Kids' Injuries:
Having too much fun

Little League is in full swing or the football field is filled. Or It's high season for basketball, soccer or tennis. At the local pool, teenagers race against the sweeping hands of a trainer's stopwatch. Organized sports may seem an ideal way to keep youngsters occupied and in shape, but in excess, they are to blame for what some experts are calling an epidemic of overuse injuries.

"These injuries have become more common in the last 10 to 15 years," says Michael Ehrlich, MD, chief of orthopedics at Rhode Island and The Miriam hospitals. "It's a result of the organized, high intensity sports for kids."

Children, says Ehrlich, are playing sports too many hours a day, too many days a week and too many months per year. "At sports camps, the kids play for eight to 10 hours a day. The development of formalized leagues has resulted in coaches making children undergo long practices. Towns of all sizes now have indoor hockey rinks where kids can play all year long."

Matthew McCrossan of North Kingstown was one of those kids. "He had a fire burning inside him," says his mother, Patricia. "He's always been an athlete, from the time he was a little boy."

Matthew played soccer, basketball, baseball, and football-and by the time he was in eighth grade, his passion for sports had caught up with him. "He started having problems playing soccer," his mother says. "Dr. Ehrlich found a hairline fracture in one of his knees and said, 'No sports,' but that didn't sit very well with my son."

Matthew cut the soccer season short, but when basketball season arrived, he joined a team. Eventually, he found himself in such pain he was unable to run the length of the court. For eight weeks, he wore a cast that stretched from hip to ankle, but it didn't stop him. A year later, freshman football proved irresistible and he ended up with a cast on the other leg.

How does it happen?

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