuries, the highest level of injury was reported in wrestling, followed by girls’ basketball and girls’ soccer. While no one was surprised that football emerged as number one, there were some unexpected findings. Among the directly comparable sports of soccer, basketball, and baseball/softball, girls actually sustained a higher severe injury rate than boys. There were also patterns in injury sites, with the knee sustaining a severe injury nearly 30 percent of the time, followed by the ankle at 12.3 percent and the shoulder at 10.9 percent. Additionally, 5 percent of the severe injuries recorded resulted directly from illegal player activity such as tripping or spear tackling. While ankle sprains still tend to be the most common nonsevere
injury among young players, these findings highlighted the importance of finding ways to protect the knees from more traumatic damage, and suggested that not enough is being done to educate and protect young women athletes. According to this very important and revealing article, future studies should focus on risk factors to develop prevention and intervention. Decreasing sports-related injuries is critical to keep kids playing sports long-term and minimizing the health care cost both to the family and to the health care system itself.
According to the National Federation of State High School Associations, some 7.34 million athletes now participate in high school sports programs, up from 5.2 million just ten years ago. The boy-to-girl ratio is not quite even, although the number of girls participating in sports is on the rise: The total numbers are approximately 4.32 million boys compared to 3.02 million girls, yet the number of serious injuries in many girls’ sports is higher than the rate in comparable boys’ sports. This is certainly a cause for concern.
In light of these statistics, I’d like to make some general recommendations for athletes of both genders that I will elaborate on in part 2’s sports-specific chapters. The vast majority of sports medicine professionals, coaches, and trainers agree that training in the months prior to the sports season is critical to an athlete’s success. The old saying Preparation is ninety-nine percent of execution
is certainly true in the athletic arena. A very successful preseason strength and conditioning program will dramatically decrease the risk of both minor and major injuries. It is the responsibility of coaches in all youth sports to educate their players in proper periodization on a twelve-month basis in preparation for a season. That is, fitness must begin prior to the first day of practice, and, ideally, some form of physical fitness should be maintained year-round, with training increasing gradually two to three months before the season starts. Statistics show that the majority of injuries occur in the first few weeks of a sports season due to inadequate preseason preparation.
It is also critical for coaches and players to realize that there must be a balance between work and rest. A young athlete should not work out at peak levels twelve months out of the year—especially not with an eye toward specializing in a specific sport. Overtraining always increases the risk for injury, especially in growing bodies. Therefore, athletes should not neglect off-season training, specifically cross-training and participating in other sports. But they should also be willing to take off a few weeks or a month from intense exercise each year in order to allow their body to rest. Low-impact activity should be pursued during that time, but the body needs a chance to recover and repair itself from the constant wear and tear of training.
Coaches should also be aware that the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) indicates that 62 percent of sports injuries occur during practice rather than in a game or match. This does make sense: although an athlete’s adrenaline tends to be higher in competitive settings—contributing to more aggressive play—the vast majority of his or her time is spent in practice versus actual time going head-to-head with another team. For that reason, practices should always be well supervised for safety of technique as well as the intensity of the workout.
No matter the sport, it is important to focus on general conditioning and core stability, as well as overall cardiovascular fitness and endurance through long-duration, low-intensity workouts. Cross-training during the off-season is especially important when participating in a predominantly one-sided sport, such as baseball. By pursuing different types of sports, young athletes can develop more complete musculature and hone other athletic skills to avoid fatiguing a specific part of the body.
Young athletes, particularly those who have not yet gone through puberty, should avoid overtraining and overuse, as the body is not fully equipped to rebuild muscles following workouts. I recommend that younger athletes follow a simple 10 percent rule: do not increase weight, training activities, mileage, or pace by more than 10 percent a week. This prevents stressing the body beyond capacity by allowing it to rest, rebuild, and recover. In fact, increasing training intensity too quickly can actually decrease high-level athletic activity.
