Every year, more than 36.2 million children participate in some type of organized sport. However, sometimes these young athletes are prevented from taking part in the activities they love due to injuries or musculoskeletal issues. Dr. Jason T. Levy, director of the New Jersey-based Advanced Performance and Rehabilitation Center, and team chiropractor for the New York Jets (NFL), New York Red Bulls (MLS), and New Jersey Devils (NHL), knows this all too well personally. He was one of those children.
Being kept off the field was bad enough, but when he discovered later in life that his condition could have been managed and his sabbatical from playing avoided, he vowed to make a difference for the many kids just like him. That's why he strives to keep his pediatric patients in the game.
So what are some of the top issues Dr. Levy sees when treating sports athletes under the age of 18? There are many, but they can generally be broken down into three basic categories:
- Issues you can help the pediatric patient manage, but will eventually resolve on their own
- Issues you can help manage, but ultimately need to be referred out;
- Issues that can be effectively treated with sports chiropractic
Issues You Can Help Manage, But Will Resolve on Their Own
"Being a sports chiropractor, we see a lot of conditions your typical chiropractor isn't going to see," says Dr. Levy. One of the atypical conditions he encounters is Osgood-Schlatter disease, the very same one that kept him out of the game when he was younger.
Osgood-Schlatter is a condition that occurs when youth's thigh muscles "pull on the tendon that connects the kneecap to the growth plate at the top part of the shinbone." (Mayo Clinic) It often appears in children who participate in sports like soccer, volleyball and basketball; the end result is swelling and pain.
In the past, "they put you in a cast and told you to rest your leg," says Dr. Levy, referencing the same approach used with him when he was a young athlete, keeping him off the field for almost two months. "Though chiropractic care cannot heal this condition, it can help manage it until the growth plates fuse and the pain goes away" he says.
A great example is a 12-year-old tennis player Dr. Levy worked with who faced a similar musculoskeletal issue. Dr. Levy used active release technique, Graston technique and kinesiology taping – options that were not available when he was a young athlete. With time, therapy and dedication, Dr. Levy enabled the young athlete to continue participating in the daily practice regimen and frequent competitions.
Years later, Dr. Levy began treating this patient's mother and recently learned that the young athlete is now competing at a high level and had just won an adult tennis tournament in Los Angeles.
Another open growth plate-related condition is Sever's disease, also known as calcaneal apophysitis, which impacts the growth plate in the heel. For conditions such as these, Dr. Levy has found that stretching, soft-tissue management and taping procedures can often help provide relief until the growth plates have time to fuse.
Issues You Can Help Manage, But Ultimately Need to Be Referred Out
"Youth athletes today are training more like collegiate and professional athletes without the rest and recovery" says Dr. Levy. Plus, with many more children specializing in a single sport, rather than participating in a variety of physical activities, their bodies are more prone to repetitive overuse injuries.
Some of these fall into the second category of issues Dr. Levy often sees in pediatric sports patients, which are the ones you can help the child manage, but ultimately need to be referred to another healthcare provider. One such issue is a stress fracture in the spine.
"Lower back pain is very common in the general population and youth athletes are not the exception," he says, adding that diagnosing a stress fracture in the lower back can be very tricky because it presents similar to mechanical back pain. However, if the pain does not resolve within a couple of weeks, the sports chiropractor should keep this possibility in the back of their mind.
"While you can make the youth athlete more comfortable, ultimately a stress fracture in their spine is out of the scope of sports chiropractic care and should be referred out to a specialist," says Dr. Levy.
Issues Sports Chiropractic Can Effectively Treat
The final category of pediatric sports issues Dr. Levy sees are the ones that often require some type of treatment-based intervention in order to heal, and which tend to respond well to chiropractic care. A few of the most common conditions effectively treated by sports chiropractors in youth athletes are:
- Shoulder injuries. According to Dr. Levy, these are most prevalent in athletes who compete in overhead sports such as tennis, swimming and baseball.
- Hip and groin injuries. These tend to be fairly common in sports that require lateral motion, such as soccer, hockey, football, etc.
- Mechanical lower back and neck injuries. Occurring in both contact and non-contact sports, lower back and neck injuries are seen in football, wrestling, lacrosse, gymnastics, field hockey, and many others.
For all of the aforementioned injuries, Dr. Levy says effectively addressing these types of issues involves evaluating the kinetic chain to ensure the range of motion of the extremities is equal. "You can't just focus on the pain," he says. "You need to make sure everything is balanced and stable."
Extremity adjustments / mobilization and soft-tissue approaches like active release, Graston and instrument-assisted soft-tissue mobilization (IASTM) approaches can help, too.
Avoiding Injury: At-Home Tips to Share With Young Athletes
There are also some things youth athletes can do at home to "make sure the tight stuff is loosened up and the loose stuff is strengthened up," says Dr. Levy. This includes using foam rollers, engaging in a general stretching program, performing balancing exercises, and doing strength-training exercises designed to strengthen their core or other areas of weakness.
"Posture is also huge," he says. To help his young patients with this, Dr. Levy suggests they set reminders on their phones to sit up straight or take a walk. He also recommends a few basic exercises, such as wall angels, elbows-in-back-pockets, and chest stretches in a doorway, to help reinforce proper posture.
"What's fun about being a sports chiropractor is that you never know what type of athlete and injury is going to walk through the door," says Dr. Levy. "It's not just neck and back pain. You see everything."
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