Dr. Andrew's is both Auburn and Alabama's team doctor.lawdawg02 said:i don't think he'd be interested in being a team doctor for any college. he's way past that.</p>
lawdawg02 said:those doctors do those surgeries every day. if you don't work HARD in rehab, you aren't going to be the same.
LR1400 said:Most leg low extremity, especially ligament tears, are NON contact. An overwhelming majority.maroonmania said:in the last 2 football seasons SEVERELY injure legs and knees playing football while being essentially untouched by anyone (Riddell, Elliott and McRae).
rdhdawg said:RE's family opted to have two surgeries instead of fixing both ligaments at the same time. the football program was pissed at him for doing so b/c it makes for a much longer recovery. RE went with his own DR from what I understand. I don't think State's team did the op... The MSU docs may have done the actual operation, but a family doctor decided on two procedures instead of one. I don't know why RE would have consulted someone and then had a Dr who disagrees with that consult to do the actual op.
dgsmith15 said:You may have said MOST, but you referenced Elliott after saying that most of the severe knee injuries happen with little, to no contact. In my opinion, by mentioning Elliott's name you are insinuating that his happened with little, to no contact.LR1400 said:I said MOST. Willis McGahee's was like Elliott'sdgsmith15 said:I thought Elliott's injury occurred while he was going for the end zone during the LSU game. If I remember correctly, there was PLENTY of contact on that play.
cajundawg said:RL did husband's knee. Radiologist said it was one of the worst knee injuries he had ever seen. Torn ACL, ruptured medial meniscus, multiple mini-fractures in femur and tibia (when they colided as he landed), and the largest joint effusion he had ever seen. The dang thing was swollen three times normal before we ever got him off the court. Couldn't do surgery for 10 days because the swelling was so bad. RL's partner said the surgery would take at least 4 hours. RL did it in 45 minutes. At times he can hardly walk on it. After many visits where RL waltzed in and out in a matter of seconds, it was obvious he did not care, nor wanted to acknowledge that the surgery was a failure. He spent the majority of the time quoting his success rates compared to the national average. Husband says it felt better before the surgery!
LR1400 said:I did not refer to Robert's injury was non-contact. I know he was hit, I was watching. If I did it was a typo.dgsmith15 said:You may have said MOST, but you referenced Elliott after saying that most of the severe knee injuries happen with little, to no contact. In my opinion, by mentioning Elliott's name you are insinuating that his happened with little, to no contact.LR1400 said:I said MOST. Willis McGahee's was like Elliott'sdgsmith15 said:I thought Elliott's injury occurred while he was going for the end zone during the LSU game. If I remember correctly, there was PLENTY of contact on that play.
Actually, I'm not trying to be a pain in the ***. My original post was a reply the one your referenced. I may have mistakenly replied to yours instead of his which would may have caused the confusion. Apologies good sir.LR1400 said:Dude, are you trying to be a pain in the ***? I know that Robert was hit when injured. So that of course means I know his injury was contact based. But in my original post, which I went back and read, I do not reference Robert. I replied to a message that one fella happened to mention Robert's name in parentheses. it was the last thread I read and replied. I was simply stating the FACT that most lower leg ligament injuries, to be even more specific, are NON-contact based. This is a FACT I was simply pointing out. I don't give a **** what I replied to, I was not "referencing" any specific injury of any specific player. I know the guy I replied to was incorrect in placing Robert's name in the non-contact category. i, like you, was watching the game and saw him get hit causing his knee injury.LR1400 said:I did not refer to Robert's injury was non-contact. I know he was hit, I was watching. If I did it was a typo.dgsmith15 said:You may have said MOST, but you referenced Elliott after saying that most of the severe knee injuries happen with little, to no contact. In my opinion, by mentioning Elliott's name you are insinuating that his happened with little, to no contact.LR1400 said:I said MOST. Willis McGahee's was like Elliott'sdgsmith15 said:I thought Elliott's injury occurred while he was going for the end zone during the LSU game. If I remember correctly, there was PLENTY of contact on that play.
Andrews is neither Auburn nor Alabama's team doctor. His 10 fellows he has each year compete to be the AU and UA team surgeons. American Sports Medicine Institute may be the treating surgeons but I can assure you that it is his fellows that handle all of the care. I personally know half of his fellows. Andrews does very little, if any, of the cases that come to his surgical center. He may see them, but he rarely operates anymore. He closely monitors them though.curbmyenthusiasm said:Dr. Andrew's is both Auburn and Alabama's team doctor.lawdawg02 said:i don't think he'd be interested in being a team doctor for any college. he's way past that.</p>
If you are doing ACL repairs on athletes in this day and age, then you do at least a couple a week. Single bundle, double bundle, open, tunneled, arthroscopic assisted, etc... Trust me...whoever did it has done hundreds if not thousands. All it takes is a non-compliant patient to $%&# it all up.dpaul798 said:lawdawg02 said:those doctors do those surgeries every day. if you don't work HARD in rehab, you aren't going to be the same.
actually those surgeries in the grand scheme of a surgical schedule are not that common and are a big deal. now if you have someone in the field of sports medicine that does a good many of them they are a bit more routine ut are still a big deal nonetheless. i tell you this, it is REAL easy for an average surgeon to jack an acl procedure up..it aint that easy
cb6228 said:If you are doing ACL repairs on athletes in this day and age, then you do at least a couple a week. Single bundle, double bundle, open, tunneled, arthroscopic assisted, etc... Trust me...whoever did it has done hundreds if not thousands. All it takes is a non-compliant patient to $%&# it all up.dpaul798 said:lawdawg02 said:those doctors do those surgeries every day. if you don't work HARD in rehab, you aren't going to be the same.
actually those surgeries in the grand scheme of a surgical schedule are not that common and are a big deal. now if you have someone in the field of sports medicine that does a good many of them they are a bit more routine ut are still a big deal nonetheless. i tell you this, it is REAL easy for an average surgeon to jack an acl procedure up..it aint that easy
cb6228 said:lol...get my *** of google? I have done most of those procedures personally taught by the best in the world (ever heard of Freddie Fu). any athlete who goes to a non-sports fellowship trained orthopod for an ACL repair is a moron.
we're talking about orthopedic surgeons who are team doctors for a SEC university. i'm sure joe schmoe in podunk, ms, only does a few acl's a year.and there are tons of guys that only do a few acls a year.
are you saying the columbus ortho guys don't do this stuff very often?if you go to someone that isnt doing quite a few of these the results dont always come out positive
lawdawg02 said:we're talking about orthopedic surgeons who are team doctors for a SEC university. i'm sure joe schmoe in podunk, ms, only does a few acl's a year.and there are tons of guys that only do a few acls a year.
are you saying the columbus ortho guys don't do this stuff very often?if you go to someone that isnt doing quite a few of these the results dont always come out positive