scholarly journals Are Adolescent Climbers Aware of the Most Common Youth Climbing Injury and Safe Training Practices?

Author(s):  
Rachel N. Meyers ◽  
Steven L. Hobbs ◽  
David R. Howell ◽  
Aaron J. Provance

Finger growth plate injuries are the most common youth climbing injuries. The purpose of our study was to understand youth awareness of the most common youth climbing injury and safe training practices. We surveyed climbers, ages eight to 18 years old, at the 2017 USA Climbing Sport and Speed Youth National Championships. A total of 267 climbers completed the survey (mean age = 14 ± 2.7 years; 52% male). The A2 pulley injury was reported as the most common youth climbing injury by the largest portion of participants, 36%. The second most commonly identified injury was at the growth plate of the finger, 15% of participants, which was reported as significantly less than the A2 pulley injury, p < 0.001. Six percent of climbers reported the correct safe age to start double dyno campus board training. Roughly 18% of athletes identified growth plate injuries exclusively as a stress fracture, whereas 29.2% of those climbers self-reported as informed about finger growth plate injuries, but only 7.4% of climbers who self-reported as uninformed answered this question correctly. Misperceptions about skeletally-immature climbing injuries are prevalent amongst youth climbers. Education on the prevalence of finger growth plate injuries and the scarcity of A2 pulley injuries in youth climbers can increase diagnostic accuracy, improve care, and reduce long-term complications.

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Keishi Maruo ◽  
Toshiya Tachibana ◽  
Shinichi Inoue ◽  
Fumihiro Arizumi ◽  
Shinichi Yoshiya

Most unilateral pedicle stress fractures occur on the contralateral side of patients with unilateral spondylolysis. However, there are few reports of unilateral pedicle stress fractures in patients with bilateral spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis. We report a unique case of unilateral pedicle stress fracture in a long-term hemodialysis patient with isthmic spondylolisthesis. A 65-year-old man who had undergone hemodialysis presented with lower back pain that had persisted for several years. The patient experienced severe right lower extremity pain with no history of trauma. Computed tomography revealed unilateral pedicle fracture with bilateral L5 spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis with progression of scoliosis. The patient underwent Gill laminectomy of L5 with pedicle screw fixation at L4-S1 and interbody fusion at L5-S1. The patient’s leg pain ceased immediately, and he began walking without leg pain. In our present patient, development of scoliosis caused by destructive spondyloarthropathy may have contributed to a unilateral pedicle fracture.


2008 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.D Evans ◽  
L.E Sheppard ◽  
D.I Grossman ◽  
S.H Rao ◽  
R.B Martin ◽  
...  

Bisphosphonates, used to treat diseases exhibiting increased osteoclast activity, reduce longitudinal bone growth through an as yet undefined mechanism. Pamidronate, an aminobisphosphonate, was given weekly to mice at 0, 1.25, or 2.50 mg/kg/wk beginning at 4 weeks of age. At 12 weeks of age, humeral length, growth plate area, regional chondrocyte cell numbers, chondrocyte apoptosis, TRAP stained osteoclast number, and osteoclast function assessed by cathepsin K immunohistochemistry were quantified. Humeral length was decreased in pamidronate treated mice compared to vehicle control mice, and correlated with greater growth plate areas reflecting greater proliferative and hypertrophic chondrocyte cell numbers with fewer hypertrophic cells undergoing apoptosis. Pamidronate treatment increased TRAP stained osteoclast numbers yet decreased cathepsin K indicating that pamidronate repressed osteoclast maturation and function. The data suggest that long term cyclic pamidronate treatment impairs bone growth by inhibition of osteoclast maturation thereby reducing cartilage-to-bone turnover within the growth plate.


