Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's now widely accepted in the medical field that having one concussion makes you more prone to having more, and that sub-concussive hits (which require less impact) are also problematic. In other words, a pediatrician would absolutely know this and I wouldn't discount a pediatrician's advice simply because they aren't a neurologist.
I would.
Anonymous wrote:As an analogy, I know someone who had to quit basketball because they found a hole in his heart. He was going to play college ball. OP would you agree with the advice to stop? How is your son’s BRAIN, which controls everything, any different?
Running golf tennis steer him towards sports he can participate in for the rest of his life
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The music doesn't sound dreadful but the "golf for socializing" does.
I used to bicycle and have had two concussions from bike crashes. I still ride horses, although I've had at least one concussion from that. I've switched horse sports from eventing to dressage and trails.
The OP has obviously had more, and more severe, concussions than I.
Music plus track and field, or trail running, would be my choice for my kid.
This is such a DCUM post.
I had 2 biking concussion, plus at least one horse back riding concussion (2 + 1 = 3)
I didn't stop riding horses.
The OP (whose kid has 3 concussions) has obviously had more (because 3 is more than 3?) so they should do the opposite of what I do.
Anonymous wrote:The music doesn't sound dreadful but the "golf for socializing" does.
I used to bicycle and have had two concussions from bike crashes. I still ride horses, although I've had at least one concussion from that. I've switched horse sports from eventing to dressage and trails.
The OP has obviously had more, and more severe, concussions than I.
Music plus track and field, or trail running, would be my choice for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:It's now widely accepted in the medical field that having one concussion makes you more prone to having more, and that sub-concussive hits (which require less impact) are also problematic. In other words, a pediatrician would absolutely know this and I wouldn't discount a pediatrician's advice simply because they aren't a neurologist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't be taking this kind of drastic advice from a pediatrician. Get a specialist if need be.
No one needs a pediatrician to tell you that 3 concussions is a lot and a risky sport could potentially cause more.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't be taking this kind of drastic advice from a pediatrician. Get a specialist if need be.
Anonymous wrote:My child is 15 and has had three concussions in his lifetime. The latest was this sports season. The pediatrician is telling him to quit sports. That seems extreme. They are not extreme concussions. Is this standard practice? The sport is lacrosse.