2nd Tommy John surgery linked to pitcher performance decline

Orthopedic Sports Medicine

Researchers at Henry Ford Hospital found among MLB pitchers who underwent a second Tommy John surgery, their performance declined and their careers became shorter, reports Medicalxpress.com.

Researchers analyzed data and performance surrounding 33 pitchers who fit the criteria between 1996 and 2012 and compared them to pitchers who never received the surgery. Only 65 percent of pitchers with two surgeries returned to the professional level, averaged three years or less at that level and saw the amount of innings they pitched dropped to nearly half. They also saw their win-loss record dropped in half, reports Medicalxpress.com

"It's possible that increased surveillance of pitch counts, a lesser pitching role or a lack of arm endurance after a second surgery may be contributing factor in performance and pitching workload," said Vasilios (Bill) Moutzouros, MD, a Henry Ford orthopedic surgeon and the study's senior author to Medicalxpress.com.

Read more on sports medicine...
PinnacleHealth adds new sports medicine facility
Dr. David Tietze joins USMD
Can concussions hurt a pro's batting average?

Copyright © 2024 Becker's Healthcare. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy. Linking and Reprinting Policy.

 

Featured Webinars

Featured Whitepapers

Most Read - Sports Medicine