Sports Health

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All athletes deserve the very best sports-related care and treatment that’s one-on-one and state-of-the-art. At Cleveland Clinic Sports Health, this involves conditioning to become stronger and faster, maximizing abilities, treating injuries if they do occur and improving future performance.

Cleveland Clinic Sports Health brings together top orthopaedic surgeons, primary care sports medicine physicians, physician assistants, physical therapists, athletic trainers, registered dietitians, radiologists and exercise physiologists to keep athletes in the game.

Our experts treat athletes in all sports, all ages and skill levels. As our patient, you have access to the same specialists who treat Cleveland’s professional sports teams and the orthopaedic program ranked #3 in the nation by U.S. News & World Report.

What is the Difference Between Primary Care Sports Medicine Physicians and Orthopaedic Surgeons?

Primary Care Sports Medicine Physicians specialize in the non-operative medical treatment of musculoskeletal sports conditions. Orthopedic surgeons are also trained in the operative treatment of these conditions. Approximately 90% of all sports injuries are non-surgical, and Sports Medicine Physicians can expedite referral to an orthopedic/sports surgeon when indicated, and can help guide referrals to appropriate rehabilitative care and ancillary services as needed. Common examples of musculoskeletal problems in sports include:

  • Acute injuries (such as ankle sprains, muscle strains, knee & shoulder injuries, and fractures)
  • Overuse injuries (such as tendonitis, stress fractures )
  • Mild traumatic brain injury and other head injuries
  • Athletes with chronic or acute illness (such as infectious mononucleosis, asthma or diabetes)
  • Nutrition, supplements, ergogenic aids and performance issues
  • Exercise prescription for patients who want to increase their fitness
  • Injury prevention
  • "Return to play" decisions in the sick or injured athlete
  • Strength training and conditioning
  • Healthy lifestyle promotion

Our Services

There’s a difference between an injury and a sports injury. That difference is you, the athlete. Cleveland Clinic Sports Health will help you get back into your game as safely and as quick as possible with specially designed comprehensive programs.

Injury Care & Management

Both our medical and surgical specialists use the latest diagnostic technology to evaluate an athlete’s injury and develop a specialized care plan to return you to your pre-injury performance as quickly as possible.

Primary Care Sports Medicine»

Athletes have special needs. Primary care sports medicine physicians specialize in the non-operative treatment of medical conditions you may face, including:

Integrative Sports Medicine»

After an injury, every athlete hopes to heal and get back to the game as quickly as possible. Our Sports Health team collaborates with experts from Cleveland Clinic’s Center for Integrative Medicine to provide services with a special focus on supporting the body’s natural abilities to heal after a sports-related injury or condition, using techniques such as:

Combined with standard treatments, integrative medicine techniques can help reduce chronic conditions that prevent top-level performance, speed recovery from acute injuries, and enhance and improve conditioning and strength.

Sport-specific Rehabilitation»

Proper early rehabilitation is essential for a swift recovery from injury. Our physical therapists, exercise physiologists, athletic trainers and strength and conditioning specialists collaborate to maximize care for each individual. Patients have access to advanced rehabilitation equipment and the latest in rehabilitation techniques. Our emphasis is on efficient transition from rehabilitation to peak athletic performance, and we pay special attention on educating patients to avoid re-injury.

Surgical Treatments»

Orthopaedic Surgery

About 90 percent of all sports injuries are treated nonsurgically. But when surgery is needed, our primary care sports physicians can provide easy access to our orthopaedic surgeons for help for both overuse or traumatic injuries, including:

  • Torn ligaments and tendons
  • Broken bones
  • Damaged cartilage
  • Arthritis and other degenerative conditions

Our surgeons use minimally invasive techniques (such as arthroscopic surgery) whenever possible to minimize pain, scarring and recovery time.

Performance Training Services»

Whether you're a competitive athlete or someone who wants increased fitness, we have Performance Training Services (PTS) to help.

