Olympics Could Call Out the Couch Potatoes
As the 2004 Summer Olympics officially
get underway Friday with an international broadcast of the opening
ceremonies, health experts expect the Athens games to inspire
couch potatoes to become more active.
But, experts caution, amateurs,
particularly sedentary ones, should not jump into a new sports
activity without sufficient preparation.
"These athletes make it look way
too easy," said Dr. Pietro Tonino, a Chicago-based orthopedic
surgeon. "And people need to understand that most of them have
been doing their sport since they were young."
Olympic athletes have been strengthening
their muscles and bones for years to be able to tolerate the abnormal
stresses that occur during the sport, and the body needs that
time to be able to adapt to such rigorous activity, Tonino said.
"It's very motivating, and it's
exciting that people are more interested in getting out and doing
something after watching the Olympics," he added. But, sedentary
people have to be realistic about taking on an athletic endeavor.
"It's most important that people
take a look at themselves, and make sure they're in good health,"
he said. "If you don't spend time conditioning yourself for a
new sport, you're going to be in my office very soon afterward."
And if it's any consolation, even
Olympic hopefuls can get hurt, no matter how good their training.
"Even our athletes aren't immune
from injuries," said Dr. Jeffrey Housner, team physician for the
University of Michigan and USA Hockey teams, who is a volunteer
doctor for the United States Olympic Committee. He spoke from
the U.S. Olympic training center in Colorado Springs where he
was spending two weeks treating injured athletes.
About 25 to 30 athletes come to
the clinic daily for treatment for a variety of injuries related
to their sport, Housner added. Swimmers tend to suffer from shoulder
injuries; volleyball and basketball players have problems with
the Achilles tendon, the knees or acute injuries to the ankle;
and gymnasts have wrist injuries.
Housner recommended that any recreational
athlete start slowly when starting a new activity or resuming
a sport.
"Start low and go slow is the famous
phrase," he said, suggesting that a person start a sport at a
minimum level and advance at no more than 10 percent each week.
Unfortunately, enthusiasm for new
beginnings means that many people ignore this maxim. But if they
do, they will pay for it down the road, he said.
Typically, Housner said, someone
in his late 30's jumps into an activity that he might have done
in college, such as running, but trains with the same intensity
he did when he was 20.
At first he's fine, Housner said,
"but a couple of months into training, you can pick a joint, and
he's developed a problem, because his body can no longer stand
the degree of training he's doing."
So instead of running in a marathon,
the would-be athlete finds himself limping into the doctor's office
with a stress fracture that will take several months to heal.
Housner strongly recommended that
anyone interested in being active first embark on a program that
builds strength and flexibility of their muscles, especially those
of the core.
Stretching is key for people resuming
activity after being sedentary, according to New York City fitness
trainer Renee Daniels, who specializes in medical exercise.
"If your muscles are tight, which
is usually the case, and you start to do all this new activity,
there's a good chance you're going to pull a muscle," she said.
"Stretching and strengthening all the major muscle groups, especially
the primary muscles used in the activity, is very important."
In 2003, more than 7 million sports
injuries were treated in U.S. hospital emergency rooms, doctors'
offices, clinics and ambulatory surgery centers, according to
a recent report from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Division.
Basketball injuries were the most
common, with more than 1.6 million injuries; followed by cycling
accidents (1.3 million); football (one million); soccer (456,000),
baseball (417,479), and swimming/diving (364,116).
More information
For more on muscle strains, check
out the University
of Michigan and our sports
injuries section.
Reference
Source 101
August 12, 2004
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