Dear Parents: Stop Overusing Your Kids

Originally published August 17, 2015

Dear Parents of Young Athletes:

As a physical therapist, I have the privilege to work with many of your young all-stars. Some of your kids are here to recover from an injury as quickly as possible so they can get back to competing; others come in for injury prevention so they don’t go down again; and still more are simply going above-and-beyond to understand how their body works so they can push their limits. A few of these young athletes are simply, hyper-focused individuals, self-driven to be the best in their sport, and I’m always impressed by their desire to be here and get better. Unfortunately more often than not, your kids are here because of you, the parent.

Parents are pushing their young athletes to perform and—this is going to be hard for some of you to hear—it’s usually too hard, too much and too fast.

From talking to your kids while they’re on my table, I’ve learned that it’s not uncommon for young athletes to have practice twice a day, sometimes for up to four to six hours a day, just for one sport! Whether it’s swimming, running track, or playing baseball, what this means is that your kids are performing one repetitive, sport-specific movement pattern for hours at a time, day after day, for many, many months straight.

Our bodies were not meant to perform one type of movement pattern for the amount of time that most of these athletes are putting in. Kids used to play a variety of sports throughout the year, which provided the body with more diversity and helped avoid overusing one set of muscle groups. However, our society’s current fascination with the specialization of one particular sport has dramatically increased the tendency of our young athletes to overdevelop particular muscle groups without any counter balance. Over time, the overuse of these muscle groups results in an overwhelming demand that their young bodies simply cannot support, which then leads to the injuries plaguing our children these days.

A prime example of this issue is a young soccer player. Between high school and club games, practices and tournaments, she’s essentially playing soccer year-round. She continues to push her body over and over, month after grueling month, for just this one sport. The result? Her quadriceps become too dominate; her hamstrings, glutes and outside stabilizers are basically non-existent because of the lack of strength training in her other muscle groups. This can potentially lead to an ACL tear, which studies show are up 400% over the last decade.

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So whether you like to hear it or not, the fact of the matter is kids are suffering more overuse injuries these days, which ironically leads to a decrease in their overall playing time. You think you have your kid on the path to the Olympics, but instead they’re headed to my PT table with an increased risk of surgeries and chronic joint pain later on in life.

Now don’t get me wrong, I think it’s great that these young athletes are so determined to become the next Mike Trout, Michael Phelps, Misty May-Treanor and so on, but the emphasis on overtraining is a serious issue that needs to be addressed. It all starts with you, parents! Can you be the difference maker in your young athletes’ lives?

Please take caution in playing your young athlete for more than eight months consecutively in a given year. A lot of these injuries can be prevented through multiple sport play, active rest and coming in to see one of our sport-specific PTs here at Rausch Physical Therapy & Sports Performance as soon as your child starts showing warning signs of overuse injury (Remember, if they’re in pain, they should have been in here weeks ago.)

With proper injury prevention knowledge and tools, together we can help reduce this alarming overuse injury trend and keep our kids happy, healthy and in the game much longer.

Sincerely,

Jonathan Meltzer, PT, DPT

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Statistics and Additional Reading:

 


Jonathan Meltzer graduated from the University of Redlands with a bachelor of arts in biology and a minor in physical education. Following graduation, Jonathan discovered his passion for physical therapy while working as a Physical Therapy Aide. After graduating top of his class from Loma Linda University in 2012 with a Doctorate in Physical Therapy, Jonathan began his career at Rausch Physical Therapy and Sports Performance. Jonathan’s goals are to identify limitations and treat his patients with the most recent and innovative techniques in order to maximize functional independence and obtain his patients’ individual goals.
Let’s talk! We are here to help. Give us a call for an initial evaluation and assessment. We would love to meet you.

