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Sports Injuries
Sports Injuries and Chiropractic Care
By Kim Christensen, DC, DACRB, CCSP, CSCS
Many musculoskeletal complaints arise from injuries sustained in sports. Each
year we see athletic performance draw closer to the limits of human potential.
Understanding the biomechanical principles involved helps us to prevent injury
and restore functional integrity and stability through rehabilitation. While our
lever-like extremities transmit forces and motion at a distance, they also favor
musculoskeletal injuries by amplifying forces acting on the body's
neuromusculoskeletal system.1

The sheer volume of time put into training by professional athletes is often
quite remarkable. For example, runners may compete and train over 200 miles per
week, swimmers may spend four or five hours in the water daily, and the
acquisition of skills for an event such as a pentathlon may utilize even longer
periods per day. Thus, the exploitation of athletic prowess can easily be
disrupted by major and minor injury problems.2
The Garrick and Requa study of injuries in high school sports for two academic
years of 1973-74 and 1974-75 revealed 1197 injuries for 3049 participants in 19
different sports.3 These two authors also reported on the number of high school
injuries (per 100 participants) for the various specific sports as follows:4
| Male
|
Injuries
|
Female
|
Injuries
|
| Cross-country |
29 |
Cross-country |
35 |
| Volleyball |
10 |
Volleyball |
6 |
| Gymnastics |
28 |
Gymnastics |
40 |
| Basketball |
31 |
Basketball |
25 |
| Swimming |
1 |
Swimming |
9 |
| Tennis |
3 |
Tennis |
7 |
| Track & Field |
33 |
Track & Field |
35 |
| Baseball |
18 |
Softball |
44 |
| Wrestling |
75 |
| Soccer |
30 |
| Football |
81 |
Injuries sustained in high school sports: 1973-1978.
There
are good reasons why the athlete should seek a sports chiropractor for the
treatment and rehabilitation of a sports injury. Active people are physically
and emotionally different from sedentary ones. Most physicians have not had
special training in sports medicine or rehabilitation. Consequently, even
outstanding physicians who don't treat athletes regularly often make mistakes in
the diagnosis and treatment of athletes' neuromusculoskeletal problems.5
The opportunity of being a team chiropractic physician is often quite unique for
the typical chiropractor, in that he or she is dealing, as a rule, with patients
who are usually healthy and physically fit. This is rare in the general
chiropractic practice. Young athletes are often in the peak of physical
condition and motivation, which accounts for a rapid rate of recovery. While the
professional prerequisites are obtained in the regular chiropractic education,
on-site athletic care is often a far different experience than that of general
practice. Innumerable cranial, spinal, and extremity contusions, strains,
sprains, fractures, subluxations, dislocations, and soft tissue trauma are
encountered by the chiropractor.1
It is also observed that the cumulative effects of constant athletic small
stresses over a long duration can give rise to the same difficulties as severe
sudden stress. Spinal injuries in sports constitute only about three percent of
all athletic injuries. Thus, the chiropractor must be well prepared to manage
the various musculoskeletal injuries that occur away from the spine.6
While conditioning is emphasized in athletics, the motivation is frequently on
winning, rather than on prevention of injury. While this seems illogical,
chiropractors handling athletic injuries must understand this if they are to
properly evaluate and provide service. The development of cooperation between
team physician, family physician and chiropractor helps to reduce the problem of
conflicting opinions, often delivered to an already confused athlete. The
typical family doctor has little knowledge of the practicalities involved in
specialized sports injury management, and should accept logical procedures and
recommendations when explained by the chiropractor.1
The chiropractic approach toward athletic injuries has demonstrated that
everyone is better served by having the injured player promptly and ably
treated, thereby obtaining recovery before irreparable damage is done. The
chiropractor must become not only the doer, but also the teacher. The
chiropractor with a special interest in athletes must be prepared to handle
their injuries, and must in turn pass this information on to other physicians.
It must be recognized that in the management of athletic injuries, the patient
must get complete recovery, or he or she is no longer an athlete. The following
concepts (the "Five A's")7 utilizing chiropractic treatment have proved to be of
great value:
1. Accept athletics. The chiropractor -- not the player, not the coach, not the
parents, but the chiropractor -- must recognize the value of competitive
athletics; that it is vital to the patient to be restored to competitive
athletics. If the chiropractor fails in this, the patient-doctor relationship
suffers and rapport is lost. The chiropractor who depreciates the player's
ambition should not be treating the athlete.
2. Avoid expediency. Outside influence must not be permitted to outweigh sound
chiropractic judgment. Many pressing factors will tend to influence the
chiropractor's decision. All concerned are extremely unwilling to believe that
the player is really hurt. The athlete's desire to compete, the fear of
"failing" teammates, the parents' desire to see their child excel, the coach's
hope that the player is not really hurt, all must be ignored if the proper
conclusion is to be reached.
3. Adopt the best method of treatment. Chiropractic evaluation of the nature and
extent of injury must be the controlling factor in the choice of treatment. If
you really believe that one method is distinctly better than another, you should
recommend it and then carry it out. This must be an entirely objective decision.
4. Act promptly. A definitive decision on the proper method of treatment must be
made at the earliest possible moment, and then carried out. Delay has been
conclusively shown to be the difference between success and failure of
treatment.
5. Achieve perfection. Make complete recovery the chiropractic goal. While this
may not be possible in every case, it must always be the goal. The athlete is
basically in good condition and can well tolerate any reasonable measure if it
serves to increase the chances for a complete recovery.
Sports chiropractic and chiropractic rehabilitation have received a considerable
amount of attention in recent years. Some of the reasons for the increased
awareness and interest are the publicity afforded the injuries of professional
athletes; the injuries resulting from the increased participation by individuals
in physical fitness and recreational athletics; and the government's role in
encouraging physical fitness through the president's Council on Physical Fitness
and Sports.
Sports chiropractic and chiropractic rehabilitation have developed at a
considerable pace over the last decade. As with other areas of chiropractic,
where knowledge and understanding are rapidly expanding, it is necessary for the
chiropractor to first be given an adequate basic preparation, and then be
reminded of the necessity to keep abreast of the latest developments and
advances. Thus, appropriate and timely rehabilitation protocols are essential.
References
Schafer RC. Chiropractic Management of Sports and Recreational Injuries.
Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1982.
Muckle DS. Injuries in Sport. Chicago: Year Book Medical Publishers, Inc., 1978.
Roy S, Irvin R. Sports Medicine Prevention, Evaluation, Management, and
Rehabilitation. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1983.
Garrick JG, Requa RK. Injuries in high school sports. Pediatrics 1978;
61:465-469.
Mirkin G, Hoffman M. The Sports Medicine Book. Boston: Little, Brown and
Company, 1978.
White AA, Panjabi MM. Clinical Biomechanics of the Spine. Philadelphia: J.B.
Lippincott Company, 1978.
O'Donoghue DH. Treatment of Injures to Athletes (3rd ed.). Philadelphia: W.B.
Saunders, 1976.
Kim D. Christensen, DC, DACRB, CCSP
Ridgefield, Washington
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