Our professionally trained and credentialed Cleveland Clinic Sports Health staff works closely with you to meet your goals. With PTS, you receive training that is backed by evidence-based research to maximize results.

  • Personalized training plans to improve sports performance, focused on strength and conditioning, speed and agility or endurance building.
  • Nutritional guidance and/or meal plans
  • Fitness/performance assessments, metabolic testing
  • Performance strength and conditioning camps
  • Football strength and conditioning performance program design and consultation services for coaches

Specialty Programs

Sports Nutrition»

Optimal nutrition is important for maximizing your stamina and ability to perform. Our sports health nutritionists can help you stay healthy, avoid injury or accelerate your healing. Nutritional requirements vary by sport, so our nutritionists will work with you one-on-one to design a nutrition plan that helps you achieve you goals, including:

  • Improving your diet and hydration status to maximize your performance or workout
  • Assist with weight loss, muscle and weight gain
  • Prevention of bone loss and injuries
  • Playing your best with a chronic condition, such as diabetes or heart disease

Pediatric and Adolescent Sports Medicine and Orthopaedic Surgery»

Children aren’t just small adults; they need specialized care for any sports-related injuries or conditions.

Our dedicated team of sports medicine experts are specifically trained to provide comprehensive assessment and treatment for both nonsurgical and surgical issues in children, teens and young adults, including:

  • ACL tears
  • Shoulder instability
  • Joint cartilage problems, especially involving the knee and elbow
  • Throwing and overuse injuries
  • Concussions
  • Sport-specific rehabilitation

We also are actively involved in ongoing research with other U.S. children’s hospitals to improve understanding and treatment for various pediatric sports injuries.

Women’s Sports Health»

Female athletes sometimes face very different medical and athletic needs than their male counterparts. Recognizing this, we have assembled a team of physicians and rehabilitation specialists with experience caring for girls, adolescents and women. They strive to help them achieve optimal health and sports performance by providing expert guidance on:

  • Training, rehabilitation and injury prevention
  • Stress incontinence
  • Weight loss, amenorrhea and osteoporosis
  • Maintaining your sports routine during pregnancy and menopause

Our experts also are committed to researching the unique needs of female athletes to help improve tomorrow’s care.

Concussion Center»

Cleveland Clinic's Concussion Center, a collaborative effort between the Center for Sports Health and the Neurologic Institute, is dedicated to evaluating and managing athletes who have suffered a concussion.

Our team is made up of primary care sports medicine physicians, neurologists, neurosurgeons, neuropsychologists, certified athletic trainers, vestibular therapists, radiologists, neuroophthalmologists and researchers, all dedicated to getting the athlete back to play safely.

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Results: 23 Doctors

 

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Thomas Anderson, MD
 

Thomas Anderson, MD

Anderson, Thomas, MD
(216) 518-3444

Location(s): Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Twinsburg Family Health & Surgery Center

Department: Orthopaedic Surgery

Specialties: ACL Injury, Acute Sports Injuries, Athletic Knee Injury, Biceps Tendon Injuries, Broken Bones, Collar Bone Injuries, Elbow Problems more

Treats: Both Adults and Children & Adolescents

Surgeon: Yes

Education: University of Iowa College of Medicine

 
Jack Andrish, MD
 

Jack Andrish, MD

Andrish, Jack, MD
(216) 518-3444

Location(s): Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Sports Health at the Jewish Community Center, Cleveland Clinic Main Campus

Department: Orthopaedic Surgery

Specialties: ACL Injury, Athletic Knee Injury, Internal Derangement of the Knee, Knee Cartilage Injury, Knee Injuries, Knee Joint Disorders, Knee Ligament Injuries more

Treats: Both Adults and Children & Adolescents

Surgeon: Yes

Education: University of Kansas School of Medicine

 
John Bergfeld, MD
 

John Bergfeld, MD

Bergfeld, John, MD
(216) 518-3444

Location(s): Strongsville Family Health Center, Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Cleveland Clinic Main Campus

