Implication of Back and Core Issues of the Disabled Athlete
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Transcript Implication of Back and Core Issues of the Disabled Athlete
Implication of Back and
Core Issues of the Disabled
Athlete
Mary L Donahue, MEd, ATC, PT
Henry Ford Health System
William Clay Ford – Center for Athletic Medicine
Detroit, MI
Sports for the Disabled Athletes
Participation in sports is based on the disability or diagnosis in
these general categories:
Amputations
Blind or Visually Impaired
Cerebral Palsy
Deaf or Hearing impaired
Intelligently Impaired
Spinal Cord Injuries
Les Autres – “The Others” Those who do not fit in the above
categories.
Competition
Athletes compete in the local,
regional, national and
international levels
Paralympics Games are the
pinnacle of sports for disabled
athlete and are recognized by
the USOC
Deaf athletes compete in the
Deaflympics
Intelligently Impaired athletes
compete in the Special
Olympics
Deaflympics
The first organized international
disabled sport competition was held
in 1924 in Paris for athletes with
hearing impairment or deafness
Longest reigning international games
outside the Olympics
4000 athletes and officials from 77
countries competed in Taipei during
the summer games
600 athletes and officials were at the
winter games in Salt Lake City, 2007
Special Olympics
Special Olympics were founded in 1968 by
Eunice Shriver and were for athletes with
Intellectual Disabilities
The first International games were held in
1977 in Colorado and are held every 2
years alternation summer and winter
games
2500 athletes from 100 countries
competed in the 2009 winter games and
7500 from 165 countries complete in the
2007 summer games
Sport for the Physical Disabled Athlete
Sir Ludwig Guttmann the “Father”
of Disabled Sports
Instituted sports as a component of
rehab of spinal cord injured service
men/women in 1944
Sir Guttmann felt sport participation
was as important for the patients as
learning proper skin/bladder care.
First competition for disabled
athletes was held in 1948
Athletes with Physical Disabilities
Archery was the first sport, followed by track
Swimming, track and field were soon added as
well as wheelchair basketball
The Early “Olympics for the Paralyzed”
The Paralympics
Held in 1960 in Rome with
400 athletes from 23
countries and were the
precursor of the
Paralympics games
Paralympics are from the
word Para in Greek
meaning “attached to” the
Olympic
The first “Paralympic Games
were held in Japan in 1964
Paralympics were held in most of the same
countries as the Olympics between 1960 – 1984
Seoul was the first Olympic host city which was
also the host city for the Paralympics.
Since 1988 a host city must submit a bid to host
both the Olympic and Paralympic Games
The Beijing games hosted 3951 athletes from 146
countries
The opening ceremonies of the Vancouver games
is March 12 - today
Paralympic Athletes are those with
the following disabilities/diagnoses
Amputations
Les Autres (the others)
Traumatic
Disease
Muscular Dystrophy
Multiple Sclerosis
Ehler’s Danlos Syndrome
Arthrogryposis
Blindness/Visual
impairment
Cerebral Palsy
Dwarfism
Friedreich's ataxia
Osteogenesis Imperfecta
Spinal Cord Injuries
Traumatic
Disease
Spina Bifida
The Athletes are represented by
these organizations in the USA
Classification System
Designed to equalize competition
By Disability
Spinal Cord: based on
motor innervations
Amputation: based on
level of limb loss
Blind: based on level of
vision loss or total
blindness
Cerebral Palsy: most
complicated, based on
presentation , type of CP
and involvement
Classification System
Designed to equalize competition
Based on Function
Athletic competition is
classified within a sport to
create an situation where
those with similar level of
disabilities are matched
There are several different
sport specific classification
systems
Summer Paralympic Sports
Archery
Athletics
Boccia
Cycling
Equestrian
Football 5-a-side
Football 7-a -side
Goalball
Judo
Powerlifting
Rowing
Sailing Shooting
Swimming
Table Tennis
Volleyball Sitting
Wheelchair Basketball
Wheelchair Dance Sport
Wheelchair Rugby
Wheelchair Tennis
Paralympic Winter sports
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Alpine Skiing
Biathlon
Cross Country Skiing
Ice Sledge Hockey
Wheelchair Curling
Injuries by Disability Group
Blind Athletes
More prone to lower
extremity injuries
Injuries occur from
normal sport activities,
but also from a lack of
proprioception
Goalball injuries are to
shoulder and head
Injuries by Disability Group
Wheelchair Athletes
Majority of injuries are
to the upper extremity
Prone to overuse injuries
due
Secondary problems due
to disability
Autonomic Dysreflexia
Thermoregulatory
Skin breakdowns
Osteoporosis/osteopenia
Injuries by Disability Group
Amputee Athletes
Lower limb strains and sprains
Low back pain
Injuries to the intact limb
Injures to the amputated limb
due to osteopenia/osteoporosis
Injuries by Disability Group
Cerebral Palsy Athlete
Injuries to the knees
and shoulder are the
most common
Patellofemoral
syndrome frequently
occurs with
ambulatory athletes
Injuries by Disability Group
Special Olympic Athlete
Congenital problems with
Atlanto-axial joint and
cardiac malformation
Hypermobility of joints
General deconditioning
Case Presentation
• Amputee track athlete
• Blind Athlete
Case Presentation
• Wheelchair Athlete
• Cerebral Palsy Athlete
Bibliography
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