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Chapter 24: Preventing and Managing Injuries in Young Athletes. Cultural Trends. Significant increase in participation by young children, particularly females Organized and informal sports and recreation activities Results in an increase in sports and recreation related injuries
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Chapter 24: Preventing and Managing Injuries in Young Athletes
Cultural Trends • Significant increase in participation by young children, particularly females • Organized and informal sports and recreation activities • Results in an increase in sports and recreation related injuries • Risk of injuries is inherent in sports • Young athletes are susceptible because they are continuously gaining motor and cognitive skills
Questions still arise concerning the appropriateness of youth participation in sports • Level of training intensity and frequency remains a concern
Physical Maturity Assessment in Matching Athletes • Children are at a greater risk than adults for injury • Due to inability to assess risk, less coordination, slower reaction time and less accuracy • Rates of injury vary with age and gender • Injury rate is associated more with child’s stage of development • Youth sports participants should be matched by physical maturity, size, weight and skill level
Maturity assessment should be part of the physical examination • Used to protect the physically young athlete • Commonly used tools • Tanner’s Stages of Maturity • Stage 1 – puberty is not evident • Stage 3 – fastest bone growth and is crucial in terms of contact/collision sports (growth plate weakness) • Stage 5 – full development
According to the American Academy of Pediatrics • Preadolescent boys and girls should not be separated by gender in recreational or competitive sports activities • Separation of genders should occur in collision-type sports once boys have attained greater muscle mass in proportion to height
Physical Conditioning and Training • Those guidelines and philosophies used by adults should not be imposed on younger athletes who are anatomically, physiologically or psychologically less mature
Young athletes should focus on developing muscular strength, endurance, cardiovascular fitness and flexibility • Should work with coaches and ATC’s (if possible) year-round to maintain fitness and nutrition • Engage in appropriate conditioning program for 6 weeks prior to beginning daily practice routine
Athletes should engage in appropriate warm-up (w/ stretching) and cool down with activities • Practices should be limited to no more than 2 hours • Strength training can be safe and appropriate for emotionally mature athletes who are able to follow directions associated with a properly designed program • Younger children can also engage in program (callisthenic in nature) as long as they are able to follow directions and perform activity safely
Psychological and Learning Concerns • Stress as a result of overzealous coaches and parents is always a concern • Children do not always understand sports concepts until they have received instruction • Children usually are eager to please adults • Vulnerable to coercion and manipulation • Coach should be positive and use positive reinforcement • Allows athlete to develop self-worth and self-esteem
Not all children are equal in ability • Some children respond to competition while others shy away • Attempting to do one’s best must be emphasized • Children must receive instruction • Should be timely • Emphasize enjoyment of the activity not just winning • Types of play • Organized vs. Free-flowing
Adverse effect of adult influences is one potential negative psychological aspect of youth sport participation • Participation in sports can be taken to extremes – intensive participation relative to intensity and frequency • Demands placed on body and mind • At ages 10-12 a great deal of development is still occurring cognitively • Ability to comprehend multiple points of view, team perspective
Issues may also enter the picture when injury rehabilitation is involved • Risk factors for psychological complications in the injured child • Stress in the family • High-achieving siblings • Over or under-involved parents • Paradoxical lack of leisure in athletic activity • Self-esteem that is reliant on athletic prowess • Narrow range of interests outside of athletics
Coaching Qualifications • No federal law requires coaching education at any level • Training • Degree programs, Boy Scouts, youth sports coaching programs • No real standards until 1996 • NASPE is developing accreditation programs • USOC mandates participation in safety and certification course (American Red Cross / USOC)
Generally coaches have little or no background in providing safe and positive sports experience • Should be dedicated to the highest ideals of coaching • NYSCA has membership and levels of certification focusing on coaching, safety and first aid along with the psychological aspect of sports • Coaches should have good understanding of child development – physical, emotional and psychological
Common Injuries in the Young Athlete • Must be concerned with repeated microtrauma that can become compounded, become chronic or even degenerative in maturing musculoskeletal system • Children are susceptible to same injuries as mature adults
Growth Plate Fractures • Growth plate • Region at the end of long bones where bone growth occurs • Determines length and shape of bone • Trauma could be single acute incident or chronic, overuse, stress related • Suspected fracture should be referred to a physician immediately • Determine severity and form of treatment/immobilization
Must be carefully monitored • Bone will either not get longer or end up with stimulated growth with injured leg becoming longer than uninjured • Complicated fractures must be followed up with until skeletal maturity is reached
Apophysitis • Apophysis • Specialized area of cartilage within growth plate • Often point of large tendon insertion • Repetitive stress results in inflammatory response • Osgood-Schlatter’s and Sever’s disease • Usually begins at ages 8-15 • Pain generally with activity
Tenderness is localized with no other significant abnormalities • Diagnosis from history, physical exam and occasionally X-rays • Not serious and will resolve over time • Treatment is directed toward reducing symptoms
Avulsion Fractures • Bone vs. Muscle development • May result in imbalance and possible injury • Stresses placed on bones through tendon of contracting muscle may result in pieces of bone being pulled away from point of insertion • Common sites • ASIS, AIIS, ischial spine, and 5th metatarsal • More common in lower vs. upper extremity
Spondylolysis • Defect or fracture in bony structures of spine • Generally the result of repetitive loading • Occur between ages of 5-10 around the 4th and 5th lumbar vertebrae • Children often remain asymptomatic and injury is not realized until later in skeletal development • X-rays are required to determine extent of injury
Spondylolisthesis involves vertebrae slippage • Treatment for both centers on healing of defect and treating patient’s symptoms • Physician’s decision • Brace vs. no brace • Flexibility becomes a major factor in rehab program
Sports Injury Prevention • For all individuals involved in sports one of the primary goals should be prevention of injury • Involve proper physical and psychological conditioning • Utilize appropriate equipment (safety) in a safe environment with adequate supervision • Enforce safety rules • Be sure participants receive a physical and are cleared to participate
Instruct participants on fitness and the various components • Performance enhancement and injury reduction • Encourage proper eating and nutrition • Work with athletes on acclimatization and hydration • Be sure plans and guidelines are in place regarding care and treatment of injuries • Work to create a safe and healthy playing environment • Be aware of injury prevention guidelines for specific sports