


WASHINGTON (AP) — A 14-year-old gymnast with a stress fracture in her lower back. A 12-year-old who tore his ACL in a soccer game. A 16-year-old runner with a leg stress fracture. A 15-year-old who tore his meniscus playing basketball.
A single morning’s patients for Harvard’s Dr. Mininder Kocher provides a window into a troubling trend: Injuries once seen mostly in adult athletes are becoming distressingly common in young athletes - not just in high school, but in Little League and Pee Wee Football.
These aren’t simple injuries. In the past decade, “Tommy John” surgeries to repair elbows blown out playing baseball - an operation named for a Hall of Famer - have almost tripled among adolescents at a high-profile Alabama clinic, a meeting of sports medicine specialists will be told by researchers this week.
Worse, some injuries don’t have good treatments for young patients. The surgery that fixed the torn ACL, or anterior cruciate ligament, in golfer Tiger Woods’ knee, for instance, can thwart the growth of a young child’s leg.
Dr. Kocher, an orthopedic surgeon at Children’s Hospital Boston, is about to begin a government-funded study to figure out the best treatment for children who tear that anterior cruciate ligament while growth plates around the knee still are active.
But no matter how well certain injuries heal for now, Dr. Kocher worries about the long-term consequences for little joints.
“I wonder what these kids are going to be like 20 to 30 years down the road,” he says. “Will we have a whole generation of middle-aged adults with early arthritis?”
Why the sudden influx? Orthopedic surgeons say that today’s youth sports are more intense, with players often picking just one to specialize in as young as 8. And they can play and train in some sports virtually year-round - with a school team, recreation league, travel league, and summer camp.
“Youth athletes are not the same as small adults,” says Dr. E. Lyle Cain Jr. of the Andrews Sports Medicine & Orthopaedic Center in Birmingham, Ala. Certain types of injuries “can cause permanent damage that affect their future growth.”
By Dr. Milton R. Wolf
Victory requires Mitt to complete his conversion

By Jeffrey Anderson - The Washington Times
Within weeks of an inspector general’s report that criticized a bid by the D.C. Lottery ...

By David Hood - The Washington Times
Their ranks have thinned over the past three years, but a renewed sense of optimism ...

By Nekesa Mumbi Moody - Associated Press
Adele, who captured the world’s heart with an album about a broken romance, emerged as ...
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

A mother of three and a passionate conservative, Shirley Husar changes the game with commentary on the political game ala California, U.S.A.

A slice of suburban family life from the diverse perspectives of a politically minded mom.

A wife, mother of three and world waterskiing champion looks at the world through the eyes of her faith.

From family to children, to life on our street and in our world, Lori shares her view of the world