| USC Sports Medicine Center
Serves
Health Care Needs of Athletes
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"Our mission is to provide
comprehensive medical services to athletes of all ages, including
young athletes in the pediatric population."
-– Jeffrey Guy, M.D. |
A 16-year-old quarterback may think he has little in common with
a mother pushing a jogging stroller or a middle-aged executive shooting
a game of hoops. Yet all three share common ground in their pursuit
of exercise. That means they share the potential for injuries and
other medical issues that are influenced by their physical activity.
The USC Sports Medicine Center serves the specialized health care
needs of athletes at all levels of competition, as well as providing
diagnostic, treatment, and preventive services to anyone involved
in sports or recreation. “Our patients range from young, competitive
athletes to men and women in their sixties and seventies who are
playing racquetball and running triathlons,” said Dr. Angus
McBryde, one of two orthopaedic surgeons at the center. The medical
staff is rounded out by two primary care sports medicine physicians.
At the end of May the center will move into a new 4,800-square
foot facility in the lower level of Two Medical Park. The space
includes 12 exam rooms, two x-ray rooms and a cast room. Easy patient
access is provided by a direct entrance that bypasses elevators
and stairs. “It’s much more user-friendly,” said
Dr. McBryde.
“As we expand our services we’ll be able to accommodate
that expansion,” said Dr. Jeffrey Guy, an orthopaedic surgeon
at the center. “Our mission is to provide comprehensive medical
services to athletes of all ages, including young athletes in the
pediatric population,” he said. Dr. Guy’s training included
a fellowship in pediatric sports medicine at Boston Children’s
Hospital, one of only two such fellowships in the country. “The
phrase ‘kids at play’ rarely applies today as young
athletes are becoming increasingly involved in organized and competitive
sports,” he added. “It’s our job in the sports
medicine community to keep up with the specific injuries and the
increasing demand within this population,” he said.
A collaborative effort between the Departments of Family and Preventive
Medicine and Orthopaedic Surgery, the USC Sports Medicine Center
provides a broad array of services that includes treatment of musculoskeletal
injuries and medical problems associated with exercise, sports physicals,
nutrition counseling, and consultations on strength and conditioning.
“There has been a transition over the last decade as to what
constitutes sports medicine,” said Dr. Mark Leski, describing
how the focus has expanded from orthopaedic sports injuries to a
broader perspective. One of the center’s primary care sports
medicine physicians, Dr. Leski completed an intensive sports medicine
fellowship following his family practice residency. Such advanced
training prepared him and his counterpart, Dr. Thomas Terrell, for
management of common orthopaedic problems and medical conditions
in sports. “Eighty percent of orthopaedics is non-operative,”
Dr. Leski added, noting that he and Dr. Terrell can manage many
orthopaedic issues that do not require surgery.
The center’s orthopaedic surgeons can also address medical
issues that bring athletes into treatment. “We are all familiar
with the evaluation process and implementing a conservative treatment
plan. And that’s where the overlap lies,” explained
Dr. Guy on how the roles of the four physicians interrelate. Just
as he might refer a particular hand injury to a hand specialist,
he and Dr. McBryde determine when the expertise of one of the primary
care sports medicine physicians would be the optimal choice to handle
a specific medical problem.
Treating individuals who are serious about their particular sport
or playing at a professional level presents a different challenge
for sports medicine physicians. “These people are highly motivated
to get back into activity and eager, almost overzealous to get into
rehabilitation,” said Dr. Terrell. “We want to make
sure that they are adequately treated, recovered and rehabilitated
before they get back to their sport,” he said. Such patients
are redirected to other forms of exercise that are conducive to
the rehabilitation process and allow them to maintain their aerobic
performance level.
The center serves a growing segment of organized athletics that
includes The Capital City Bombers baseball team, student athletes
at Benedict College and the Columbia City Ballet. The physicians
also treat some individual professional athletes. “People
tend to get narrowly focused on the elite athlete, and that’s
not what sports medicine is about,” noted Dr. McBryde. He
added, “For every high profile athlete there are thousands
of us putting on shorts and shoes and running around the neighborhood.”
Reprinted from Connections newsletter, March 2002
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