Just as a sidebar, that reminded me of this cool anecdote from one of the sport med physicians here on the rodeo sport med team (I'm in Calgary, what did you expect?) who was examining a rodeo competitor for a concussion. As part of the standard medical history, the physician asked, "Have you had any prior injuries?" to which the cowboy said, "No." The physician then had the cowboy take off his shirt to do a full physical and pointed at a scar on the cowboy's torso, "What's that scar from?"
"Oh, that's from when they had to take out my spleen when I was gored by a bull."
"And..what's _this_ scar from?"
"Oh, right, that's when they had to take out part of my liver when I was thrown from the bull."
"And...this scar?"
"Yeah, that's when they had to open my chest because they didn't know what was going on inside when I got stomped on by a bull."
Those cowboys scare the crap outta me. One of my athletic therapist friends had to attend to a cowboy who had been gored by a bull (this doesn't happen often, but the stories accumulate over time) who said, in response to, "How are you doing?" (mostly to maintain conscioussness), "It smarts a bit...ma'am."
Anyways, back to your regularly scheduled thread on knee recovery. Motivation and pre-surgical fitness/health are big factors in return-to-play decisions, but also realize that for most competitive athletes, they also have very vigilant monitoring resources (trainers, physicians, therapists) that accompany the seemingly "quick" return to play.
|