Wednesday, July 30, 2014

How Riverside Sports Medicine Practitioners Help Pro Athletes Recover

For superstar athletes (fondly referred to as “freak athletes”), injuries are a part of daily life, making sports orthopedic doctors a fixture in every professional athletic setting. A Riverside sports medicine practitioner like Dr. Wade Faerber specializes in the science that treats and heals sports-related injuries. Bleacherreport.com writer Will Carroll narrates how this discipline has helped NBA franchise players Kobe Bryant, Derrick Rose, Russell...

Monday, July 28, 2014

For Sports Injuries in Kids, Visit a Riverside Sports Medicine Center

Surgical treatment for a dislocated jointImmediate treatment for dislocation mainly focuses on returning the joint to its normal position through nonsurgical means. If this cannot be achieved, surgery will likely be required.What kind of doctor can perform surgery on a dislocated joint?Primary physicians do not have the specialized training and equipment necessary to perform surgery on a dislocated joint. If a dislocation that requires surgery is found upon examination and testing, it is important to see a Riverside, CA orthopedic surgeon like...

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Athletes Who Suffered Career-Ending Injuries

Sports injuries range from the rather miniscule, to the potentially career-threatening. Here are some of the athletes whose promising careers were cut too short by injuries. Doc Powers – Powers played as a catcher for the then Philadelphia Athletics of Major League Baseball. However, in the Athletics’ first game at the newly constructed Shibe Park, Powers got injured chasing a pop-up straight into a wall. He suffered numerous internal injuries and died two weeks later. Joe Theismann – A former quarterback for the Washington Redskins, Theismann...

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Putting the Separated Shoulder Back Together

A separated shoulder is one of the more serious injuries you can incur while playing high-intensity contact sports like football. Sports medicine physicians define it as the spraining of ligaments between the clavicle and scapula. The injury often occurs due to an outstretched hand or direct hit to the shoulder. Analyses of the injury may classify its level from Type I to VI, with Types III to VI requiring surgery. Symptoms of separated shoulders include a deformed shoulder, tenderness in the collarbone, and intense pain when the injury strikes....