Department: Orthopaedic Surgery

Specialties: ACL Injury, Acute Low/Mechanical Back Pain, Ankle Injuries, Ankle Instability, Arthritis, Arthritis Of The Hip, Arthritis Of The Knee more

Treats: Adults Only

Surgeon: Yes

Education: Temple University School of Medicine

 
Alfred Cianflocco, MD
 

Alfred Cianflocco, MD

Cianflocco, Alfred, MD
(216) 692-7750

Location(s): Euclid Medical Office, Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Center, Cleveland Clinic Main Campus

Department: Orthopaedic Surgery

Specialties: Abdominal Strain, ACL Injury, Acute Low/Mechanical Back Pain, Acute Sports Injuries, Ankle Injuries, Ankle Instability, Arthritis more

Treats: Adults Only

Surgeon: No

Education: Wake Forest University Bowman Gray School of Medicine

 
Alan Davis, MD
 

Alan Davis, MD

Davis, Alan, MD
(440) 695-4000

Location(s): Richard E. Jacobs Health Center, Westlake Medical Campus Building A

Department: Orthopaedic Surgery

Specialties: Achilles Tendon Injury, ACL Injury, Acute Sports Injuries, Ankle Injuries, Ankle Instability, Arthritis of the Foot and Ankle, Athletic Knee Injury more

Treats: Both Adults and Children & Adolescents

Surgeon: Yes

Education: Wright State University School of Medicine

 
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Appointments

To schedule an appointment with a sports health physician, please call toll-free 877.440.TEAM (8326) from 7 a.m. – 11 p.m., everyday. Same-day appointments are available for urgent sports injuries.

Locations

Offering sports health and rehabilitation services and accessible care for the full range of sports injuries at 21 convenient locations throughout northeast Ohio.

Additional locations offering sports health, rehabilitation and sports therapy services:

Cleveland Clinic Florida

For more information about our Sports Health Services in Weston and West Palm Beach, Florida,
visit clevelandclinicflorida.org or call toll-free 877.463.2010

Cleveland Clinic Canada

For more information about our Sports Health Services in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, visit
clevelandclinic.ca or call toll-free 888.507.6885 .

Team and Event Medical Services

  • We provide team physicians and athletic trainers for professional sports teams, high schools and college athletics.
  • We offer educational opportunities for athletes, athletic trainers, physicians and coaches.
  • We provide medical care for both athletes and spectators at major sporting events.

Official Team Physicians for:

Professional Teams»

The Cleveland Browns

The Cleveland Cavaliers

The Cleveland Indians

The Cleveland Fusion

College Athletes»

Baldwin-Wallace College

Cleveland State University

John Carroll University

Notre Dame College (EPL)

Florida Atlantic University

Cuyahoga Community College
- West Campus

High School Athletes»

  • Aurora
  • Avon (AHL)
  • Avon Lake
  • Bay
  • Beachwood
  • Brecksville/Broadview Hts.
  • Brunswick
  • Brush
  • Buckeye
  • Chagrin Falls
  • Cloverleaf
  • Collinwood
  • Cuyahoga Hts.
  • Elyria Catholic
  • Fairview
  • Garfield Heights
  • Gilmour Academy
  • Glenville
  • Independence
  • Euclid
  • James F. Rhodes
  • John Adams
  • John F. Kennedy
  • John Hay
  • John Marshall
  • Kenston
  • Keystone
  • Lake Catholic
  • Lincoln West
  • Lorain Admiral King
  • Lutheran West
  • Magnificat
  • Maple Heights
  • Mayfield
  • Medina
  • Midview
  • Nordonia
  • North Olmstead
  • Orange
  • Padua
  • Lakewood
  • Richmond Heights
  • Rocky River
  • Shaker
  • St. Edward Shaker Heights
  • St. Edward
  • St. Joseph Academy
  • St. Peter-Chanel
  • Solon
  • Trinity
  • Vermilion
  • Villa Angela-St. Joseph
  • Warrensville Heights
  • Wellington
  • Westlake
  • Wickliffe

