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Preparticipation Exam“Sports Physical” Crystal Sturgis, PA-C, MSPAS ThedaCare Orthopedic Care Financial Disclosures I do not have any financial relationships or interests to disclose with relation to any information provided in this talk WIAA Requirements A preparticipation physical fitness form attesting to current physical fitness to participate in sports as determined by a licensed physician, Physician Assistant (PA) or Advanced Practice Nurse Prescriber (APNP) no less than every other school year with April 1 the earliest date of examination (chiropractors are not accepted). Athletic Disqualifications There are two major considerations for restricting persons from participation in athletics: 1. Is there a disease or condition which prevents the individual from competing fairly with others? 2. Is there a disease or condition which might be aggravated by athletic competition? Both of these are relative and circumstances alter decisions. It is the examining provider’s responsibility to determine qualification or disqualification for athletic participation. Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Maturity • The state of maturity varies greatly in adolescents of the same age. Almost all boys/girls have reached the same stage of maturity by the junior year in high school, but many freshmen and some sophomores are not mature and should be withheld from competing with boys/girls who are. At earlier levels, seventh and eighth grades, it is important to identify the boy/girl who is mature and prevent him from injuring his classmates in athletic activities. Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Absence or Severe Disease of One of a Paired Organ • Most commonly involved organs are the kidneys, the eye and the testicles. • The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Academy of Family Practice and the American Medical Association all feel that if there is only one of a paired organ left, then collision and contact sports should be restricted. These athletes should be directed into the noncollision, noncontact sports. If they are to be allowed to participate, every safeguard must be taken to protect the uninjured paired organ that is left. • Ultimately, may be a legal decision Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Hernia and Hydrocele • Considered disqualifying until repaired. • Hydrocele is usually associated with a hernia. • The danger of hemorrhage into or around the hydrocele as the result of a blow is great. This can result in irreparable damage to the cord and the testicle. • Repair should be done as soon as possible. • Once repaired, the athlete can return to full competition. Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Head Injury • No athlete shall return to play or practice on the same day of being diagnosed with a concussion or rendered unconscious. • Any athlete suspected of having a concussion must be evaluated by an appropriate health-care professional that day. • Any athlete with a concussion must be medically cleared by an appropriate health-care professional prior to resuming participation in any practice or competition. Return to play must follow a step-wise protocol which includes provisions for delaying return to play based upon the return of any signs or symptoms. • Wisconsin state law requires concussion information sheets to be distributed and acknowledged for coaches, parents, and athletes before practice may be allowed. Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Orthopedic Conditions • Epiphyseal conditions (Osgood-Schlatter, Legg-Perthes, etc.) determined on case-by-case basis dependent on symptoms • Back pain- Any student who has persistent back pain should be x-rayed and closely evaluated for some congenital abnormality or early rheumatoid spondylitis. Spondylolysis and Scheuermann’s disease (osteochondrosis of the vertebra) are examples of causes of back pain that should be considered as possible temporary disqualification for contact/collision sports. • Other orthopedic conditions should be evaluated on basis of symptoms and severity Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Epilepsy and Diabetes • When under control are not necessarily causes for restriction from athletics Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Skin Diseases • At least temporary disqualification when infections- bacterial, viral or fungal- are present. • Herpes infections are extremely contagious, especially in wrestlers. The student with this infection should be restricted until the infection is controlled. Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Asthma and Other Respiratory Conditions • If controlled, not disqualifying. Appropriate consultations are recommended. Disqualifying conditions from Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's Medical Policies and Procedures • Disease of the Cardiovascular System • Area of uncertainty and controversy • Murmurs- not automatically disqualifying, but should have further workup. • Organic heart disease, especially rheumatic or congenital heart disease, may be a reason for disqualification . Those who have mitral stenosis or aortic stenosis may be seriously harmed by severe exertion. • Cardiac arrhythmia not associated with organic heart disease is not disqualifying • Hypertension should be evaluated by repeated examinations. It is not unusual to find high school athletes with elevated blood pressure on an emotional basis. If it remains elevated, further evaluation is necessary to rule out coarctation of aorta, unilateral kidney disease, or some other congenital abnormality. Sudden Cardiac Arrest/Death in Athletes • Annual incidence is 1 in 80,000 high school athletes and 1 in 50,000 college athletes • Most SCA/D events (50-61%) occur in males in football and basketball • 56-80% of SCA/D in athletes occurs during exercise, remainder nonexertional • Limited evidence that athletes have higher risk of SCA than general population of similar age Sudden Cardiac Arrest/Death in Athletes • Prevalence of cardiac conditions associated with SCA/D in athletes is approximately 0.3% • Most common causes of SCA/D: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, anomalous coronary arteries, idiopathic left ventricular hypertrophy, arrthymogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, long QT syndrome, WPW, aortic dissection, and CAD • Up to 44% of athletes with SCA/D have no structural cardiac abnormalities on autopsy • HCM prevalence in young athletic population is 1 in 800 to 1 in 2600, in general adult population is 1 in 500 History and PE for Cardiovascular Screening • Personal history of CV symptoms (i.e. exertional syncope) and/or family history of juvenile/young adult SCA/D or inheritable cardiac conditions • PE findings of HTN, pathologic murmur, physical stigmata of Marfan’s and other connective tissue disorders • Significant variance in providers’ diagnostic abilities • Only detects about 20% of cardiac disorders with elevated risk for SCA/D EKG for Cardiovascular Screening • Estimated 60% of cardiac disorders at risk for SCA/D have detectable EKG abnormalities • Risks: increased cost, false positives, false negative • Risk-stratified screening may provide more benefit- males, older age, African Americans, high risk sports, level of play • Current recommendation from American Medical Society for Sport Medicine: No conclusive evidence to make universal recommendation for or against addition of EKG during preparticipation evaluation Real Risks to Athletes • SCA/D incidence remains very rare- 35 of the 7 million adolescents in sports at risk • 15-18,000 annual adolescent deaths from automobile injuries, many involving alcohol/drugs • 6,000 annual young adult homicide victims • Suicide deaths over 5,000/year, with 50 to 200 attempts for every death • 1 million pregnancies per year among American women age 19 or younger • Up to 6 million cases annually of STIs in adolescents • Teenagers account for nearly 50% of reported cases of child abuse • Crucial for providers to address risk-taking behaviors and other age-appropriate preventative topics Sports Physical vs Well Child Exam • Goldberg et al surveyed over 700 high school athletes • For 78% of them, the sports physical was the only annual health assessment. • Best practice is to incorporate sports specific requirements into regular health maintenance visit • Multi-station screening sports physical not recommended – – – – Noisy Rushed Lack of privacy Minimal parental communication References 1. Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association Medical Procedures Guide https://www.wiaawi.org/Portals/0/PDF/Publications/medicalproceduresguide.pdf 2. Cavanaugh Jr. R, Miller M, Henneberger K. The Preparticipation Sports Physical: Are We Dropping the Ball? Pediatrics 1995; 96;1151 3. Drezner J et al, AMSSM Position Statement on Cardiovascular Preparticipation Screening in Athletes: Current Evidence, Knowledge Gaps, Recommendations and Future Directions. Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine September 2016; Vol. 26, Issue 5, p347-361 Thank you Crystal Sturgis, PA-C, MSPAS ThedaCare Orthopedic Care