What being a professional athlete does to your spine
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- Опубликовано: 2 июл 2024
- In this video, Dr. Webb talks about what being a professional athlete does to your spine.
Check out these other videos about athletes and injuries:
Professional Sports Injuries and How Orthopedic Surgeons Fix them! • Professional Sports In...
To see Dr Webb as a patient, please contact:
Antonio J. Webb, MD
Orthopedic Spine Surgeon
South Texas Spinal Clinic
9150 Huebner Road Suite 290
San Antonio, Texas 78240
Office: 210-614-6432
Fax: 210-293-4171
www.spinaldoc.com
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"The spine is the back bone of every athletes success" .. heh
He is right on point so listen to him. 😮
Hi doctor Webb, how tall are you?
Hi Doctor, I would love to see you watch some DDP yoga videos and give your opinion / rudimentary explanation. It's a perfect example for using surgery as a last resort.
Interesting
Is it possible to be a pro golfer without destroying your L5/S1 disc and the rest of your spine?
Hi Dr Webb. I’m at active 58 years old male. Prostrate CA remission. Eat right, gym daily. My doc did H & P. XR T and C Spine. All good. But, osteopenia. Should I be concerned?
Get a dexa scan to be positive about osteopenia.
Present
Sweeeeeeeeeeet
*Promo SM* 😍
Could Ronnie Coleman have had conservative treatment for his spine and did he really need all those fusions? The screws came lose on some of his fusions when he turned over in bed.
Part of the problem with Ronnie's outcome is that he never let his body and spine recover from the surgery. It can take 6 months to a year and even longer for a fusion to fully heal. Ronnie has stated in interviews that he was back in the gym lifting massive weights within a few days of his surgery. And he has constantly done this after each of his surgeries. On top of that he was probably lifting more than what should ever be done after having spinal hardware installed.
this sounds chat gpt generated
1st comment
Dude, I know you must be busy, but this video, a "Spine Announcement" was weak. You needed pictures of the spine when it's healthy, or a 3D animation of what happens when the body experiences the extreme force of a football hit, or even just jumping up and down. C'mon now!
Great feedback! You should do a video on it! I’ll be waiting on it 😁