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Disclaimer — All the information that you find on our blogs and social media pages are for informational purposes only and are not intended to be used as your personal professional diagnosis, or treatment. Come and see us for your excellent, personalized care! https://staging.rauschpt.net/

Six Ways to Avoid Painful “Text Neck”

 

Your screen addiction isn’t just straining your eyes and relationships; over time, your neck muscles can become stretched out and weakened while others become tight and painful as they struggle to stabilize your head in front of your body. Poor posture due to hours of mindless scrolling and tapping could be at the root of the chronic soreness and pain in your head, neck, shoulders, and back. PT Ashley Heller shares her six tips for avoiding the painful condition “Text Neck.”

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BY ASHLEY HELLER, PT, MPT, RAUSCH PHYSICAL THERAPY

I constantly notice patients looking down at their phones—texting while in the waiting room, scrolling through Instagram while on the table, checking their work calendar to schedule their next appointment. These days, most everybody relies on their smartphone to stay connected to the world, and almost everyone is guilty of looking down at our phones.

While there’s no question that having technology at our fingertips is entertaining and convenient, it can also be a pain in the neck—literally. So, what can we do to prevent the pain associated with the dreaded “Text Neck?”

What is “Text Neck?”

What many people fail to realize is that repetitive or habitual postures over time related to texting, reading, and working on the computer may lead to long-term effects on the way we feel. Over time, the neck muscles become stretched out and weakened while others become tight and painful as they struggle to stabilize your head in front of your body. Poor posture over a prolonged period of time can lead to postural dysfunction resulting in chronic soreness and pain in your head, neck, shoulders, and back.
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What’s the science?

  • Postural syndrome occurs when prolonged stress is placed on the neck
  • The average human head weighs 10-12 pounds in a neutral position
  • The further bent forward your head is, the more weight your neck has to support:
    • 15º =  27 pounds
    • 30º = 40 pounds
    • 45º = 49 pounds
    • 60º = 60 pounds

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Symptoms of Text Neck

  • Headaches or migraines
  • Pain in neck and or between the shoulder blades
  • Numbness or tingling down the arm
  • Shoulder pain

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Long-term effects of Text Neck

Prolonged posture strains your neck muscles and cervical facet joints, resulting in soreness and inflammation in that area. It also flattens the normal curve of your neck, which can lead to:

  • Headaches
  • Nerve pain in neck or arms
  • Disc degeneration or herniations
  • Arthritis resulting in neck stiffness, as well as arthritis in the neck joints

Text Neck also can also cause a rounded shoulders posture, which can affect the mechanics of the shoulder and may result in shoulder impingement. You’re also more susceptible to a condition called Upper Crossed Syndrome, which occurs when the muscles in the neck, shoulders, and chest become deformed causing things like a hunched back or chronic shoulder, upper back and neck pain.

Six ways to combat and avoid Text Neck

The good news is that it’s not too late to make changes to undo any damage your screen addiction may be inflicting on your body. These tips can also apply while reading or working on your computer or tablet.

    1. Be aware of your posture. Pay attention to the way you are sitting or standing and how long you have been in that position.
    2. Listen to your body. When you feel neck pain starting, correct your posture immediately by getting out of a slumped position, then find a neutral spine posture by sitting upright while aligning your ears with your shoulders.
    3. Bring your phone up to eye level to reduce strain to your neck while you are texting.

 

  1. Text with your arms supported to decrease strain to the neck.
  2. Don’t stay in one position for too long. You now know that prolonged postures can lead to muscle strains, so get up and move around! You should also use a foam roll, tennis ball or lacrosse ball to decrease tissue tension in your upper back.
  3. See a physical therapist. If you’re already feeling the painful symptoms of Text Neck in your neck, upper back or shoulders, schedule an appointment with a physical therapist. We’re experts in musculoskeletal dysfunction, and we can create a specific plan of care combining manual therapy and therapeutic exercises to help you find relief and change your texting habits for good.

