Moment of Impact: Keeping Young Athletes SAFE

Moment of Impact: Keeping Young Athletes SAFE

Article previously published in Rite Up, 2022 – Issue 3.

What if you could prevent a sports injury before it happens? That is exactly what the experts in the Center for Excellence in Sports Medicine at Scottish Rite for Children aim to achieve. Led by Sophia Ulman, Ph.D., the SAFE (Sports-specific Assessment and Functional Evaluation) program uses 3D motion capture technology — the same technology used to create special effects in movies and video games — to assess injury risk by studying the movements of young athletes.

The goal of the SAFE program is to develop injury prevention tools that will reduce sport-related injuries in young athletes here and beyond, creating a new standard of care. “Current injury prevention methods are falling short, as sports injuries in young athletes are skyrocketing,” Ulman says. “We are the first to use machine learning techniques to assess a young athlete’s risk for injury by considering risk factors such as movement characteristics, demographics, sports participation characteristics, psychological measures, nutrition, and sleep patterns.”

Uninjured athletes are invited to the Scottish Rite’s Movement Science Laboratory, where they are fitted with reflective markers. The markers are used to collect the athlete’s movement patterns to evaluate their mobility, speed, agility, and power in 3D. Participants are asked to jump, squat, run, pivot, and perform sport specific movements like penalty kicks, layups, or back handsprings. “The data is analyzed to learn more about how young athletes move and to determine if certain movement patterns lead to future sports injuries that would require treatment,” Ulman says.

The SAFE program has tested the movements of approximately 340 athletes across sports, such as baseball, basketball, gymnastics, softball, track, and more. “After initial testing, we follow athletes for one year and note if any athlete experiences an injury,” Ulman says. “This data is helping us compare the movements of athletes who remained healthy versus athletes who were subsequently injured to determine what may have led to the injury.”

Researchers at Scottish Rite have already identified findings that might help predict injury risk in young athletes. “We have found that current tools for assessing injuries of the knee may be unreliable in some instances,” Ulman says. “Current methods commonly rely on 2D video to assess injury risk, but our research using 3D modeling is identifying potential risk factors that the 2D assessment cannot.” Through this innovative program, Scottish Rite researchers collaborate with medical professionals and sports medicine experts across the field to advance the treatment of young athletes throughout the country.

The SAFE program is poised to change the way health care professionals assess athletes for injury risk and, best of all, will help keep young athletes in the game.

To learn more about Movement Science, please call 469-515-7160 or email MSL.Frisco@tsrh.org.

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Inaugural Pediatric Musculoskeletal Ultrasound Conference Was a Success!

Inaugural Pediatric Musculoskeletal Ultrasound Conference Was a Success!

The results are in, and the Pediatric Musculoskeletal Ultrasound (PMSKUS) Fundamentals Course met and exceeded expectations on several fronts. We’re getting busy planning the next opportunity to participate in the spring of 2023. Join the wait list today.
We hosted 28 attendees from across the country, including two former Scottish Rite for Children fellows (orthopedics and rheumatology). Participants left telling us they were likely or very likely to recommend this conference to colleagues. Attendees represented a wide variety of professions and specialties including physicians in family medicine, sports medicine, rheumatology and radiology as well as an athletic trainer, physical therapist and sonographer.

“Scottish Rite is not only defining but also introducing the use of MSK US in this population to providers across the country. This conference was exceptional from the planning to the delivery, to having live pediatric models. There are no other ultrasound conferences focused on pediatrics.”

—    Guest Faculty – Jon A. Jacobson, M.D.

The guest faculty Jon A. Jacobson, M.D., is a board-certified diagnostic MSK radiologist at Lenox Hill Radiology in New York City, New York. He completed a Bachelor of Science in Biological Science at Wayne State University and his medical degree (MD) at the Wayne State University School of Medicine. He completed a diagnostic radiology residency at Henry Ford Hospital and a MSK radiology fellowship at the University of California San Diego (UCSD). He has served as section chief of Musculoskeletal Radiology at the University of Michigan and the University of Cincinnati.

Unlike any other program offered today, this pediatric-focused program offered didactic lectures alternating with hands-on sessions. In the scanning sessions, pediatric models, ranging from ages 5 to 15, gave attendees the opportunity to practice scanning normal anatomy as well as several patients with active juvenile idiopathic arthritis. The procedural scanning session employed tofu, olives and ham to offer practice for performing ultrasound-guided injections.