It is essential for coaches to understand the basic principles related to preparing an athlete for a season. Thanks to Avery D. Faigenbaum, EdD, at the College of New Jersey, and Larry Meadors, PhD, at Sports Spectrum Training, here’s a list of twelve fundamentals for building young and healthy players, which the authors aptly entitle The Coaches Dozen,
originally published in Strength and Conditioning Journal in 2010:
1. Young athletes are not miniature adults.
2. Value preparatory conditioning.
3. Avoid sports specialization before adolescence.
4. Enhance physical literacy.
5. Better to undertrain than to overtrain.
6. Focus on positive education.
7. Maximize recovery.
8. It is not what you take, it is what you do.
9. Get connected.
10. Make a long-term commitment.
11. There are no secrets.
12. Never stop learning.
Coaches and parents alike should remember that sports are meant to be fun, while facilitating a young athlete’s social development. Never push the training or make the competition so serious that the child feels stressed or comes to dread the activity. This can easily lead to burnout in the sport or in athletics in general. I also recommend avoiding professionalism
in youth sports—that is, harping on how young athletes need to develop their talent if they ever want to make it in the pros, or obsessing over their training to the point of tunnel vision. Adolescents have plenty of time to develop into professional athletes if their talent and interest point them in that direction. Genetically, 99.9 percent of young athletes are not ready for such serious professionalism at a young age.
There are essentially two different types of injuries: acute injuries and overuse injuries. Acute injuries are the result of a single traumatic event. Common examples include wrist fractures, ankle sprains, shoulder dislocations, or hamstring muscle strains. Overuse injuries, on the other hand, usually occur over time, making them more challenging to diagnose and sometimes more difficult to treat, as the damage is often not as clearly defined as in acute injuries. They are usually a result of overtraining: repetitive microtrauma to tendons, bones, cartilage, and joints, such as shin splints or tennis elbow. Whenever an athlete trains for a sport, even as a child, he or she is trying to make the bones, muscles, tendons, and ligaments of the body stronger and more functional. Unfortunately, there is a very thin line between beneficial training and training that is ultimately detrimental to the body.
The process of breaking down and building up muscle has a fine balance as well. When is the soreness a good thing, meaning that the muscles were stretched and worked to the point of growing stronger? And when does it mean that the muscles were damaged and are struggling to repair themselves? Training errors tend to involve a rapid acceleration of the intensity, duration, or frequency of an activity. They are especially associated with specialization.
Parents, coaches, and athletes must remember that the goal is always to feel better, not worse. Although soreness is to be expected when working new muscles, and anyone is likely to feel winded when doing cardio conditioning, the pain should never be debilitating. A common philosophy in training for sports is that more is better
: in other words, if pitching a ball twenty times is good, pitching it forty times is twice as good. That’s simply not true. No pain, no gain
should have no place in youth sports. Young athletes should not participate with pain. Athletes should have an open dialogue with their coaches, parents, or other trusted adults regarding their pain patterns, as these may be early indications of overuse injuries.
When an imbalance between strength and flexibility occurs, the injury pattern for overuse injuries increases rapidly. Young athletes who are still developing and growing often have bony malalignment, which simply means that the bones are growing at a rate that temporarily puts them out of the normal position in relation to their joints. This condition makes young athletes even more prone to overuse injuries. Other factors include equipment (such as the type of running shoe or ballet shoe), whether the terrain is uneven, hard surfaces versus soft surfaces in training, and whether proper techniques are being taught and practiced. These are just a few of the reasons why expert, certified coaches are so important in bringing their knowledge and understanding of the safest and best possible practices to their teams.
Some guidelines for treating overuse injury include:
1. Cut back the intensity, duration, and frequency of an activity.
2. Adopt a hard/easy workout schedule to vary the intensity each day, and incorporate cross-training with other activities to maintain fitness levels.
3. Learn proper training and techniques from a qualified coach or athletic trainer.
4. Perform proper warm-up and cool-down activities before and after practicing. Flexibility stretches can be particularly helpful when combined with ballistic exercises that get the muscles ready for intense bursts of energy, such as squats or tossing a medicine ball. (See chapter 32 for more information and illustrations.)
5. Apply ice for minor aches and pains after any activity.
6. Use nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs), such as aspirin, ibuprofen, and naproxen, as necessary. Communication between athletes, parents, and coaches is particularly important if symptoms persist, at which point a visit to a sports medicine specialist is in order.
7. Consult athletic trainers and physical therapists for guidelines about early recognition and treatment of suspected overuse.
Keeping our kids safe needs to be a team effort, with all involved parties pitching in. Parents, grandparents, coaches, trainers, and athletes should all work toward the brightest possible future for every young athlete: one that is healthy and active thanks to the safe decisions we make together now.
Chapter 2
What Is Sports Medicine?
We need to begin by talking about the importance of sports medicine and how it specifically targets the unique needs of athletes. A short definition of the practice is that it is the care of the muscles, bones, and joints of athletically active individuals.
But to understand the bigger picture, let’s look at how it developed.
