From injury to backflips: A path to recovery for gymnasts

gymnastics

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Gymnasts can create the illusion that gravity doesn’t exist. As they spring from one acrobatic skill into the next, they leave spectators little time to consider the strain they’re putting on their wrists, elbows, and shoulders. Nonetheless, a single back handspring exerts force equal to two to four times an athlete’s weight on their upper extremities.

The high-impact skills and young age at which many gymnasts start practicing add up to a large number of upper-extremity injuries. Until recently, however, sports medicine providers had little in the way of gymnastics-specific, evidence-based guidelines to support their patients’ safe and successful return to the sport.

“Gymnastics has a vast combination of skills and equipment that most don’t interact with on a regular basis,” says Andrea Bauer, MD, an in the Hand and Orthopedic Upper Extremity Program at Boston Children’s Hospital.

A provider may feel like they’re hearing a foreign language when patients rattle off terms like “salto,” “Yurchenko,” “kip,” and “giant.” All the more reason, says Bauer, to make sure providers have the tools they need to help gymnasts return to their sport without further injury.

Experts in treating high-performance gymnastics

Together, Bauer, Elspeth Hart, PA-C, a gymnastics medicine specialist in Boston Children’s Sports Medicine Division, and Donald Bae, MD, an upper-extremity surgeon, have pooled their expertise to create a structured set of gymnastic-specific return-to-play protocols for five common upper-extremity injuries.

The three clinicians brought their experience of treating hundreds of upper-extremity gymnastics injuries to the task. “The are the result of our specialized experience treating the upper limb through our high-volume practice and our insights into biomechanics and rehabilitation,” says Bae.

As a former Division I gymnast, Hart also contributed first-hand knowledge she’d gained while recovering from a variety of gymnastic injuries—knowledge she also used to create a gymnastics medicine subspecialty.

The protocols, published in the Journal of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America (JPOSNA), are broken down by level so that providers can tailor them to an athlete’s skill level. They also define when a gymnast is ready to progress to the next stage.

“The protocols are very specific regarding what to look for before a gymnast is ready to move to the next level,” says Hart, who has been using a version of the protocols with her patients for years.

For instance, the six-week hanging protocol, designed to strengthen athletes’ upper-body muscles and reduce strain on their wrists and elbows, begins with the gymnast hanging from a pull-up bar. Once they can do so three times for 60 seconds without pain, they can progress to a slightly more challenging level—and so on.

While some athletes balk at the gradual pace, the protocols provide a clear and structured path to returning to training and competition with less chance of injury. For providers who wish to become more familiar with the sport, the publication also includes a video of a young gymnast demonstrating foundational gymnastics skills.

Expanding gymnastics knowledge

The protocols are part of a broader effort within the Sports Medicine Division to raise awareness of the forces gymnasts place on their bodies and how to promote safe participation. In related research, the team investigated the use of wrist guards and supports in gymnastics and their effects on the joint.

Looking ahead, Hart, Bae, and Bauer plan to track gymnasts who follow the protocols to see how many successfully return to their sport without reinjury. Hart also plans to develop similar protocols for lower-limb injuries in collaboration with the Lower Extremity Program.

In the meantime, all three hope the protocols will benefit both providers and athletes. “We’re very lucky at Boston Children’s to have a gymnastics medicine program,” says Bae.

“We welcome our colleagues to apply these protocols and we welcome athletes, parents, and coaches to engage with us to keep these talented athletes healthy.”

More information:
Elspeth Hart et al, Common upper extremity gymnastics injuries and gymnastic specific return to play protocols, Journal of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.jposna.2024.100016

Citation:
From injury to backflips: A path to recovery for gymnasts (2024, August 12)
retrieved 19 August 2024
from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-08-injury-backflips-path-recovery-gymnasts.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Helmet CPAP Leads Noninvasive Ventilation Therapies for Acute Respiratory Failure thumbnail

Helmet CPAP Leads Noninvasive Ventilation Therapies for Acute Respiratory Failure

Critical Care > General Critical Care — Showdown of HFNC and helmet- and face mask-based modalities in meta-analysis by Elizabeth Short, Staff Writer, MedPage Today April 23, 2023 The available noninvasive oxygenation strategies varied in their effectiveness in treating acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (AHRF), according to a meta-analysis of randomized trials. Helmet continuous positive airway
Read More
Optimization of by pharmacists in heart failure thumbnail

Optimization of by pharmacists in heart failure

מחקרים הדגימו כי טיפול של רוקחים בניהול של אי ספיקת לב מביאים לתוצאים קליניים טובים יותר, הכוללים שימוש בטיפול רפואי מוכוון קווים מנחים ואשפוזים חוזרים. השפעה זה הייתה שונה בקרב מחקרים שונים. מטרת מחקר זה הייתה להעריך את שיעורי האשפוז מכל סיבה, אשפוז כתוצאה מאי ספיקת לב וכן את השינוי במרקרים עקיפים (מקטע פליטה חדר…
Read More
Kumail Nanjiani Shared How He Learned to Cope With Anxiety thumbnail

Kumail Nanjiani Shared How He Learned to Cope With Anxiety

Guide to TherapyBest Running ShortsBiohack Your SkinBest Food ScalesMuscle Building at 50COMEDIAN KUMAIL NANJIANI went viral in 2020 when he underwent a jaw-dropping physical transformation for his role in Marvel's Eternals, ditching the nerdy persona he had cultivated in projects like Silicon Valley in favor of a strapping action hero look.But, as Nanjiani recently explained
Read More
Improving the patient experience is a two-way street thumbnail

Improving the patient experience is a two-way street

While healthcare needs technology to drive heightened patient experiences, technology can be a hinderance to the clinician experience. This is because of increased administrative burden and a lack of interoperability between electronic health records themselves and with other forms of health IT. In fact, more than half of clinicians feel overwhelmed by administrative burden and
Read More
KOMMENTAR thumbnail

KOMMENTAR

Die Schweizer Energiegruppe Alpiq hatte die Frechheit, um Liquiditätshilfe beim Staat anzufragen. Dass die Firma mittlerweile grösstenteils Institutionen der öffentlichen Hand gehört, macht den Versuch nicht besser. Alpiq sondierte beim Regulator Elcom die Möglichkeit einer Liquiditätsspritze. Eine solvente Privatfirma sollte jedoch zuerst alternative Finanzierungsquellen erschliessen, bevor sie einen Hilferuf an den Staat richtet. Arnd Wiegmann…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share