2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-23
Author(s):  
Fuat Bilgili ◽  
Sami Sökücü ◽  
Ayhan Kılıç ◽  
Atilla Sancar Parmaksızoğlu ◽  
Özgür Mengeş ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Lindsey N. Landry ◽  
Milena Keller-Margulis ◽  
Michael Matta ◽  
Hanjoe Kim ◽  
Jorge E. Gonzalez ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. 399-403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kozo Ohtera ◽  
Hideji Kura ◽  
Toshihiko Yamashita ◽  
Naoki Ohyama

2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 210-225
Author(s):  
Sarah Ochs ◽  
Milena A. Keller-Margulis ◽  
Kristi L. Santi ◽  
John H. Jones

Universal screening is the first mechanism by which students are identified as at risk of failure in the context of multitiered systems of supports. This study examined the validity and diagnostic accuracy of a reading computer-adaptive test as a screener to identify state achievement test performance for third through fifth graders ( N = 1,696). Single time points and slopes within year and longitudinally were examined. Validity results for single points were moderate (.60–.79, p < .002). Validity for slopes and the state test were weak or not significant. Diagnostic accuracy cut scores that maximized sensitivity and specificity yielded high accuracy for single points whereas sensitivity was inadequate for slopes. Practical implications and future directions are presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (7_suppl6) ◽  
pp. 2325967120S0047
Author(s):  
Simone Gruber ◽  
Rhiannon Miller ◽  
Beth Shubin Stein ◽  
Joseph Nguyen

Objectives: Medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) reconstruction is the standard of care surgical treatment for recurrent patellar instability. Recurrent patellar instability is common after a first-time dislocation in the skeletally immature population. Adult-type reconstruction techniques are often avoided in skeletally immature patients due to the proximity of the femoral insertion of the MFPL to the distal femoral physis. It is currently unclear how outcomes of MPFL reconstruction in skeletally immature patients compare to those for skeletally mature patients. The objective of this study is to present the outcomes of isolated MPFL reconstruction in skeletally immature patients and compare their findings to a skeletally mature population. Methods: Patients were identified from an institutional patellofemoral registry who underwent isolated MPFL reconstruction from March 2014 to July 2018. Demographic, radiographic, and knee-specific patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) were collected prior to surgery. Follow-up data collection included knee surveys collected at 1 and 2-years following MPFL reconstruction. Additionally, return to sport rates and episodes of re-dislocations were also collected. Comparisons of demographic and clinical data were made between skeletally immature and mature patients. Sub-analysis was performed on outcomes in skeletally immature patients who underwent MPFL reconstruction where the graft was placed distal to the physis to avoid the growth plate versus those who had standard placement of the graft. Baseline factors were analyzed using independent samples t-tests or chi-square analysis. Longitudinal analysis of knee PROMs was conducted using generalized estimating equation (GEE) modeling. Statistical significance was defined as p-values of 0.05 or less. Results: The study cohort included 107 patients (25 skeletally immature, 82 skeletally mature). Mean age of the study groups was 13.8 years in the immature group (range 11-15) and 21.3 in the mature group (range 14-34). No differences in sex (72% female in both groups) or obesity (0% vs. 8%) was observed between immature and mature patients. Radiographic measures of Caton-Deschamps Index (1.18 in both groups), TT-TG (14.9 vs. 14.8), and Dejour classification (P=0.328) also saw no differences between groups. Longitudinal outcomes in KOOS QoL, IKDC, KOOS PS, and Kujala surveys found no differences between immature versus mature patients over time. However, higher PediFABS was observed in the immature group versus mature at baseline (21.6 vs. 11.9, P<0.001), 1-year (18.1 vs. 11.5, P=0.006), and 2-years (22.4 vs. 11.5, P=0.003). Low incidence of post-operative dislocation and a high return to sport rate was observed in both skeletally immature and mature patients. No statistical differences were observed in all outcomes between immature patients who had standard graft placement and those where the graft was placed distal to the physis. Conclusion: Controversy exists in how best to treat the skeletally immature patient with recurrent lateral patellar instability. Due to the risk of injury to the growth plate, many believe it is best to wait to stabilize these patients until they have stopped growing. However, given the high risk of cartilage injury with each dislocation and the long term sequelae of such injuries in these young knees, the risk of waiting may be high. This study demonstrates similar outcomes and recurrence rates in skeletally immature patients with those seen in the mature population without disturbance or injury to the growth plates. [Figure: see text][Figure: see text]


