Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- From: "Meat Normous" <meatnormous_NETBLOCKGEN783_@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 02 Nov 2005 01:12:32 GMT
"keveagle" <k714eagleNOSPAM@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1b833$43680497$438cf4bc$10779@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> "Sheldon Brown 24" <emailless@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:4367d9ed$0$70518$892e7fe2@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >
> > "Buddude197" <buddude197@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> > news:1130878978.261636.101230@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >>
> >> keveagle wrote:
> >>> > We had a rip roaring debate about that the week they released he had
> >>> > it. I was really in favor of shutting him down then. There is a
doctor
> >>> > in Germany who does the surgery exclusively and has 12,000 of them
to
> >>> > her credit, mostly on soccer players. She estimates the rate of
> >>> > pain-free return at 2 weeks. Had he had it then, even if he missed
her
> >>> > estimate by 2 weeks, he would've been back by now having missed
Dallas
> >>> > and KC plus the bye week.
> >>> >
> >>>
> >>> Amazing how this went from the 6 weeks the pro surgery crowd said a
few
> >>> weeks ago and now it's down to 2 weeks ....... name one football
player
> >>> who
> >>> has come back in 2 weeks from this ......
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >> Hey Kev, don't blame me. They published a 3 page article about it in
> >> the PDN about a week or 2 ago. The doctor has performed over 12,000 of
> >> this specific surgery. (Sheldon can you access the article?)
> >
> >
> > Could operation benefit McNabb?
> >
> > By DANA PENNETT O'NEIL
> >
> > oneild@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >
> >
> > ON FEB. 9, Chris Leitch flew to Munich for surgery to repair the sports
> > hernia that had plagued him for the better part of a season.
> >
> > On Feb. 12, he jogged.
> >
> > On Feb. 14, he ran 5 miles.
> >
> > And on Feb. 19, he began preseason practice alongside his MetroStars
> > teammates.
> >
> > Eight months and an entire Major League Soccer season later, Leitch has
> > had no re-tears, no problems and best of all, no pain.
> >
> > He is, without sounding too dramatic, cured.
> >
> > "I feel great," Leitch, a defenseman out of North Carolina, says. "Never
> > better."
> >
> > As Donovan McNabb enters yet another work week with his sports hernia,
the
> > quarterback insists the pain he is feeling is pain he can stomach. Given
a
> > recovery period of 6 to 12 weeks, McNabb, understandably reluctant to
have
> > any sort of surgery, is even more hesitant to undergo a procedure that
> > might shelve him for the better part of the Eagles' season.
> >
> > But what Leitch - and thousands of top-level European athletes and a
> > growing number of American soccer players - have learned is that should
> > McNabb's injury progress to the point of intolerable, it doesn't
> > necessarily mean the end of the quarterback's season and subsequently,
the
> > end of the Eagles' Super Bowl hopes.
> >
> > There is an alternative.
> >
> > "Look, I have no interest in this," Leitch says. "I don't know Donovan.
> > What he does doesn't affect me, but as an athlete, I have to say if you
> > need surgery and you don't have this done, you're cheating yourself. Fly
> > over there and be done with it."
> >
> > Over there would be Munich, home to the Hernia Center and its director,
> > Dr. Ulrike Muschaweck, a woman who has revolutionized sports hernia
> > repair. Using a procedure she developed called Minimal Repair Technique,
> > athletes are returning to competition in 10 days to 2 weeks.
> >
> > That's full competition with no limits, no restrictions and best of all,
> > no re-tears. Her recurrence rate is an astonishing .002 percent.
> >
> > Though many of Muschaweck's patients play professional soccer - it is,
> > after all, Europe's version of the NFL - she says it doesn't matter what
> > sport her patient plays because sports hernias affect motion. Contact
> > doesn't alter the injury.
> >
> > "It doesn't matter what they do - basketball, football, soccer, hockey,"
> > Muschaweck says, taking a break from her typical five-surgeries-a-day
> > schedule last week. "After about 2 weeks, they can return. That's it. No
> > risk."