A Brief History of Sports Medicine
While sports medicine is one of the youngest fields of medical practice in many ways, it is also quite an ancient one. In the fifth century BC, a Greek-speaking physician from Thrace named Herodicus reportedly was the first team doctor and the father of sports medicine. He rendered his fundamental theories on the use of therapeutic exercises for maintaining health and treating disease, promoting not only a proper diet for peak athletic performance but also postworkout massages for the sake of rehabilitating sore muscles and joints. A gymnastics master as well as a practicing doctor, Herodicus mentored a number of younger athletes and physicians alike, such as Hippocrates, for whom is named the Hippocratic oath, which all physicians still take as part of their medical education and licensure.
An abundance of sports medicine theories have been put into practice in the intervening 2,500 years—some good, some bad, some with a lot of inconsistencies. The one fact that remains true throughout history is that athletic competition produces injuries, and some can be severe, career ending, and even deadly.
Sports medicine as we know it today really began in 1890 at Harvard Medical School. This was a logical place for the field to emerge, as Harvard University was the home of one of the nation’s oldest and most competitive football teams. And even as the sport was taking off at the end of the nineteenth century, protective equipment still lagged behind: Helmets were not used widely until the 1920s, and even then were just thick leather caps rather than the carefully designed shells with face masks and strategic padding that are such an indispensable part of modern football. At Harvard, significant injuries following football games and other athletic competitions were recognized as unique health challenges; because of this, a program was instituted to educate the players about the need for personal fitness, proper gear, injury prevention, and the importance of rehabilitation. Team athletic trainers and therapists grew in importance along with the team physician. Modern sports medicine had begun.
For the next sixty years, Harvard continued to lead the way in developing this branch of medicine into a distinct field of practice. In 1899 Dr. E. A. Darling released a scientific report defining the physiological effects of strenuous athletic exercise and methods for decreasing related injuries. Five years later, team physician Dr. Edwin Nichols pushed for protective gear to be required in football.
The following year, in 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt formed the American Football Rules Committee. Led by Henry L. Williams, the AFRC laid the groundwork for what would eventually become the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the organization that now oversees sports programs at most US colleges and universities.
But sports medicine was growing not just in America. The term sports physician was first used in Germany in 1914. Nineteen thirty-three saw the formation of the Internationale de Medico-Sportive et Cientifique, which focused on medical practices for much of the athletic competition in Europe.
The first book on the subject was published in 1938 by Dr. Augustus Thorndike, a Harvard Medical School graduate, World War I veteran, and surgeon who began working with the Harvard University Athletic Department in 1926. His text, Athletic Injuries: Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment, became the written authority for a generation of team doctors and trainers.
The 1940s and 1950s witnessed a huge increase in the number of scientific articles examining sports medicine in practice. In 1957 Harvard’s team physician Dr. Thomas B. Quigley crafted what he called the Athlete’s Bill of Rights,
a document that sparked a great deal of discussion as to the degree of medical care that athletes had a right to expect from their team.
By the start of the 1960s, University of Oklahoma team physician Dr. Don O’Donoghue’s book Treatment of Injuries to Athletes had replaced Thorndike’s book as the bible of sports medicine and helped to standardize training and approaches to injury treatment and prevention. Around that same time, in Columbus, Georgia, Dr. Jack C. Hughston, chairman of the American Medical Association’s Sports Medicine Committee, worked to promote postgraduate courses in the field and encouraged more research on the subject, in effect, pushing it into mainstream medicine. Hughston also brought a team of physicians with him to high school football games on Friday nights, and then to college games at Auburn and other universities on Saturdays. Specialized athletic health care was becoming the rule rather than the exception.
The 1970s saw some of the most substantial changes in the field, however. The American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine was born in 1972, with Don O’Donoghue as its first president. Along with the establishment of the AOSSM came its Journal of Sports Medicine, with Jack C. Hughston as the initial editor. It later became the American Journal of Sports Medicine.
Prior to 1978, there was little continuity or consistency in America with regard to how individual Olympic sports selected their own medical teams. The United States Olympic Committee launched a program to refine and regiment the care provided to Olympic athletes.
Even more significant during that same decade was the introduction of arthroscopy, a minimally invasive procedure in which a tiny camera inserted through a tiny incision in the body provided a view of internal injury. As technology improved, joint surgery was revolutionized. Suddenly knee injuries that had once been career ending could often be surgically repaired. Shoulder, elbow, ankle, hip, and wrist surgeries all offered new hope to injured athletes. This was the most important technical advancement in sports medicine in the last forty years, thanks to the late, great Dr. Robert Jackson, who brought the first arthroscope to North America from