Event Coverage»

  • MAC Men's and Women's Basketball Tournament: each year since 2000
  • Partnership with Greater Cleveland Sports Commission
  • Cleveland Rite Aid Marathon – each year since 1976
  • Greater Cleveland Football Coaches Association East West Game
  • Cleveland Triathlon & Duathlon

We have also cared for the athletes from the following past events/teams:

  • Cleveland Ballet: From 1980-1995
  • Cleveland Clinic Sports Health River Run – each year since 2000
  • Cleveland Rockers: Team physicians from 1999-2003
  • Cuyahoga County East-West High School All-Star Football Game: 2003, 2004
  • Gravity Games: 2002, 2003
  • Hoop It Up: 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004
  • McDonald's All-American High School Basketball Games: 2003
  • National High School Wrestling Championships: 2002, 2003, 2004
  • US Figure Skating Championships: 2000
  • US Gymnastics Championships: 2002

Other Partners»

Greater Cleveland Sports Commission

Greater Cleveland Sports Commission

NEOPGA

North Coast Multisports

Rush For A Cause

USCA

Cleveland Marathon, Cleveland Triathlon, Academy Volleyball Cleveland, Cleveland Coaches Association, Mid-American Conference


We also see athletes from leagues and organizations around the world: Alpine Ontario, American Hockey League (AHL), Canadian National Ski Academy, English Premier League (EPL), NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, MLB, MLS, PBA, Spanish Premier League, USA Boxing, USA Hockey, US Olympic Team, and WNBA

Cleveland Clinic Sports Health offers various seminars and clinics including courses for physicians, physical therapists and athletic trainers, student athletic trainer camps and coaches clinics. Below are the upcoming courses and events that Cleveland Clinic Sports Health is currently offering:

PAV Clinics»

2013 Sports Health Pupil Activity Validation (PAV) Coaches' Clinics

Cleveland Clinic Sports Health is hosting Pupil Activity Validation courses for coaches of youth programs at the elementary, middle and high school level and recreation leagues. Parent coaches are not required to have Pupil Activity Validation, but encouraged to attend.

Coaches will learn the proper way to address life threatening and non-life threatening injuries or health concerns basic injury management and prevention strategies. The clinics will also cover a variety of other health and safety topics that can arise when supervising and working with student athletes.

Course Curriculum:
  • Recognize the signs of common injuries/health concerns, including: environmental safety, life threatening and non-life threatening injuries and health concerns
  • Emergency Planning
  • R.I.C.E Method
PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED. Space is limited.

Register Now

Registration Fee:

All Classes are $20 per coach. Payment will be collected at the door during check-in, cash or check accepted. Check-in begins 30 minutes prior to the start time of class.

Cleveland Clinic Sports Health is an approved provider of the Ohio Department of Education Pupil Activity Programs.

These clinics fulfill the Ohio Department of Education (ODE) and Ohio High School Athletic Association requirements for Pupil Activity Validation.

Clinic Dates, Times and Locations:

Date: July 29, 2013
Location: Fairview Rec Center 21225 Lorain Road, Fairview Park, OH 44126
Check-in: 8:30 a.m.
Class times: 9:00 a.m.- 11:00 a.m.

Register Now

Date: July 29, 2013
Location: Sports Health Center 5555 Transportation Blvd, Garfield Heights, OH, 44125
Check-in: 4:30 p.m.
Class times: 5:00 p.m.- 7:00 p.m.

Register Now

Health Talks»

Baseball Pitching Informational Series

Monthly baseball talks on proper function, mechanics, and techniques, providing the pitcher with knowledge to improve performance.

Upcoming Talks

Where: T3 Performance, 1200 Chester Industrial Parkway, Avon, Ohio 44011

April The Biomechanics of Velocity - Instructor, Rich Ozmun, DPT
May Managing Year-Round Throwers
June Throwing, Exercise and Nutrition

Want to learn more about a specific sports health topic?

