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Explore the history, training, and responsibilities of team doctors in sports, from their early presence on the sidelines to the formation of the NCAA and the significant reduction in injuries. Learn about the crucial role team doctors play in providing medical care for athletes and how they work together with athletic trainers in diagnosing and treating injuries.
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Team Doc 101 Lutul D. Farrow, MD Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Assistant Team Physician Baldwin-Wallace College
History • 19th century • 1st Physicians on sidelines • Almost banned 1905 • Serious injuries • Deaths • Rule/equipment changes • Formation of NCAA • Greatly reduced injuries
History • Hundreds of thousands athletes • Adolescent • High school • Collegiate • Professional • Thousands of team docs
Definition • Licensed MD/DO responsible for treating and coordinating the medical care of athletic team members
Principle Responsibility • Provide for the well-being of individual athletes
How to Get There • Early desire • Athletic Background • 4 years college • 4 years medical school • Allopathic (MD) • Osteopathic (DO)
How to Get There • Medical • Internal medicine • Pediatrics • Family medicine • Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation • Surgical • Orthopaedic Surgery • Sports medicine • Other subspecialties
Case #1 • D.B. • 22 yo Varsity College FB player (DE) • Chief Complaint: Right ankle pain
Case #1 • History • “Coming off of a block and rolled my right ankle” • Inversion injury • Felt a ‘pop’ in the ankle • Able to walk off the field • Not able to return to play
Differential Diagnosis • Most likely diagnosis? • Ankle sprain • Ankle sprain • Ankle sprain • Fracture/dislocation • Muscle strain • Dislocated tendon • Torn tendon
ATC’s Role • Alert coaching staff • Initial athlete evaluation • “ATC gestalt” • Triage • Patch and go • Versus • Communicate with Doc
Team Doc’s Role • OBSERVATION! • Be a trained observer! • Gait • Swelling • Deformity • On-field performance • Compare to other side
Team Doc’s Role • Communicate with ATC • Help coordinate care • Timely athlete evaluation • In gear • Versus • Gear off • Sideline vs Locker room • SAFELY get patient back into competition
Ankle Anatomy • Bones • Tibia • Fibula • Talus
Ankle Anatomy • Ligaments • “ORTHO PROOF” • Named by bones
Ankle Sprain Anatomy • Type I • Stretched • Type II • Partially torn • Type III • Completely torn
Ankle Exam • Observation • Swelling • Bruising • Deformity • Palpation • Medial • Lateral • Proximal
Ankle Exam • Special tests • Anterior drawer • Talar tilt
Ankle Exam • Special Tests • Squeeze test • External rotation test
Case #1 • Exam on sideline • Antalgic gait (visible limp) • +Swelling • No deformity • No ecchymosis (bruising) • Significant TTP (pain to touch) • No bony TTP • Stable • No “Syndesmosis pain” • “NV intact”
Case #1 • On field • Ankle taped • Standard tape job + ‘spats’ • Unable to perform sport-specific drills • Placed in walking boot/crutches • Similar exam in injury clinic next day • Sent for xrays on Post-injury day (PID) #2
Case #1 • Interval history • PID #7 • Weaned out of boot • Attempt to ramp up activity • No go • Back into boot • PID #7 – 21 • Continued ankle rehab • Step-wise improvement (objective/subjective)
Case #1 • Returned to play 3 weeks after injury • Played in 2 Varsity Games • Still mildly hobbled by injury • Ankle not at 100% • No interval injury • MRI obtained at 5 ½ weeks post injury • Continued pain
Not a sprain • MRI showed talus fracture • Nondisplaced • Also showed ligament tears
Differential Diagnosis • Most likely diagnosis? • Ankle sprain • Ankle sprain • Ankle sprain • Fracture/dislocation • Muscle strain • Dislocated tendon • Torn tendon
Case #1 • Treatment • Foot & Ankle Specialist consulted • Non-operative management • Cast x 3 weeks • Aircast boot x 3 weeks • Follow with serial imaging
Case #1 • Healed fracture • 10 month xrays • 10 months later • No pain • Full motion • Spring practice
Discussion • Talar neck fractures • Hi energy trauma • Usually require surgery • This is the first reported case in athletic competition
Conclusions • Take home message • Keep the athlete first • Communication is key • Keep an open mind • Observe, observe, observe • When in doubt, get more information
Detection of radiographically occult ankle fractures following acute trauma: positive predictive value of an ankle effusion. • Clark et al • Am J Roentgen 1995 • Prospective plain film evaluation • 1,153 ankles w/acute trauma • All with negative x-rays • 33 patients with capsular distention on x-ray • 11/33 with fracture on tomography Clark TW, Janzen DL, Ho K, Grunfeld A, Connell DG. Detection of radiographically occult ankle fractures following acute trauma: positive predictive value of an ankle effusion. Am J Roentgen. 1995;164(5):1185-1189
Vascular supply • Inokuchi S, Ogawa K, Usami N: Classification of fractures of the talus: Clear differentiation between neck and body fractures. Foot Ankle Intl 17:748-750, 1996.
Clark et al (cont) • Cumulative measurement of anterior/posterior fat pads • Predictive for fracture • Composite measure > 13mm • 82% sensitive • 91% specific • Retrospective analysis of our athlete • 16mm composite measure • Highly suggestive of occult fracture Clark TW, Janzen DL, Ho K, Grunfeld A, Connell DG. Detection of radiographically occult ankle fractures following acute trauma: positive predictive value of an ankle effusion. Am J Roentgen. 1995;164(5):1185-1189