Anonymous wrote:So he's had a concussion at 5, 10 and 15. What kind of parent is ok with this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just catching up on replies. Concussions are not due to the sport. They are over the course of his lifetime and at least five years apart each.
He has his first concussion at age 5???
Anonymous wrote: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.
You suck as a parent.
It is not "extreme"
How do you not know this answer?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just catching up on replies. Concussions are not due to the sport. They are over the course of his lifetime and at least five years apart each.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is playing rugby and we have a 1 severe or 2 mild then out agreement.
Get him out now.
Anonymous wrote:DCUM is very risk averse.
I have participated in a risky sport (equestrian) since I was 8. I love it and it is a huge part of my life.
I have had many concussions, including two fairly severe TBIs.
For an unrelated reason, I have had several MRIs in the last year. My brain still looks good in every respect except the benign, asymptomatic brain tumor I have that is completely unrelated to concussions.
During this time I talked with several top neurologists and neurosurgeons about my concussion history, and they said that CTE is not so much likely when you have a few large concussive events as when you have repeated smaller impacts, often not even diagnosable. The cited football and headers in soccer as strong risks, and my 4-5 bad accidents as a much lesser risk.
These people claiming they stop at one are misled.
Dont come to DCUM for risk advice. I rode my horse this morning!
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Well, I mean track & field or swimming would be great.
You can bang your head swimming colliding with a swimmer coming the other way or miscounting your backstroke strokes into the wall.
Have 4 swimmers. Concussion exceedingly uncommon.
It can and does happen, hence the protocols.
https://www.jackrabbitclass.com/blog/swimming-and-concussions/
Michael Phelps banged heads with another swimmer during warms up at a meet I think I recall.
It's less likely that the OP's son will become a synchro swimmer but there's this...
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/02/sports/olympics/artistic-synchronized-swimming-concussions.html
Concussions occur in waterpolo and diving too.