Email your suggestions to sports-health@ccf.org.

Interested in having a Cleveland Clinic Sports Health expert join your next coaches, team or parent meeting?

Contact sports-health@ccf.org. Please include the date, time, topics of interest, and number of expected attendees.

For more information about our one-on-one training or group classes, call Performance Training Services at 866.702.0518.

Web Chats»

Free Online Chats

You’re Invited…Free Live Web Chats. Bring your own questions to the web chat. This is your time to ask!

There are currently no sports-health web chats scheduled, but we are currently planning new chats. Stop back soon.

Missed a Sports Health Web Chat? Read the web chat transcript.

Concussions and Sports Injuries in School Aged Athletes
Online Health Chat with Paul Salaun, MD and Adam Lake, MEd, ATC, CSCS
September 19, 2012

Sports Concussion - Your Silent, Invisible Opponent
Online Health Chat with Richard Figler, MD and Robert Gray, MS, ATC
August 12, 2011

Preventing Hockey & Ski Injuries
Online Health Chat with Tony Miniaci, MD
December 11, 2009

Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Courage Award is an honor given annually by the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission in collaboration with Cleveland Clinic Sports Health at the Greater Cleveland Sports Awards banquet each January. It is awarded to a student athlete who has faced a medical challenge in his or her life and approached the situation with courage and determination to get back into the game.

2013 Courage Award

If you know a student athlete who has overcome a medical challenge in his or her life and would like to submit them for the 2013 Courage Award nominate them today.

Previous Courage Award Recipients

2012 Courage Award Recipient: Molly Miller, Notre Dame Academy, Soccer»

Molly Miller

Molly Miller

Cancer has been a part of Molly Miller’s life for as long as she can remember. Molly’s father, Phil, was first diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma when she was just three years old. But there is another constant in Molly’s life: sports. With two athletically-gifted older brothers, Molly was thrown into a competition-dominated world almost instantly. So much so that her older brothers would avoid competing against her, fearful of what would happen if Molly didn’t win.

Phil and his wife, Jane, taught Molly and her brothers to never feel sorry for themselves. Molly credits this lesson with helping her get through the pain of losing her father at the age of 11.

Nineteen months after Phil’s death, a lump in Molly’s axillary began to grow. The lump had been there for most of Molly’s life and Phil’s experience had taught Jane to check it often. When the mass became enlarged, a biopsy was performed and Dr. Steve Lietman, Director of the Cleveland Clinic Orthopaedic Musculoskeletal Tumor Center, delivered some difficult news. Molly had a low grade fibromyxoid sarcoma – a rare form of cancer.

Despite being told that her treatment would not resemble her father’s and no chemotherapy was needed, Molly was still scared. She leaned on her strong relationships with her family to help calm some of her fears. An operation performed by Dr. Lietman removed the remaining portion of the tumor. Despite not needing chemotherapy, Molly had a long road ahead. In order for her surgical area to heal properly, Molly would not be able to play sports for the better part of a year. One constant in Molly’s life had removed the other.

Despite having sports taken from her, Molly remained upbeat, knowing her absence from the field was only temporary. Her competitive personality was stronger than ever, fueling her drive to make sports once again a constant in her life. After taking almost a year off, Molly returned to the soccer field and made the varsity team as a freshman at Notre Dame Academy.

According to Dr. Lietman, the cure rate for someone with Molly’s form of cancer is 80 percent. If the sarcoma does come back, it will resurface in her lungs. Each time Molly has a follow-up appointment, she must face the possibility of being told her cancer has returned.

Falling back on her parent’s lessons, Molly never felt sorry for herself. She approached her surgery and each follow-up appointment at the Cleveland Clinic with a positive and calm demeanor. Cancer has forever changed Molly’s life. Yet through the ups and downs, the tears and the smiles, Molly has faced each challenge with courage and determination.