PT-Headshots-AshleyAshley Heller, MPT is a licensed physical therapist at Rausch Physical Therapy & Sports Performance. She received her Masters of Physical Therapy degree at California State University, Long Beach and is passionate about working with patients with shoulder, knee and ankle injuries. With background in orthopedic-related injuries and post-operative rehabilitation, Ashley believes that the combination of manual therapy and personalized therapeutic exercise program is vital to recovery. Known as the Water Sports PT, Ashley says her goal is to help her patients better understand their injuries and the plan for their road to recovery.

Click to learn more about Ashley and our other physical therapists »
Let’s talk! We are here to help. Give us a call for an initial evaluation and assessment. We would love to meet you.

Did you know there’s no prescription needed from a doctor to see us – but we will communicate your progress and treatment to your doctor if you’d like us too!

(949) 276-5401

RauschPT

Disclaimer — All the information that you find on our blogs and social media pages are for informational purposes only and are not intended to be used as your personal professional diagnosis, or treatment. Come and see us for your excellent, personalized care! https://staging.rauschpt.net/

Sports Injury Prevention Tips

Sadly, medical science has yet to figure out how to clearly identify people who are at risk for sports injuries. Injuries happen, but we mostly don’t know why they happen to the people they happen to, so prevention is a bit of a crapshoot. This article reviews some of the closest things we have to evidence-based injury prevention options.

But first, let’s deal with a classic tactic that is not evidence-based …

Stretching ain’t it

Weekend warriors and a lot of amateur athletes tend to believe that injury prevention is pretty much all about having a stretching regimen, and they are usually feeling guilty about not doing it enough. If I had a buck for every time I’ve heard someone say, just before a game of ultimate, “I should really do some stretching” … well, heck, I could afford to play ultimate for a living.

Lucky for them, they aren’t really missing anything important. As established elsewhere, stretching doesn’t really work for the things people think it does, and it is particularly useless at preventing injury. Here are five ways to prevent injury that are a much better use of your time …

Train in the Goldilocks Zone: manage your training “load”

One of the few things we know for sure is that injury is linked to training “load”— how hard and quickly your tissues are challenged. So load management is one of the best overall strategies for preventing injuries. What “load management” mostly means is avoiding spikes and lulls in training and competition where possible … and when they do occur, be more cautious for a while. Train regularly and moderately, with only moderate increases in load.

That’s the tip of the iceberg on the topic of load management. It’s simple in principle, but the devil is in the details. In 2016, a panel of experts for the International Olympic Committee covered all of those details in an exhaustive scientific paper on this topic, “How much is too much?” Here are the main points they made, translated to plain English:

  • There’s not enough research, surprise, and what we do know is mostly from limited data about a few specific sports. But there’s enough to be confident that “load management” overall is definitely important.
  • Both illness and injury seem to have a similar relationship to load — lots of overlap.
  • Too much and not enough load probably increase the risk of both injury and illness. You want to be in the Goldilocks zone! But the devil is in the details …
  • Not everyone is vulnerable to high load, and elite athletes are the most notable exception: they are relatively immune to the risks of overload, probably because of genetic gifts. Everyone else gets weeded out!
  • Big load changes — dialing intensity up or down too fast — are much bigger risks than absolute load. If you methodically work your way up to a high load, it may even be protective.
  • “Load” can also refer to non-sport stressors and “internal” loads, which are legion. Psychology, for instance, probably does matter anything from daily hassles to major emotional challenges, as well as stresses related to the sport itself.

Most of the tips below are really just diving deeper into the implications of load management.

Warm up

The best simple way to prevent injury is to warm up. Prepare for any intense activity by doing a similar activity less intensely. In other words, start slow! To warm up your tissues, you need metabolic activity: the heat causes physical changes in connective tissues that make them more pliable. Many more complex benefits arise from the stimulus of mild physiological stress.Mobilizations are an excellent warm-up method, but really it’s just a matter of starting intense activities slowly.

