Exertional Rhabdomyolysis

I hope the blog readership has had a chance to take a look at the most recent issue of CJSM.  The September 2013 edition of the Journal has studies looking at conditions from concussion to osteoporosis and at sports from football to ballet.  It is a varied mix, and a testament to the wide range of conditions primary care sports clinicians treat and study.

Nile_Kinnick

The great Nile Kinnick,
University of Iowa
1939 Heisman trophy winner,
World War II hero

I spent a good amount of time in August talking about concussions, and I could easily continue this thread throughout September.  I started off the month, in fact, with a look at my friend Bill Meehan’s recent work on the “The Presence of Undiagnosed Concussions in Athletes.”  I thought I’d take a break from that topic, and look at a less common but also potentially dangerous condition:  exertional rhabdomyolysis.  It’s a particularly relevant topic at this moment, as exertional rhabdo often times strikes untrained athletes working out in hot and humid environmental conditions, and it’s an unseasonable 95 in Columbus Ohio today, where I am writing this post.

A Cluster of Rhabdomyolysis Affecting a Division I Football Team,” a study by Smoot, MK, Amendola, A, Cramer, E et al., looks at an ‘outbreak’ of the condition in January 2011 at the University of Iowa’s football (american) team after some intense off-season lifting workouts.  Ironically, we had a cluster of our own in Columbus, Ohio, home to Iowa’s Big Ten rival Ohio State, just this spring, in the women’s sport of lacrosse.  The LAX players were hospitalized after team members performed a new 20 minute workout involving repetitive pushups, situps and chin ups, without break.  Six female athletes were hospitalized for as much as a week.  The local newspaper reported,  “Five returned to play last season, all except sophomore Kelly Becker of Dublin…..who has since transferred to Michigan.”

mo squared at michigan

The author’s son,
letting it all hang out
in the ‘Big House’
Ann Arbor, MI

Ok, stop!!  If that doesn’t suggest to you the gravity of the situation, nothing will.  As a consequence of her experience as an athlete who developed exertional rhabdo, a young woman traded in being a Buckeye for a Wolverine.  The ultimate protest!!!!

Returning to the study…..The authors set out to look for what might be risk factors for exertional rhabdo (ER) in collegiate football players.  They begin by doing a brief and excellent overview of the signs and symptoms, defining characteristics, and known risk factors for ER.  They proceed then to describe the workout the 16 football players did (e.g. 100 back squats at 50% of one rep maximum) and how the young men presented with ER.  Thirteen players were hospitalized for ER after this workout.

The authors were given permission to look at the medical records of 10 of the 13 cases. Nine of the 10 had urine screens negative for drugs (one had a positive opiate screen, but his urine had been collected after being administered narcotic analgesics); one of the 10 had sickle cell trait; and two of the 10 had consumed creatine before the workout.

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The New Issue of CJSM

friday night lights

Under the lights, on the gridiron:
the site of a lot of concussions.

I was very excited to find the eTOC (electronic table of contents) for the September 2013 CJSM in my email inbox this morning.

As an associate editor, I am privy to this sort of information prior to launch, so to speak, but it’s usually all I can do on these blog pages not to talk about the contents prior to publication.  The offerings are always so varied, so interesting.  Well, the ‘horse is out of the barn now,’ the new CJSM is travelling over the ether, and I can at last discuss an article or two!

Before I forget, let me remind you that you, too, can get the CJSM eTOC and find out the lineup when it’s hot off the press, so I encourage you to go to the home page and sign up, the link is near the top of the masthead.

I wanted to write briefly this morning about one of the new studies in the September CJSM, “The Prevalence of Undiagnosed Concussions in Athletes,” Meehan et al.

William P. Meehan III, M.D. is a friend of mine.  To paraphrase a line that has had a lot of currency recently here in the states, the arc of Bill’s career bends towards success.  It is really hard to keep track of all the work he is doing in the field of concussion.  In fact, in an attempt to do so, I have asked him to participate in a “Five Questions with CJSM” blog post interview, like the one I did with Dr. Jason Mihalik last month.   Keep your eyes posted here, because I’m hoping Bill can sit for a few minutes between attending to his multiple, other commitments and I’ll write up his thoughts in a blog post  before the end of the month, I hope.

The new study was conducted at Boston Children’s Hospital and the University of Pittsburgh.   Read more of this post

Anyone for Tennis? U.S. Open Tennis Championships in Full Swing

From the archives: with the U.S. Open in full swing, our Excecutive Editor Chris Hughes gives a thorough review on evidence-based treatments for lateral epicondylitis/’tennis elbow’ from the 2011 CJSM blog.

Chris Hughes's avatarClinical Journal of Sport Medicine Blog

And so to the gloriously British Grand Slam Premier Tennis event that is Wimbledon which is currently in full swing. Well – full swing insomuch as the British weather is currently allowing, but at least with the Centre Court’s retractable roof, installed in time for the 2009 Championships, we are guaranteed to get through at least some of the scheduled games every day. As I write in London not more than a few miles away from the courts, the rain is currently pouring down – a not so welcome tradition of the Championships, together with the more desirable traditions such as strawberries and cream, ‘Henman Hill,’ and the inevitable tireless British banter about why we haven’t managed to produce a Men’s Champion since the legendary Fred Perry way back in 1936 when he won for a third time.

A total of 128 players take part over the fortnight in the single tournaments…

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Sudden Death on the Playing Field

It’s Labor Day, and I’m laboring mightily on a research manuscript I’m hoping to get mostly wrapped up this week so I can submit it for publication consideration in a week or so.

I hope you all are enjoying the holiday if you’re in the USA, or having a decent day at work if you are elsewhere.

I hope also you had a chance to see my recent blog post highlighting a recent study looking at the epidemiology of catastrophic injuries in American high school and college football players.

Keeping this ‘low key’ on a holiday, I would encourage you to take the poll below, and check the blog post and the study to see if you got the answer right!

And before I sign off, just a heads up:  the new Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine launches at the end of the week, so look forward to upcoming posts highlighting the great studies we have for you in this edition of CJSM.

Enjoy your BBQ!