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HOME/Radiology/‘Tis the Season for Basketball Injuries

‘Tis the Season for Basketball Injuries

‘Tis the Season for Basketball Injuries
January 26, 2015
0 Comments
By: Catherine Leopard

“Basketball is life, everything else is an interruption.”
–Planet Hoops

ACL and ACL Tear Comparison

Whether it’s the NBA, college hoops, high school games or rec leagues, it’s definitely basketball season. Basketball is a great way for kids to be active, but of course some children will be injured while playing the sport. Common injuries range from a simple ankle sprain to a more complex fracture. Sometimes radiology imaging is needed to determine the extent of the injury.

Often, doctors are concerned with any fracture that involves the growth plate of the bone. It’s important that these breaks are appropriately identified and then treated to ensure healthy growth in children.

Knee injuries can frequently occur from playing basketball. Sometimes the injury is a single event, such as a tear of the meniscus (the cushion between your knee bones) or the anterior cruciate ligament (piece of tissue attaching your knee bones together). Other basketball injuries can occur over a longer period of time and usually affect the front of the knee. These long-standing injuries can involve the lower part of the knee cap, referred to as Sinding Larsen Johansson disease in growing children and jumper’s knee in older children who are finished growing. Osgood Schlatter disease is another diagnosis involving the lower knee seen in growing children.

Besides leg injuries, fingers can be injured from being jammed when catching the ball. Head injuries are also a concern, resulting from either physical contact with other players or a fall on the court.

Regardless of the injury, the radiologists at Cincinnati Children’s are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to help with any necessary imaging.

Osgood Schlatter_20150128

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Contributed by Dr. Andrew Zbojniewicz and edited by Catherine Leopard (CCLSS).

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TAGS:
  • basketball injuries
  • knee cap
  • Osgood Schlatter Disease
  • Radiologist
  • radiology
  • Sinding Larsen Johansson Disease
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About the author: Catherine Leopard

Catherine is a Child Life Specialist who works in Cincinnati Children’s Department of Radiology. She has always been drawn to helping children overcome their fears. As a young child, Catherine remembers sitting in her pediatrician’s office feeling sad as she listened to young babies crying in exam rooms. In response, she began singing lullabies through the walls to sooth and comfort those children in distress. As an adult, she first experienced the support of Child Life when her infant daughter was hospitalized. After that positive experience, Catherine completed her Child Life internship at Cincinnati Children’s and has worked here ever since. Her daughter is now a teenager and her son is an active 3rd grader.

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