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (03) ◽  
pp. 386-388
Author(s):  
Hiroyuki Fujioka ◽  
Tetsuo Nishikawa ◽  
Yohei Takagi ◽  
Takanori Oi ◽  
Shinichi Yoshiya

An eleven-year-old male gymnast felt right wrist pain when performing handstands on the floor without any major traumas. Displaced scaphoid fracture was observed on the anteroposterior view of the radiograph. Both on the T1-weighted image from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and on the short TI inversion recovery (STIR) image from MRI, low intensity was detected at the middle of the ossification center of the scaphoid and the physis and the articular cartilage covering the scaphoid bone were preserved without any injury. The patient was diagnosed with stress fracture of the ossification center of the scaphoid and successfully treated conservatively.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 5134-5134
Author(s):  
Samantha Pozzi ◽  
Raffaella Marcheselli ◽  
Alessia Bari ◽  
Eliana Valentina Liardo ◽  
Paola Bresciani ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 5134 BACKGROUND: Bisphosphonates (BP) are standard supportive care in patients affected by symptomatic multiple myeloma (MM) with skeletal lesions. Despite the long term use of BP in the clinic, many of the effects of this category of drugs and their optimal schedule of administration are still matter of debate. In the recent past the identification of osteonecrosis of the jaw induced clinicians and researchers to reevaluate the schedule of administration of BP in myeloma, questioning about their effects on other cells than osteoclasts. Therefore a better definition of risks and benefits of anti-catabolic agents may help addressing future studies in this field. Recently a growing number of publications alerted orthopedics and endocrinologists about a rare but serious event called “atypical low energy fractures” (LEF) in patients affected by osteoporosis treated with long term BP (1–3). LEF refer to stress fractures, mainly localized in the subtrochanteric region, spontaneous or secondary to minor trauma, often preceded by local pain, with specific radiologic patterns and sometimes delayed healing. Localizations in bones different than femur have been reported. Still debated is the association with BP and the pathophysiology of this condition. So far three cases of fractures with the characteristics of LEF have been described in MM patients. METHODS: in order to evaluate the possible existence of other cases of LEF in patients with MM we started a retrospective survey in hematological centers, collecting the cases of MM followed by each center between January 2005 and December 2010, and any case of atypical fracture not related to MM or major trauma. Inclusion criteria for LEF were so defined: diagnosis of MM; treatment with BP; fractures induced by minor trauma or spontaneous, not associated with MM localization; radiological aspect of stress fracture; +/− prodromic pain. Central revision of patients history and radiology will be conducted with the support of an orthopedic in the patients with atypical fractures, followed by bone histomorphometry on bone marrow biopsy. RESULTS: The study is ongoing. At present seven centers reported a total of 1065 patients affected by MM followed between 2005 and 2010 and five cases of suspect LEF. The first patient is a woman diagnosed with anaplastic myeloma in 2002, apparently in complete remission after 4 lines of treatment. In June 2008 the patient was diagnosed with an atraumatic left fracture of the fifth metatarsal bone, followed by a right metatarsal fracture one month later and second right metatarsal stress fracture in 2011. The fractures were not related to myeloma localization. Other four cases of fractures are under investigation in other two center. CONCLUSIONS: MM patients are exposed to high rate of bone fractures related to the hematological disease and at the best of our knowledge the frequency of stress fractures in this population is unknown. With the present study, over a population of more than one thousand patients, we observed five cases of possible LEF that will undergo detailed analysis through central revision of patients history, radiology and bone histomorphometry with the aim to identify individual risk factors. Despite LEF is a rare and still controversial condition, the identification of individual risks to develop fractures not secondary to MM, may help clinicians tailoring the treatment for bone disease, much needed in an era of new drug discoveries for bone treatment. Disclosures: Palumbo: Celgene: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Janssen: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Merck: Honoraria; Amgen: Honoraria.


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