FSU quarterback faces shoulder repair surgery
November 10th, 2009 by Jennifer Walker-Journey
Things were looking promising for Florida State University quarterback Christian Ponder, until last Saturday, when he separated his right shoulder making a tackle after throwing his fourth interception against Clemson. He now faces surgery to repair a Grade 3 AC separation, which will bench him for the rest of the season.
Shoulder injuries are not uncommon among athletes. Hard and repetitive throwing motions like those needed for football and baseball leave many players with shoulder problems, many of which require surgery. While a full recovery is usually possible, some patients’ injuries were worsened by shoulder surgery.
The phenomenon even confused doctors who performed the shoulder repair surgeries. They were finding a growing number of patients months or years after surgery were back in their offices complaining of pain, stiffness and loss of motion. Upon further inspection, doctors found those patients had developed a condition known as chondrolysis, caused by the breakdown of cartilage. As the cartilage wears away, bone begins to rub against bone causing even more pain and damage.
What doctors finally deduced was that it wasn’t the surgery that was causing this specific type of chondrolysis known as postarthroscopic glenohumeral chondrolysis (PAGCL), but the pain pump used during and after surgery. The pain pumps are devices that have a balloon filled with pain-deadening medication. That medication is fed directly into the wound site through a catheter for up to 72 hours.
The pumps were approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) with the catheter placed in the shoulder tissue. But pain pump manufacturers began telling doctors to place the catheters in the shoulder joint, which allowed the joint space to be bathed in medication. What doctors didn’t realize is that constant drip of medication into the shoulder joint was slowly eating away at the cartilage, resulting in chondrolysis.
Since this discovery, published in a recent issue of The American Journal of Sports Medicine, patients who have suffered serious disability from the wrongful use of pain pumps have sued the manufacturers of pain pumps. If you are experiencing the symptoms associated with chondrolysis or PAGCL, you too may have a claim against the manufacturer.
Source: St. Petersburg Times
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