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Reddit mentions of Any Given Monday: Sports Injuries and How to Prevent Them for Athletes, Parents, and Coaches - Based on My Life in Sports Medicine

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We found 1 Reddit mentions of Any Given Monday: Sports Injuries and How to Prevent Them for Athletes, Parents, and Coaches - Based on My Life in Sports Medicine. Here are the top ones.

Any Given Monday: Sports Injuries and How to Prevent Them for Athletes, Parents, and Coaches - Based on My Life in Sports Medicine
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Release dateJanuary 2013

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Found 1 comment on Any Given Monday: Sports Injuries and How to Prevent Them for Athletes, Parents, and Coaches - Based on My Life in Sports Medicine:

u/asmi_kyle ยท 3 pointsr/Braves

First, I'll say that I'm an epidemiologist working the the field of sports medicine, but not an orthopaedist, sports medicine physician, or physical therapist, so I don't have the personal or professional knowledge to answer all of your questions.

However, there has been a substantial increase in the number of TJs seen in the younger age groups. UCL reconstruction fortunately has a very high success rate (83% return to play at the same level or higher) with a pretty low complication rate (20%; 16% minor, 4% major). Nonetheless, it seems like these young athletes are putting a lot of stress on their arms at a much younger age than this used to happen. Dr. Andrews talked a lot about this in his book that he just came out with (I promise I don't make any money off this, it's actually an interesting read). Lastly, I doubt there are too many cases where the parents make the call to undergo surgery when it's not really necessary. There aren't too many orthopaedists that I know that would open a kid's arm up just because dad wanted junior back on the mound. The decision for surgery is normally a long, slowly considered process that takes place after failed conservative treatment (usually rest and therapy).

After surgery (again, I'm not a physician or therapist, so I'm just basing this off of what I've seen in studies we've done), most players are able to return to the same position they played. Occasionally with older players (pros and college), we'll see a starter move to a reliever and rarely a pitcher move to a position player, but these sort of moves happen within an organization anyway so to attribute it solely to the surgery may not be quite correct.

Hope that answered your questions!