kharis87 steroids wearing off, he realizes he can’t race against Father Time without being publicized even more for taking steroids due to how bad his surrounding team used to be, now he doesn’t have to take steroids since he is in la although he will still be super athletic but only for a couple more years but will still be unstoppable
JermondC. WilliamsJr. Stop comparing yourself to lebron just because y’all both black 😂 he’s a freak of nature as are other athletes who come in all sorts of ethnicities...
Love watching these videos. Helps me understand other medical terms and explain things to others that they may not understand. Also helps me understand why an athlete is out or in a lot of pain or things along those lines. Keep up the videos!
when i was younger i was desperate to see this sort of information about NBA injuries, but there would be a few brief articles mentioning an injury and no serious technical details. i know that many fans are getting a great deal out of these vids
Excellent video. I am from Argentina and suffered always increasing pain on my heeL for near ten years. It all started after an ankle sprain and a bad recovery. Associated problems were back pain, sciatica, calf pain, popliteal fossa pain. Had surgery two weeks ago, removing Haglunds deformity, cleaning a calcified Achilles tendon, partially cutting the calf muscles at their origin to relax them (they were shortened) and removing a retrocalcaneal spur (below the tendon insertion point)
I had this surgery in June 2017, so little over 1.5 years ago. I have been a marathon runner since 2003. It was a problem that started for me in 2011, but in summer 2016 in got much worse. I tried conservative treatment for almost a year and then had the surgery in June 2017. I was jogging 3 months after surgery. I am now back to running 50 miles/week, and trying to qualify for the Boston marathon. The heel feels almost 100%. I would highly recommend this surgery for people who have this problem if it dose not get better with conservative treatment.
Would be kind of boring, its an achilles tear, thats all. Players like john wall, dwight howard, markelle fultz and etc. Those are the more interesting ones
This is so awesome! I’m a freshman pre-med major, and all through high school, sports were my focal point. These videos bring my two passions together and it’s so awesome!!
Bro I actually have this on my heels to so that makes this video even more entertaining to watch and learn about. Great content love your channel keep it up
I think you doing these videos on sports injuries is a great idea, and you have great charisma, and a solid way of explaining things so that it really is understandable to the common person! I think it could help improve your videos if towards the end you could relate what you’ve explained to the specific circumstances/instance of the players’ injury, like break down the actual footage of the injury occurring, or showing possible supporting evidence of gradual injuries/or bad form. As they are your videos start talking about a specific player and their injury, then speak to the medical side of things without really talking much more on the player side of things. Just a some possible constructive feedback that you didn’t ask for :) You have a new fan/sub anyways man and I’ll be watching all your future stuff!
Keep on up what your'e doing man! These videos are very educational and interesting, the way you translate complicated medical talk to lay man's terms is phenomenal.
You should do Boogie and Achilles injuries, but you should wait until he comes back so you can get the crazy views from that headline. I'm pumped for whatever you got, man. :) Going over CP3 or DRose would be solid. Or just Thibs and his odd...correlation with injuries for his star players.
@@BrianSuttererMD true! I just would love to see your opinion on the connections between his three major career ending injuries. Cause Westbrook avoided that by changing up his running form and etc.
Another great video. I always learn something new. Ive been subscribed for a little over a month and every video you make gets slightly better each time. Keep up the great work man.
I think I have that. On both heels. Yes, I play basketball. The pain goes away when my feet are active. I alleviate the pain by warming up first with stretches and light work out then I continue with actual activity. However, as soon as I cool down or rest for thirty minutes or so, I start limping and hurting on either foot. Same goes when waking up in the morning. I'm going to consult my doctor on this on July. I don't know if my insurance covers me on this situation.
Can you do a kyrie Irving broken knee cap that happened a couple years ago in the NBA finals... I broke my knee cap November 31st and had surgery on December 1st when I was going up for a dunk after practice and my tendon pulled the bottom of my knee cap so I’m missing my whole freshman year...
Crazy Jay thx lil bro I’m doing rehab 2 times a week just got done with my 2nd session and I’m raising and walking with no crutches this injury happens to less than 2% of sports injuries
I have a Haglund deformity on my right foot. Sometimes it flares up and I limp around for a few days. Most of the time it doesn't bother me too much. I'm considering the surgery, but I've heard that the recovery is long, and the docs have to detach your Achilles tendon.
@@thsht1677 Mine sticks out father than any I have seen on RU-vid. When mine isn't hurting it's fine, and I can walk. I'm in my late 50s so walking is about the only aerobic activity I can still do. My wife and I walk three miles about four times a week, unless my Hagland's flares up.
@@thsht1677 I think mine is getting worse (bone is growing). I have an 11:30 appointment tomorrow to see a podiatrist to see if surgery is needed. My guess is that it does need surgery. I'll let you know what I find out.
Thank you. I’m currently a month into recovering from my second bone spur removal and Achilles debridement. It took about a year for full recovery on the first one but i can tell I’m way ahead of that schedule this time.
@@robertwoodifse it’s 3 weeks no weight bearing. Then 3 weeks walking in a boot. So you’re walking about 6-7 weeks after surgery. I’m 14 months out now and finally back to pretty much normal. Find a good physical therapist that will do resistance training with you. I didn’t this time and it set me back a few months I think. Im 51. I play and Coach soccer so I’m very active. I’ve been playing through the pain for about 4 months and it’s finally almost gone. Stay ahead with your pain meds and take laxatives!
I really love these videos! U do a great job explaining everything making it easy to understand. A future suggestion would be doing an achilles tear like what happened to Kobe and Boogie. Keep up the great work!
super unique channel and it’s awesome to be subscribed being an avid nba fan myself. i was born with calcaneonavicular coalition so some of these terms actually make sense to me since i had 3 surgeries for it 🤣
Could u do Andrew lucks shoulder injury and why it took so long for him to return to the field. I’m a huge colts fan and would it interesting to hear from a pro rather than pundits thanks
can u do one where u explain an injury of an athlete, but ur doing it in an enclosed space with a dangerous animal? im tryna learn, but im also tryna feel a rush.
Could you cover David Busst's leg injury back in the 90's? It's the worst football/soccer injury I can think off and it's pretty grumsome but I've never heard much about it so I'd be intrested to know more! Thanks!
Hi Doc Brian, Love your videos! could you do injury analysis of famous tennis players please? Such as Andy Murray, Rafael Nadal, Sloane Stephens, etc. Thanks a lot!
Not basketball related, but stillsurprised a lot of fans. How about Ronnie Coleman's back injury? Videos of him not being able to walk was scary as hell!
You did not go over the specifics of the surgery. What's done? Is the bone shaved down? What are the implications? Downtime? Recovery? Can he be the same player?