It is this courageous and inspiring attitude that led the nurses, doctors and staff of the Cleveland Clinic to award Molly the Courage Award presented by Cleveland Clinic Sports Health at the 2012 Greater Cleveland Sports Awards on January 24 at the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel Grand Ballroom.

2011 Recipient: Brandee Kelly, Cleveland State University, Basketball»

Brandee Kelly

Brandee’s determination in overcoming lymphoma earned her the admiration of her teammates, coaches, family, friends and medical team at Cleveland Clinic and led to her receiving the 2011 Cleveland Clinic Courage Award. The award recognizes exceptional student athletes who face difficult medical challenges with courage and determination.

Cleveland State University’s Brandee Kelly thought the pain she felt in her lower back during the start of games in her first season might just be due to the grind of a Division I women’s basketball career.

Intense pain sent her to the emergency room where a battery of tests revealed abnormal growths in Brandee’s back, pelvis and leg. After seeing the images, head team physician, Susan Joy, MD, of Cleveland Clinic Sports Health, arranged a biopsy of Brandee’s pelvic bone and referral to an oncologist.

Cleveland Clinic oncologist Brad Pohlman, MD, shared with Brandee the news that the pain was being caused by the mass in her back, which was lymphoma, a type of blood cancer that affects cells of the immune system. In her case, it was found in her bone marrow, and it was spreading throughout her body.

Lymphoma found in young patients can be aggressive and deadly. Treatment would require an intensive regimen of chemotherapy, but there was hope for a full recovery. Brandee says at first she was devastated. She could not understand why a young, active woman would have cancer. But the somberness didn’t last long. The winning spirit that led Brandee to be valedictorian of Beaumont High in St. Louis and a prized recruit for the Vikings defined her cancer treatment.

Accompanied by family members and close friend Monica Daniels, Brandee began the first in a series of chemotherapy treatments that would span four months. Brandee battled through the side effects: intense nausea, vomiting, fatigue and hair loss. Each time she finally began to feel better, she would return to the clinic for another round of treatment.

She said she has always been a positive person. Her cancer experience was a test of that attitude, and she did not waver. Brandee missed only a few weeks of school; she even returned to take final exams and she passed them all.

For her final treatment, with her prognosis for beating cancer seemingly strong, Brandee’s Cleveland State teammates and coaches joined her as she rang the ceremonial bell at Taussig Cancer Institute. The bell gives notice to everyone in the building that a patient has completed a final treatment session. It also signaled to Vikings fans that a healthy, cancer-free Brandee would be returning to the floor for her sophomore season.

2010 Recipient: Olivia Warhop, Hathaway Brown School, Swimming and Soccer»

Olivia was 13 years old and living with her family in San Francisco when unexplained pain in her leg brought her to physicians who found a mass growing inside her tibia, the larger bone of the lower leg. The tumor was thought to be non-cancerous, and Olivia underwent surgery to remove it. She began her recovery as the Warhop family relocated to Cleveland that year. However when Olivia continued her care at Cleveland Clinic, she learned that the growth was cancerous, and could return.

She was diagnosed with an extremely rare cancer called myofibrosarcoma. Doctors across the country had seen few cases of the cancer which is almost always found in the soft tissue, instead of the bone.

Following the diagnosis, Olivia and her family gave careful consideration to this new finding. Olivia underwent reconstructive surgery with orthopaedic surgeon and cancer specialist Michael Joyce, MD and his team to remove and replace a portion of her tibia with a donor bone, plates and screws. The procedure was performed to eliminate the cancer, but would require an intensive rehabilitation program.

Olivia continues to recover from her operation and has undergone several follow-up procedures, including bone grafts from her hip.

She has persevered through the difficult diagnoses and multiple steps of treatment. She continues to remain active as much as possible, including swimming.

Her nurse, Jane Golden, RN nominated her for the 2010 Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Courage Award and said, "Despite many hospital and clinic visits, Olivia remained bright, friendly and very positive. She offered many well thought out questions and always responded to the answers with remarkable maturity."

