Anonymous wrote:Looks like my DD may have this in one of her knees (made the varsity soccer team and has been training hard/most days for the past six weeks). Pain when she plays (hard) in a game; relatively okay if not training hard/lots of running at practice. Goes away after the game for the most part (but twinges on stairs sometimes).
Will see a doctor soon, but in the meantime would like to hear others' experience with this. Is better practice to stop playing until pain free? Play through the pain? Worried about this becoming a chronic condition. TIA!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Senior year is late for this for a girl. Are you sure this is what it is?
Shindig-Larsen-Johansson syndrome and Osgoods happen during growth spurts.
But, yes, over-training with high school + club is brutal. My son missed his entire Junior year with a hip/groin thing
She is a freshman (14) - but starts/plays the whole game. Or at least was until the patellar tendinitis!
Anonymous wrote:Senior year is late for this for a girl. Are you sure this is what it is?
Shindig-Larsen-Johansson syndrome and Osgoods happen during growth spurts.
But, yes, over-training with high school + club is brutal. My son missed his entire Junior year with a hip/groin thing
Anonymous wrote:Senior year is late for this for a girl. Are you sure this is what it is?
Shindig-Larsen-Johansson syndrome and Osgoods happen during growth spurts.
But, yes, over-training with high school + club is brutal. My son missed his entire Junior year with a hip/groin thing
Anonymous wrote:Looks like my DD may have this in one of her knees (made the varsity soccer team and has been training hard/most days for the past six weeks). Pain when she plays (hard) in a game; relatively okay if not training hard/lots of running at practice. Goes away after the game for the most part (but twinges on stairs sometimes).
Will see a doctor soon, but in the meantime would like to hear others' experience with this. Is better practice to stop playing until pain free? Play through the pain? Worried about this becoming a chronic condition. TIA!