We Asked Attendees: What do you consider to be the best part of the program?

“The program is very organized, the hands-on sessions being throughout the day is a great idea.”

“Ample hands-on practice with different faculty, pediatric US models with specific pathology findings.”

“Good flow between lecture and hands-on, good amount of time spent in each. Kept basic but flexible to the level of the learner.”

“Hands-on experience with awesome mentors. Love the combo of lecture to US to lecture to US to break up the day.”

“Thank you! Stellar Faculty!”

“Hands-on focused course with small groups was great.”

“Hands-on seeing actual pathology and practicing hands-on injections.”

Image at Top: Course directors (in bold) and faculty of the inaugural PMSKUS conference at Scottish Rite for Children’s Frisco, Texas, campus. From L to R: Vivek Kalia, M.D., M.P.H., M.S., Jon A. Jacobson, M.D., Yassine Kanaan, M.D, Matthew Hammer, M.D., Heather Benham, D.N.P., APRN, CPNP-PC, Jacob C. Jones, M.D., RMSK, Joseph Chang, M.D., Mark Bowens, RDMS, Kelley Sherrard, RDMS

Polydactyly in Children and What Parents Need to Know

Polydactyly in Children and What Parents Need to Know

Polydactyly is a word that means “many fingers.” There are many forms of this common diagnosis. Some extra fingers are on the thumb side, some on the pinkie finger side and some in the middle of the hand. Polydactyly of the feet is also common. Some forms of polydactyly run in families; others come as new “surprises.” It is rare for the extra fingers to be fully formed normal fingers. Some of these fingers may be very small, floppy and have nonfunctional fingertips. Others will have bones and joints, and some may even have tendons and some movement. Some forms of polydactyly are “isolated,” meaning that there is nothing else the matter with the baby. Other forms of polydactyly may have other conditions such as webbing, twisting or angling of other fingers. In rare cases, there may be problems in parts of the body other than the hand. Polydactyly is common, it is not painful and it is not an emergency to treat.

How can polydactyly be treated?

The treatment of polydactyly depends on the exact shape and form of the extra digit, whether there are other problems in the hand and whether there are other more general problems for the baby. If the extra finger parts are very small, the treatment may be simply tying off or putting clips on the base of the finger to allow it to dry up and fall off (similar to the way the stump of the umbilical cord dried up, separated and fell off on its own). Any finger that is too big for this will require surgery that will be done in the operating room and done with general anesthesia for your baby. Some polydactyly cases require delicate reconstructive surgery to rebuild the best parts to save for your child’s best hand function. There is no hurry in doing this, because it is safer to wait until the baby is older. The risk of anesthesia is higher for a little baby and lower for an older baby. Your doctor will discuss with you the exact plan for the polydactyly type of your child.

Learn more about our treatment for hand disorders.

Overcoming Hardship with Humor and Hope

Overcoming Hardship with Humor and Hope

Article previously published in Rite Up, 2022 – Issue 3.

“Why do nurses like red crayons?” says 17-year-old Mikaylin, of Forney. She pauses. “Sometimes, they have to draw blood.”

Exchanging dad jokes, eye rolls and laughs with pediatric orthopedic surgeon David A. Podeszwa, M.D., became a tradition after Mikaylin came to Scottish Rite for Children in the spring of 2021. She has looked forward to every appointment since.

Before finding Scottish Rite, Mikaylin endured years of extensive treatments and setbacks that left her and her mother, Laneesha, feeling despondent. What began as pain in her legs while playing basketball turned out to be stress fractures. A doctor surgically implanted rods into her legs, but the bone in her right leg became infected. They tried to fight the infection through multiple surgeries without success. Finally, the doctor said that she needed to consider amputation.

“I was at a point where I was like, ‘I just want to get this over with. Just take the leg away from me,’” Mikaylin says. Laneesha researched other options and consulted with another physician who referred Mikaylin to Scottish Rite. “When we arrived, Mikaylin was really down,” Laneesha says. “But after our first visit, her outlook completely changed because they gave her hope.”

Experts from Scottish Rite’s Center for Excellence in Limb Lengthening and Reconstruction (CELLR) designed a customized treatment plan to save Mikaylin’s leg. Dr. Podeszwa and a team of specialists surgically removed more than four inches of infected bone from her leg and attached the TRUE/LOK™ External Fixation System, a device that would support the reconstruction of her bone throughout the next year.

