Amputee Ski Trip Spotlight: Anthony, age 15 of Fort Worth

Amputee Ski Trip Spotlight: Anthony, age 15 of Fort Worth

Anthony is an active 15-year-old from Fort Worth, Texas. In 2008, Anthony had an accident and one of his legs was amputated below the knee. That hasn’t slowed him down. Anthony is very athletic and played on his school basketball team up until this year. He has never been to Colorado and is excited about the chance to try both skiing and snowboarding for the first time. Anthony has signed up to take a class in welding, and he thinks he may want to be a welder when he grows up. He says welding is a combination of art and technology, and that really excites him. Eventually, Anthony thinks he might want to attend Baylor University.

About the Annual Amputee Ski Trip

February 2017 will mark the 36th anniversary of the annual Amputee Ski Trip, held each year at the National Sports Center for the Disabled in Winter Park, Colorado. Fourteen teenage patients with limb differences receive practical recreational therapy, while also having the opportunity to grow, build confidence and bond with others similar to them.

Get to Know Our Staff: Dwight Putnam in Prosthetics

Get to Know Our Staff: Dwight Putnam in Prosthetics

Dwight Putnam is a prosthetist who has been working at Scottish Rite Hospital for 10 years. Get to know him and why he loves working at our hospital.

What was your first job? What path did you take to get here?
My first job was making sandwiches at Schlotzsky’s… I took a very circular path…Started pre-med and ended up an artist, which eventually took me back into allied health.

What made you want to work here?
I could see the immediate impact of my work on the lives of my patients and their families

What skills do you need for your job?
An open mind, an open ear and a few hand skills…

What is your favorite prosthetic device that you’ve created for a patient?
One of the first specialty devices I made was a silicone finger for playing clarinet. It was a pivotal experience in my career because, at that point, it became clear to me how the patients at Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children could benefit from my skills and knowledge.

What’s your favorite thing about the hospital?
Our TEAM approach to treating patient families

What did you want to be when you grew up?
Grizzly Adams

What’s the most adventurous thing you’ve ever done?
I proposed to my wife at the top of the Machu Picchu ruins in Peru. We hadn’t talked about marriage up until that point, but I figured as far as the scenery and the company, it couldn’t get any better.

What’s the last book you read?
Passionate Nation: The Epic History of Texas by James Haley – still reading this one, it is pretty thick…

What is something people don’t know about you?
I am the youngest of four children; I have 13 nieces and nephews that I am very proud of.

Getting back to sports after an ACL Reconstruction

Getting back to sports after an ACL Reconstruction

After an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear, many young athletes choose to have surgery to replace the ACL. In very active kids, the knee is often unstable and at risk of injury without this important ligament. Returning to sports after this procedure takes time and a lot of work.
The “new” ACL, called a graft needs time to be ready for certain activities. The length of time depends on several things including:

Type of Graft – Age – Gender – Sport – Position – Level of Competition
Because very young patients need a different surgery, they need more healing time. Read more about ACL reconstruction for athletes with open growth plates.

Early exercises focus on preventing swelling and stiffness. The graft can tolerate more and more stress over time. Throughout recovery an athlete is allowed to progress from simple exercises for the leg to complex movements that challenge the whole body. We refer to the later stage of rehabilitation as functional training.

The goals of this stage are often shaped by the patient’s sport-specific needs. Research has shown there are also some principles that apply to many athletes. The athlete’s ability to perform certain movements has been shown to help identify patients at risk of an ACL injury or re-injury. We use several different tests to help determine when a patient is ready to return to sports after an ACL reconstruction.

Philip Wilson, M.D., tells us that “as a practice, we are passionate about functional retraining as a means to avoid a second injury.  Mounting research has shown that athletes in our pediatric and adolescent age groups are at an extremely high risk for injury to the surgical or opposite leg. Additional research has shown that increasing the time prior to return to sports, and demonstrating documented muscle strength and control are the best ways to avoid these new injuries.”

Because many sports require stability on a single leg in activities like running, pivoting, stopping, kicking, and throwing, the tests challenge athlete’s ability to stand on one leg. Additionally, these functional movements challenge the strength and flexibility throughout the body.  A comprehensive rehabilitation program incorporates these concepts from the beginning:

Flexibility – strength – stability – muscle activation – balance – control – body awareness

For this, and many other injuries, surgery is only the first step on the road back to sports. An athlete must also be committed to the rehabilitation and functional training required to return to sports. We encourage athletes to use these concepts in their training programs before they sustain game-changing injuries.

For information about injury prevention and pediatric sports medicine, please visit our website at Scottish Rite.