Conversely, don’t overdo it. I’ve seen sports teams scrimmage for an hour before game time. I think that’s crazy: players go into a competition not only warmed up but worn out. In competition, you can’t afford to give up any resources, and you only have so much juice in a day — no matter how fit you are. Athletes get hurt far more when they are fatigued than when they’re fresh.

And speaking of being tired …

Get your zzzleep

As just mentioned, fatigue is a major risk factor for injury. Sleep deprivation is an almost universally underestimated problem. It’s a major factor in chronic pain. It impairs athletic performance, getting more sleep boosts performance, and injury rates and recovery are probably affected too.

People who actually do get enough sleep are extremely rare, and of course, actual insomnia is a common problem. Insomnia treatment is not as hard as people think, and it’s a great indirect injury prevention tip, something that is definitely relevant to performance and injury risk — but has nothing to do with what you’re doing before, during, or after workouts.

Cultivate coordination

Many traumatic injuries are probably caused by minor glitches in coordinating fast, powerful movements — an inability to sense and respond to traumatic forces at just the right time, either from lack of developed skill and/or fatigue. Creating coordination takes practice at complex and specific tasks (working within genetic advantages and disadvantages). But you can make some progress simply challenging yourself with a wide variety of activity and sensations, and coordination can be improved. For instance, a particularly long-term study followed a men’s basketball team for six years, tracking their injury rates in response to “classic proprioceptive [coordination] exercises” — which seemed to clearly reduce ankle sprains, and possibly more.

Balance is one of the most basic elements of coordination and isn’t much of a concern for younger athletes, but it becomes one for older adults — and even fit older people fall just as much as their less active counterparts. Fortunately, if you practice tasks that require balance, your balance will usually get better (as long as there’s no medical issue). And better balance means fewer falls.

Play smart, not hard

Many injuries are caused by excessive and misdirected effort! That might seem like a bit of a no brainer, but people need to learn this. I certainly did. It is one of the great lessons of martial arts.

I remember the day I learned this lesson in ultimate, watching an older woman play. She seemed unlikely to be competitive — she was simply too old, and a little overweight. In fact, it turned out that she was the best player on the field that day, entirely because she was clever. I particularly remember how little she ran. Although there were certainly bursts of intensity, her effort was precise and savvy, and time and again she got the better of other players with only a fraction of the sweat.

One particularly important way of playing smart is to relax into intense challenges …

Chill out, man

Adaptability prevents injury, and rigidity is the opposite of adaptability. Relaxation is more psychological than golf. To purge rigidity from your system, you will have to go on the journey of self-exploration: most tension is emotional and protective. You won’t be able to relax and be “comfortable in your own skin” until you know yourself better. Meanwhile, you’ll get more injury prevention mileage.

Part II: Collateral and re-injury prevention

Don’t underestimate the importance of prevention … after you’ve already been injured! After an injury, you should double-down on injury prevention.

The risk of re-injury and collateral injury is a significant factor in many cases of chronic pain. Minor re-injury can stop healing in its tracks, or at least slow it down. Injury “prevention” is therefore not just a way of keeping yourself from getting injured in the first place, but directly relevant to recovery from obvious injuries that have already happened. Double or triple your alertness and caution when limited by an injury, and bear in the mind the risk of minor re-injury turning an injury into a chronic pain problem.

We’re not just talking about the risk of a second “oh @#$!&” moment, dramatically re-injuring your injury, although that can certainly happen: re-injury routinely occurs in small, sneakier ways. And every minor re-injury impedes recovery. Minor re-injuries can be so subtle that you aren’t even really aware that it’s happening — all you know is, you aren’t getting better fast enough. (Although it’s awfully hard to tell how fast is fast enough.

Good health care professionals are always considering the “aggravating factors” of their patients’ pain problems. What factors in patients’ lives are making the problem worse? What keeps people from healing? What adds insult to injury? In a sense, almost every “aggravating factor” is basically just a kinda re-injury. You could call them “micro” re-injuries.

