Porzingis Injury
Page 1 of 1
Porzingis Injury
http://nypost.com/2017/01/04/medical-experts-take-on-kristaps-porzingis-injury/
The good and bad of medical expert’s Kristaps Porzingis assessment
By Marc Berman
January 4, 2017 | 11:59pm
Kristaps Porzingis, talking with Carmelo Anthony, missed his third straight Knicks game on Jan. 4. Anthony J. Causi
It took 11 days for Knicks season to turn into an utter train wreck
Knicks suffer buzzer-beating crusher after blowing big lead
Jeff Hornacek a lot softer on Carmelo than MSG Network
Kurt Rambis would make for convenient defensive scapegoat
With Kristaps Porzingis missing his third straight Knicks game with a sore Achilles tendon, a leading medical expert in foot/ankle injuries told The Post the 7-foot-3 Latvian is suffering from tendinitis, should play less minutes and go on a special program to strengthen the tendon.
The good news, the expert from Northwestern Memorial Hospital said, is Porzingis likely is too young at 21 to be suffering from Achilles tendinosis, which could result in a career-ending rupture. However, the expert said Porzingis is more prone to Achilles tendinitis than virtually all other NBA players.
“For sure people who are of advanced height put more strain on the tendons, their height and length mechanically puts more stress,’’ Dr. Anish R. Kadakia, associate professor of orthopedic surgery and fellowship director of Orthopedic Foot and Ankle Fellowship at Northwestern University, told The Post. “The Achilles is the most relevant because it has to support your whole body weight.’’
Porzingis said he had never had Achilles pain before developing soreness Christmas Day, but played through it for two games before being shut down last week in Houston. Coach Jeff Hornacek said before the Knicks’ 105-104 loss to the Bucks that the tendon was still “stiff’’ but hoped to get Porzingis into a practice Thursday and try to play him Friday.
Kadakia, who has not had Porzingis as a patient, said his recommendation is for Hornacek to ease up on the playing time for now. (The Knicks medical staff is not permitted to speak to the media.)
“That’s the problem,’’ Kadakia said, “leading the team in minutes played. That’s really a lot for him at this point, the excess strain and the length of time he’s playing. A couple of things can be done — decrease playing time and at the same time have a regimented physical therapy for the Achilles to make it stronger for the future, a regimented program to build up tolerance. He’s not ready for it coming from a college or European schedule.”
Kadakia added Porzingis can’t have his A-level game if he plays with Achilles tendinitis, but no medical proof exists he’s more prone to a rupture.
“It can affect jumping and running because he can’t generate the same force because of the pain and inflammation surrounding the tendon,’’ he said.
If Porzingis had disease of the tendon causing the pain — tendinosis — it would be big trouble. That could only be shown on an MRI exam or ultrasound, and Porzingis hasn’t had either.
“A young person, it’s usually a strain from overuse,’’ Kadakia said. “He just needs rest and focused physical therapy.’’
bob
MY NOTE: The downside of drafting big men really young and putting them through an 82-game NBA season. Their bones and tendons aren't there yet.
Calling Dr. Worcester, Dr. Fine, Dr. Worcester...
.
The good and bad of medical expert’s Kristaps Porzingis assessment
By Marc Berman
January 4, 2017 | 11:59pm
Kristaps Porzingis, talking with Carmelo Anthony, missed his third straight Knicks game on Jan. 4. Anthony J. Causi
It took 11 days for Knicks season to turn into an utter train wreck
Knicks suffer buzzer-beating crusher after blowing big lead
Jeff Hornacek a lot softer on Carmelo than MSG Network
Kurt Rambis would make for convenient defensive scapegoat
With Kristaps Porzingis missing his third straight Knicks game with a sore Achilles tendon, a leading medical expert in foot/ankle injuries told The Post the 7-foot-3 Latvian is suffering from tendinitis, should play less minutes and go on a special program to strengthen the tendon.
The good news, the expert from Northwestern Memorial Hospital said, is Porzingis likely is too young at 21 to be suffering from Achilles tendinosis, which could result in a career-ending rupture. However, the expert said Porzingis is more prone to Achilles tendinitis than virtually all other NBA players.
“For sure people who are of advanced height put more strain on the tendons, their height and length mechanically puts more stress,’’ Dr. Anish R. Kadakia, associate professor of orthopedic surgery and fellowship director of Orthopedic Foot and Ankle Fellowship at Northwestern University, told The Post. “The Achilles is the most relevant because it has to support your whole body weight.’’
Porzingis said he had never had Achilles pain before developing soreness Christmas Day, but played through it for two games before being shut down last week in Houston. Coach Jeff Hornacek said before the Knicks’ 105-104 loss to the Bucks that the tendon was still “stiff’’ but hoped to get Porzingis into a practice Thursday and try to play him Friday.
Kadakia, who has not had Porzingis as a patient, said his recommendation is for Hornacek to ease up on the playing time for now. (The Knicks medical staff is not permitted to speak to the media.)
“That’s the problem,’’ Kadakia said, “leading the team in minutes played. That’s really a lot for him at this point, the excess strain and the length of time he’s playing. A couple of things can be done — decrease playing time and at the same time have a regimented physical therapy for the Achilles to make it stronger for the future, a regimented program to build up tolerance. He’s not ready for it coming from a college or European schedule.”
Kadakia added Porzingis can’t have his A-level game if he plays with Achilles tendinitis, but no medical proof exists he’s more prone to a rupture.
“It can affect jumping and running because he can’t generate the same force because of the pain and inflammation surrounding the tendon,’’ he said.
If Porzingis had disease of the tendon causing the pain — tendinosis — it would be big trouble. That could only be shown on an MRI exam or ultrasound, and Porzingis hasn’t had either.
“A young person, it’s usually a strain from overuse,’’ Kadakia said. “He just needs rest and focused physical therapy.’’
bob
MY NOTE: The downside of drafting big men really young and putting them through an 82-game NBA season. Their bones and tendons aren't there yet.
Calling Dr. Worcester, Dr. Fine, Dr. Worcester...
.
bobheckler- Posts : 61461
Join date : 2009-10-28
Similar topics
» Delonte West’s Injury Return Pushed Back, Plus Other Injury Updates
» Marcus Morris injury: Boston Celtics forward expected to miss week or more with knee injury
» PORZINGIS ANYONE??
» Porzingis for the #1 pick?...really.
» What/Who Would You Trade For Kristaps Porzingis?
» Marcus Morris injury: Boston Celtics forward expected to miss week or more with knee injury
» PORZINGIS ANYONE??
» Porzingis for the #1 pick?...really.
» What/Who Would You Trade For Kristaps Porzingis?
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
|
|