“The day after surgery, Mikaylin got out of bed and put weight on her leg for the first time in 18 months,” says Emily Elerson, R.N. “When I saw the look in her eyes, I knew that was the turning point for her.”

Next, the team conducted a bone transport — a procedure to grow new bone where the infected bone was removed. To facilitate this surgery for Mikaylin’s specific case, new equipment was invented and attached to the fixator. “Mikaylin will be remembered long after we’re gone,” Dr. Podeszwa says, “because of the complexity of her treatment and how resilient she was with postoperative rehabilitation.”

In August, Dr. Podeszwa removed the fixator from Mikaylin’s leg. For a month, Mikaylin was on crutches, but at her next appointment, she received the big news — she could finally walk on her own. “We talk about how sad we’ll be when we don’t get to come to Scottish Rite anymore,” Laneesha says. “Mikaylin loves everybody there. They’ve become a huge part of her life.”

“I’m going to miss them a lot,” Mikaylin says. She hopes to keep in touch and possibly volunteer one day. When asked what she most looks forward to doing after recovery, Mikaylin says — without missing a beat — “shave my legs!” Laneesha laughs and says, “And, she can’t wait to wear pants.”

Read the full issue.

Brock’s Brigade – Fighting Perthes Step by Step

Brock’s Brigade – Fighting Perthes Step by Step

Cover story previously published in Rite Up, 2022 – Issue 3.

by Kristi Shewmaker
Kickball, wiffle ball, four square, taking hikes and riding bikes are a few of the activities 10-year old Brock, of Lee’s Summit, Missouri, enjoys. But, his first love is baseball.
 
“Baseball is his world,” his mother, Rachel, says. “He has played competitive baseball since he was 4.” In the spring of 2021, Brock played shortstop for a local team called the Baseknocks until midseason when he was diagnosed with Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease (Perthes), a rare childhood hip disorder, that temporarily took him out of the game and into a wheelchair.
 
Brock’s symptoms began with a pain in his groin. Then, he started to limp. “It was really bad,” Rachel says. “He couldn’t not limp.” She took Brock to visit his pediatrician who examined him but found nothing obvious like a broken bone. The doctor suggested trying physical therapy. “We thought maybe he had pulled a muscle,” Rachel says. After almost two months of physical therapy, Brock was still limping, and Rachel noticed that the thigh muscle in his right leg was two inches smaller than the thigh muscle in his left leg. “That was pretty alarming to me,” Rachel says. “I thought, ‘There’s something going on. It’s not just a pulled muscle.’” Later, an X-ray revealed that Brock had Perthes, a disease unknown to the family.
 
STEP 1: FINDING AN EXPERT

Perthes disease is a hip disorder that primarily affects the ball of the hip joint. The ball, or femoral head, is the upper part of the thighbone, or femur. The femoral head is normally round and fits inside the round socket of the pelvis. Perthes disease occurs when part or all of the femoral head loses blood supply. Without adequate blood flow, the femoral head bone dies. Over time, the body removes the dead bone and replaces it, initially, with softer bone. This bone is weaker, and the femoral head is more likely to collapse into a flattened position leading to deformity of the hip.
 
Perthes is rare, affecting approximately 15 children per 100,000 and is more common in boys than in girls, with a ratio of 5:1. The cause of Perthes is unknown, and currently, there is no cure. It typically occurs in children between 4 to 8 years old. Brock was diagnosed just before he turned 9.
 
“When you’re diagnosed with something that’s rare, and there’s not a ton of information, you feel like it’s a death sentence,” Rachel says. “I remember crying for the first three or four days because there were no answers, and no doctor could get us in. It was like a big, giant question mark.”
Rachel asked a friend, a physical therapist in nearby Kansas City, if she could recommend someone. Her friend said, “If it were my child, I would go see Dr. Kim at Scottish Rite.”
 
“Late at night, I sent a message to Scottish Rite and received a call the next day,” Rachel says. “Dr. Kim had an opening the day that we were going to be driving back through Dallas after a spring break trip to Galveston. It was clear that it was meant to be.”
 
