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Medical Needs of Athletes
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He’s an orthopaedic surgeon. He’s also a sports enthusiast.
The two go hand in hand for Dr. Angus McBryde, one of the four physicians
who staff the USC Sports
Medicine Center.
“Most people who go into sports medicine have had an interest
in sports ever since they were young,” said Dr. McBryde, who’s
an avid golfer and competitive runner. In the 50's he competed for
Davidson College, not unlike the young men he now treats on the
South Carolina State Bulldog teams.
Along with Dr. Jeffrey Guy, Dr. McBryde provides sports medicine
services to male and female athletes at South Carolina State. The
range of services furnished through
the USC Sports Medicine Center includes pre-season orthopaedic physicals,
onsite medical coverage at games and weekly practice scrimmages,
and a weekly clinic in the training room in Orangeburg to follow
up on injured players.
Football season becomes hectic for the two physicians, who cover
away games as well as those in Orangeburg at Oliver Dawson Stadium.
Yet they are committed to the role they play for the Bulldogs. “Our
function is to back up the team trainer for injuries that are clearly
not minor or clearly need orthopaedic attention,” Dr. McBryde
said. “The benefit to the athletes is immediate access to
care,” he said, comparing a football player injured in a game
to a motorist hurt in a wreck on the highway. “It’s
rare to have that immediate access except on the sports field, where
it’s become the standard of care,” he said.
Dr. McBryde enjoys the challenges and tough decisions that come
with athletics. “You have to decide whether or not to operate,
how to rehabilitate, and when to return someone to play,”
he said. He added that the treatment of sports injuries could impact
much more than an individual’s physical status. “When
you’re looking at a collegiate player with a potential career
ahead of him, injuries can be a crucial factor in his future,”
he said.
In addition to working in collegiate sports, Dr. McBryde has treated
athletes on various levels of play, from Olympians in Seoul and
Atlanta to individual players on professional football teams. It’s
not unusual for a professional athlete to travel to Columbia for
surgery by Dr. McBryde, who has particular expertise in sports injuries
to the foot and ankle. How do athletes from around the country end
up in his office? “There is a network of sports medicine professionals
who know each other, call on each other, and use each other as a
resource,” he said.
Reprinted from Connections newsletter, March 2002
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