Olivia plans to play soccer and join the swim team as she enters high school at Hathaway Brown School in Shaker Heights. Her Cleveland Clinic medical team wishes her the best!

2009 Recipient: Gyasi Cooper, Saint Ignatius High School, Track and Field»

Gyasi Cooper, 18, says he became a man the moment he decided he wasn’t going to let cancer beat him.

When he was 16, the St. Ignatius High School senior and track and field team member was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer. “On that day,” he remembers, “I thought my life was over.”

But his shock was short-lived. Cooper’s deep faith inspired him to fight the disease, and his family, friends and teammates cheered him on. And today, after losing his left leg to cancer and having to learn to walk again, Cooper is looking forward to graduating and studying computer engineering in college.

For his courage and winning determination, Gyasi Cooper was named the winner of the 2009 Cleveland Clinic Sports Health Courage Award.

The Setback

In July 2008, cortisone shots weren’t relieving the pain Cooper was feeling in his left heel after sprinting in the 100-, 200- and 400-yard dashes. Worried, his father took him to Cleveland Clinic for a thorough examination, which included an MRI. A biopsy later revealed a high-grade osteosarcoma in the heel.

Cooper had to undergo chemotherapy to shrink the tumor before it could be surgically removed. Due to the unfortunate location of the tumor, amputation was necessary below the knee. Steven Lietman, M.D., Director of Cleveland Clinic’s Musculoskeletal Tumor Center, performed the surgery.

Cooper went through many more chemotherapy sessions after the amputation. He developed temporary kidney failure and briefly went on dialysis. Several months after surgery, more of the limb had to be resected.

Despite these setbacks, the young man never lost hope: “Going through a situation like that really gives you an appreciation for life,” says Cooper.

Victory Lap

After missing a significant amount of school, he returned to classes full-time. Besides focusing on academics, Cooper worked hard on strengthening his hips and legs in physical therapy.

Chuck Kyle, St. Ignatius’ track coach, says Cooper’s teammates cheered him on, just as Cooper supported the track squad from the sidelines.

“Our guys liked to see him out there for us, and they took turns pushing him in his wheelchair to his classes,” says Kyle.

After spring break, Cooper returned to school — minus the wheelchair. He now walks to classes using a prosthetic leg and crutches. In physical therapy, he is learning how to use the new prosthesis so that he can forgo the crutches too.

“All of us find Gyasi a hero,” says coach Kyle. “He’s mature beyond his years.”

2008 Recipient: Eric Anderson Jr., Gilmour Academy, Basketball»

Born Athlete Overcomes Physical Challenges to Win 2009 Courage Award

The son of a University of Florida football player and sprinter, Eric Anderson Jr. always wanted to play sports. The fact that he was born without a fully developed left leg never got in his way. Over the years, he excelled at T-ball, baseball, basketball and football. He served as captain of his 8th-grade baseball team and is now a valued member of Gilmour Academy’s freshman basketball and baseball teams.

Eric’s determination earned him the admiration of his teammates, parents, coaches and medical team at Cleveland Clinic and led to his receiving the 2009 Cleveland Clinic Courage Award. The award recognizes exceptional student athletes who face difficult medical challenges with courage and determination.

A brave heart

“I had no doubt Eric would do well. Any child who could go through the significant surgical procedures that we put him through without a complaint was going to do well,” says Cleveland Clinic pediatric orthopaedic surgeon Alan Gurd, MD.

Dr. Gurd first examined Eric as a baby and told the family he could try to lengthen Eric’s shorter leg or amputate the lower portion of the leg and fit him with a prosthesis.

The Andersons opted for leg-lengthening. At age 5, Eric was fitted with an external device that allowed him to lengthen his tibia (shinbone) with the turn of a screw. Each turn was exquisitely painful.

Over the years, Cleveland Clinic prosthetists fitted Eric with multiple orthotic devices to support and align his foot and leg. However, Eric never gained good use of his foot. When he turned 10, Dr. Gurd recommended amputation.