> >
> > The reality is, at some point McNabb will need surgery. Sports hernias
> > don't go away. They must be surgically repaired.
> >
> > They can, however, get worse as the internal organs that are pressing on
> > the abdominal wall go from a partial to a full tear.
> >
> > "You can't say exactly how fast, but yes, they do get worse," says
> > Muschaweck's associate, Dr. Angie Everhorn. "These are pretty tough guys
> > who can play through the pain, but the sooner you come and have this
done,
> > the sooner you're OK for the rest of the season."
> >
> > During traditional hernia surgeries, doctors insert a mesh to help bond
> > the muscle to the bone. It's a rather simple procedure but nonetheless
> > requires a fairly lengthy recovery period.
> >
> > Muschaweck, a hernia specialist of 12 years who tailors her surgeries
> > based on a patient's age, occupation and needs, doesn't use mesh with
> > athletes, preferring instead to keep the elasticity between the muscle
> > layers after surgery. Instead Muschaweck only opens the defected area,
> > leaving the surrounding muscle tissue intact.
> >
> > Muschaweck also pays close attention to the genitofemoral nerve, which
> > often is a source of hernia pain and, and if necessary removes part of
it.
> >
> > Afterward each layer of muscle is sutured separately, allowing for a
less
> > painful and speedier recovery.
> >
> > "We don't operate on the intact structures; only the defect," Muschaweck
> > explains. "That's the secret, minimizing the operating technique. It's
> > only a small area that's causing the pain, so there's no need to open
> > something more."
> >
> > If it sounds simple, it sort of is. The reason no one in the United
States
> > is going this route is that, unlike Europe, doctors here are only
starting
> > to recognize and diagnose sports hernias with regularity. Muschaweck, on
> > the other hand, has more than 12,000 hernia repairs on her resume.
> >
> > In 1994 Brian Baldinger, the former Eagle and current Fox analyst,
> > suffered a groin pain like he'd never experienced before. No one could
> > tell him what was wrong. Finally he received a diagnosis, athletic
> > pubalgia. The term sports hernia hadn't even been coined in this
country.
> >
> > "In my opinion, the pain sometimes is misunderstood," Muschaweck says.
> > "Doctors don't know the reason of the sportsman's groin [her term for
> > sports hernia]. If you know the reason, you handle it. It's over.
There's
> > no more pain, no risk for a new hernia."
> >
> > Baldinger underwent traditional hernia repair, putting him out of
> > commission for nearly 3 months.
> >
> > Told of Muschaweck's procedure, Baldinger was dumbfounded.
> >
> > "That's amazing," Baldinger says. "Sure I would have tried it, but I can
> > see where people might think, 'Wait, everyone else says 6 weeks and now
> > they're saying 2 weeks.' It sounds like you're going to see... someone
> > who's not even a real doctor."
> >
> > His is not an unusual reaction. It all does sound too good to be true,
> > like some sort of infomercial of false promises.
> >
> > Leitch understands the skepticism.
> >
> > He wasn't immediately sold, either.
> >
> > Plagued by groin pain through the entire 2004 season, Leitch knew he had
> > to do something when the pain resurfaced prior to training camp in 2005.
> >
> > He spoke with his athletic trainer, John Gallucci, who offered a
solution.
> > During the offseason, Gallucci was one of a number of MLS medical
> > personnel to attend a MLS Medical Conference in Los Angeles where
> > Muschaweck made a presentation. Impressed, Gallucci spoke at length with
> > Muschaweck and learned more about her procedure.
> >
> > "In Europe she does basically all your big-time clubs," says Gallucci,
who
> > recently wrote an article for the National Athletic Trainer
Association's
> > News. "She's really incredible."
> >
> > Hesitantly and with Gallucci alongside him, Leitch flew to Germany where
> > Muschaweck gave him an ultrasound - just like the ones used on pregnant
> > women - and immediately found the hernia.