STEP 2: GETTING EXEMPLARY CARE

A leading expert in Perthes disease, Harry Kim, M.D., M.S., is a pediatric orthopedic surgeon and director of the Center for Excellence in Hip at Scottish Rite for Children. Dr. Kim met with Brock and his family and confirmed the diagnosis.
 
“A perfusion MRI shows how much of the femoral head has blood flow,” Dr. Kim says. “Normally, it should be 100%. In Brock’s case, about 90% had no blood flow, which caused about 90% of his bone to die. His case was severe based on the amount of bone death and his age.”
 
Children ages 6 and younger tend to have better outcomes from Perthes disease because they have greater potential for developing new bone. Also, if half or more of the femoral head dies, the potential for regrowth without deformity is lower.
 
During the family’s initial visits, Dr. Kim and his team, including registered nurse Kristen Odom, explained the disease and Brock’s specific case and outlined the treatment options.
 
“When we came out of that first appointment, Brock said the best thing was that Dr. Kim looked at him, talked to him and asked him questions about how he was feeling, rather than just talking to me,” Rachel says. “It’s so important when you’re scared and uncertain, especially when you’re a kid, and the doctor makes you feel like you truly matter.”
 
After returning to Missouri, Rachel had more questions as the family processed the information. “Kristen spent an hour and 45 minutes on the phone with me,” Rachel says. “When I hung up, I told my husband we won’t ever go anywhere else. That kind of care simply doesn’t exist. When you’re dealing with a rare disease and your baby, that care is priceless.”
 
In May of 2021, Dr. Kim performed surgery on Brock’s right hip. “Brock presented with a mild collapse or deformity of the femoral head,” Dr. Kim says. “Without treatment, it would have degraded much further. We intervened before further collapse occurred.”
 
During the procedure, Dr. Kim cut the bone and positioned it so that he could tuck the femoral head securely into the hip socket. This containment procedure allowed the blood flow to come back naturally. He stabilized the bone with a metal implant that was removed in a later surgery. Over time, the body would remove the dead bone and generate new bone. To ensure healing, Dr. Kim prescribed a controlled weightbearing regimen, meaning Brock was unable to put any weight on his leg.
 
“He couldn’t play baseball, couldn’t run up the street to a friend’s house, couldn’t ride his bike,” Rachel says. “He went to school in a wheelchair, and kids stared at him and asked questions. We thought about ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) accommodations everywhere we went. We had to rethink everything.”
 
STEP 3: FIGHTING FOR OTHERS

Despite all of these changes, Brock has taken it in stride. “He is my hero,” Rachel says. “Has he complained? Absolutely. Did he hate certain minutes, days and weeks? 100%. But overall, he was relieved to have an answer and a plan and no more pain. He has handled it better than I could have ever imagined.”
 
Last Christmas, Brock wanted to express his gratitude by designing and selling T-shirts as a fundraiser for Scottish Rite. “We called ourselves ‘Brock’s Brigade,’” Rachel says, “and put ‘His Fight Is My Fight’ on the front.” When the family traveled to Dallas for Brock’s second surgery in December, they presented a check for $1,000 to his care team. “Dr. Kim has really made an impression on Brock,” Rachel says. “This was Brock’s way of giving a little back so that hopefully it’s easier for kids in the future.”
 
“This family is so special,” Dr. Kim says. “They have gone through such difficulty, yet they want to help others improve their knowledge and support research. They are not just thinking about themselves but thinking about others.”
 
For more than a year, Brock completed a series of progressive exercises to restore muscle strength and range of motion. He went from using a wheelchair to bearing more and more weight on his crutches. In August, the answer the family had been holding their breath for finally came. Brock was given the all clear to walk.
 
“After we got the A-OK, Brock took his first walk with his dad and his brother,” Rachel says. “They do these “football walks” where his dad throws the football, and they go up ahead and catch it. They got to do that for the first time in a long time.”
 
Brock is especially excited for the day when he is cleared to play the sport he loves most. “Dr. Kim felt confident that Brock would be able to start winter practices and be 100% for spring baseball, which has been his goal from day one,” Rachel says. For now, Brock is easing back into his active life. He walks his dog, Pepper, and plays on the playground with his friends.
 
“The Scottish Rite team has been the biggest blessing to our family,” Rachel says. “Even being eight hours away and having to drive and fly multiple times throughout the last 18 months, I would drive four days to get to Scottish Rite. Our experience has been nothing short of amazing.”