When you are trying to figure out why your injury isn’t healing, do not neglect this important perspective: could you be slightly re-injuring yourself regularly? Have you actually removed from the equation any forces that might be, even just slightly, hurting you again … and again … and again …?

Injury déja vu: the risk of real re-injury

Obviously, injured parts are vulnerable. A classic example of re-injury is the ankle sprain. The anterior talofibular ligament in the ankle is the most commonly injured structure in the body — and undoubtedly the most commonly re-injured structure in the body. Once it is damaged, it is never the same again. The chances of having a second ankle sprain are way higher than the chances of having the first. Almost exactly the same is true of muscle strains (“pulled” muscles), one of the most common athletic injuries.

People also often continue doing the very same activity that injured them in the first place. Like me, for instance: for years, I had almost annual compression sprains of my thumb joint — a “thumb jam,” well known to rugby players — from playing ultimate. I was at great risk for re-injury because I kept exposing myself to the same dangers, and the thumb was so damaged that virtually any impact constituted a real hazard, flaring it up again for weeks.

The need to avoid re-injury might seem too obvious to even bother writing about. But the failure to do so isn’t just an amateur mistake made by people too eager to get back to normal after an injury. For decades, patients have often been encouraged to do so by professionals, to the point of serious risk. It’s been in vogue in physical therapy for a long time now to “mobilize” injuries as quickly as possible — probably too much in vogue. In the zeal to get people on their feet again ASAP, serious sprains — which are worse than fractures in some ways — are almost never put in a cast. Turns out that’s a mistake. A 2009 experiment published in the Lancet presents clear evidence that a full cast for a severe ankle sprain is superior to the almost universal practice of using braces and tubular compression bandages. The editors write, “This elegant study highlights the need for trials to address common problems.” n other words, it has not been common sense to make re-injury avoidance a top priority.

In many contexts, getting active makes complete sense — but doing it prematurely can be a disaster. You definitely have to consider the risk of re-injury when you are trying to heal.

Collateral injury: when you are hurt, you are at higher risk for completely different kinds of injuries

One of my clients had a shoulder injury — an ordinary thing, no big deal, just a little rotator cuff lesion, a tear in the muscles around the shoulder socket. Unfortunately, it impaired her ability to catch herself when she tripped and fell. It is amazing — shocking, really — just how hard you fall when you aren’t able to catch yourself. She fell face first onto a curb, and fractured her jaw and facial bones severely … a much more grievous injury than the original shoulder injury.

This kind of thing is surprisingly common. Patients with injuries need to be wide-awake alert to the fact that you are more vulnerable when you’ve been injured!

Being injured is an unfamiliar state, and it’s the “weirdness” of that state — the new sensations, and limitations — that gets people into trouble. An injury basically induces poor coordination (some more than others). Just like a child needs to be warned to look both ways before crossing the street, injured people — especially if they’ve never been injured seriously before — need to be warned to be much more alert to potential dangers.

Masking symptoms

A major mechanism for re-injury is the overconfidence given by masking symptoms with medication. Pain killers and anti-inflammatories, when they are effective, can make you feel less vulnerable than you actually are. And that’s when you’re going to go too far and hurt yourself … again. And you may not even realize it, both because of the masking and because it doesn’t have to be serious re-injury to really slow down recovery.

“Masking symptoms,” especially with medications, is often maligned because it doesn’t “treat the root cause.” But masking symptoms can be a good idea, and it should not be eschewed just because it doesn’t have a real healing effect … because there are very few real healing effects! “Healing” is mainly about removing impediments to natural recoveries, like stress on tissues. It’s not dictated by some mythical power to speed healing, but by a strong understanding of the nature of the problem and what pisses it off and impedes recovery. Focus on facilitating natural recovery, and don’t knock a little “symptom relief” along the way.

But, if you decide you need some symptom relief, you must exercise more cautiously.

Let’s talk! Give us a call for a complimentary assessment.

Did you know there’s no prescription needed from a doctor to see us?
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