> >
> > "I was a little sketchy," Leitch says. "I was the first American to go
> > over and do this and if it's my body having surgery, I'm going to worry.
I
> > couldn't understand why in the U.S. it took months to recover and she
was
> > telling me I'd be back in days. I thought, 'There's no way. It's not
> > possible.' Even my orthopedic surgeon was like, 'Seven to 10 days? I
don't
> > know about that.' "
> >
> > But then Leitch saw the wall of photographs, patients of Muschaweck's
who
> > also happened to be among the best soccer players in the world. To
> > soccer-phobic Americans the photos would be meaningless. To Leitch, a
> > former Ohio Player of the Year, it was like walking the hallways of
Canton
> > or Cooperstown.
> >
> > Those photos, plus his own research, reassurance from Muschaweck and
that
> > .002 recurrence rate gave Leitch the courage for the leap of faith.
> >
> > "I remember the day before the surgery, I was walking down the hall with
a
> > guy from a premiere league over there," Leitch says. "We were laughing
at
> > the idea of playing in 10 days because it just hurt so much.
> >
> > "But right after we got out of surgery, we walked around Munich. The
next
> > day, I was pedaling a stationary bike. By the third day I was jogging
and
> > around Day 5, I ran 5 miles."
> >
> > Leitch, who played every MetroStars game this season and logged the
> > second-most minutes (2,344) on his team, has started a pipeline of
> > American soccer players to Munich. He convinced his friend, DC United
> > forward Bryan Namoff, to meet with Muschaweck. Namoff had surgery on
both
> > sides of his abdominal wall in July and returned to play in early
August.
> > Chivas United forward Matt Taylor missed only seven games after his
> > procedure this season, and on Aug. 14 Ante Razov followed his teammate's
> > flight to Munich.
> >
> > The league's fourth all-time leading scorer, Razov came back to work on
> > Sept. 3.
> >
> > "I had surgery on my groin last October and then the pain came back,"
says
> > Razov, who's been plagued by some sort of groin pain for the better part
> > of 15 years. "The first surgery I had there was 3 months of unnecessary
> > waiting. Now I feel 100 percent normal. This is a no-brainer. I was
ready
> > to come back even earlier. We just didn't have a game."
> >
> > Muschaweck hopes it's just a matter of time before other American
athletes
> > follow the trail blazed by the soccer players.
> >
> > But she needs another guinea pig, another Leitch who is willing to
become
> > the first American non-soccer player to take the leap. It's a tough
sell.
> > In this country soccer still doesn't get the respect it does in Europe
and
> > so the natural skepticism of the surgery is only heightened by the fact
> > that Muschaweck's wall of honor doesn't include an NFL or NBA or MLB
face
> > (though it does include hockey's Dominik Hasek).
> >
> > "If it were someone like David Beckham, I think that would help,"
> > Baldinger says.
> >
> > How about a Donovan McNabb?
> >
> > "After the first successful American soccer players, I'm seeing more and
> > more," she says. "Nobody believed this before. Now they believe."
> >
> > http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/sports/12938754.htm
> >
> >
>
>
> very interesting ...... thanks.
>
>
>
> --
> God Bless America
>
> Go Eagles
> 2004 NFC Champions
> 3 Time NFL World Champions
>
> keveagle
You DO NOT need to QUOTE THE WHOLE DAMN ARTICLE TO SAY "THANKS", JACKASS!
-m
.
- References:
- Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- From: racerx139
- Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- From: Buddude197
- Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- From: keveagle
- Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- From: Buddude197
- Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- From: Sheldon Brown 24
- Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- From: keveagle
- Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- Prev by Date: Re: Do you still feel the LINC is the most hostile homefield?
- Next by Date: Re: Halloween horrors
- Previous by thread: Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- Next by thread: Re: Michael Irvin Disses McNabb
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|
Loading