Decision time

“The hardest decision that any parent can make is to agree with me to have part of the leg removed, because it can never be put back on again,” he says.

The Andersons discussed it as a family. “My dad told me, ‘Make a pro and con list,’” says Eric. “It just seemed like getting the amputation was so much better.”

His mom was surprised by the main motivation: “It was all about sports! ‘Am I going to be better?’ ‘Am I going to be faster?’ ‘Is this going to give me better mobility?’” she recalls.

Eric’s leg was removed below the knee. Two months later, a prosthesis was designed to fit over the end of Eric’s leg, the first of several that would be specially fabricated to meet the young athlete’s needs. When he outgrew the prosthesis, he was fit with a new design that allowed him to play basketball and accommodated the demands of various other sports. Eric also underwent physical therapy to improve his walking gait and to learn how to run and jump.

No stopping him now

Now nearly 15, Eric returns to Cleveland Clinic from time to time for adjustments to the prosthesis. However, he does not consider himself disabled, and neither does anyone else.

Gilmour basketball coach Kenneth Grant recalls that “when we first had our tryouts, an hour and a half went by before I realized Eric was wearing a prosthetic leg. I was in awe, because he did everything I asked him to do, at a higher level.”

Says Mrs. Anderson: “I’m overwhelmed by just his attitude, his courage, his impact on others. People tell us all the time what a role model he is. I guess we take it for granted, but I am so proud.”

Published April 2009

2007 Recipient: Jeff Mayer, Football, Case Western Reserve University»

He’s Got Courage: Much-Injured Athlete Beats the Odds to Make Football History

Jeff Mayer’s life turned upside down as he neared the end of rehab from two knee surgeries for football-related injuries. The Baldwin-Wallace College football player was feeling good and hoping to return to the gridiron soon. But while walking home one snowy night, he was involved in a hit-and-run car accident that left him with a broken pelvis, broken nose, dislocated shoulder and right knee, and other injuries. Mayer could have given up on football, and no one would have challenged his decision. Instead, he began setting small, realistic goals.

Down...

A standout athlete in Vermilion, Ohio, Mayer was being recruited to play college football – his ultimate dream. But during senior year, Mayer tore his left anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), and the letters and phone calls from colleges stopped coming. “I realized I could overcome the physical injury, but mentally, I was crushed,” he says. Still, Mayer didn’t quit. He worked his knee back to health and decided to attend Baldwin-Wallace, playing football on B-W’s freshman and junior varsity teams. The summer before his junior year, he expected to move up to varsity. But injury struck again. This time, Mayer tore his right ACL and meniscus during practice. Cleveland Clinic orthopaedic surgeon John Bergfeld, MD, the B-W team physician, repaired his knee.

...but not out

His second knee rehab was going well at the time of the hit-and-run accident. It negated all his progress to date. Mayer consulted Dr. Bergfeld, who brought in colleague Richard Parker, MD, an arthroscopic knee surgery specialist. “Our expertise lies in bringing a team of experts together who specialize in these complex procedures, which take lots of planning. The key was the timing of the surgery,” Dr. Parker says. The physicians waited nearly six months after the accident to reconstruct Mayer’s knee, so that his pelvis could heal. But Mayer began to realize there was a chance he could play football again. To keep his hand in the game, he coached his teammates, while spending about 18 months working with B-W physical therapists and certified athletic trainers to get back to 100 percent. “Jeff’s injuries were cumulative and severe,” Dr. Bergfeld recalls. “I was so impressed because he never gave up. ‘Can’t’ wasn’t in his vocabulary.”

The catch that ‘erased’ the past

Mayer, a mechanical engineering major with a 3.8 GPA, decided to transfer from B-W to Case Western Reserve University to complete his degree. During the transfer process, Mayer found out that he was eligible to play one more semester of college ball. It was the perfect season for Mayer to play at Case. The team earned its first-ever spot in the Division III playoffs. With 2 seconds remaining in the playoff game, he caught the game-winning touchdown as the clock ran down. Case won, 21-20. “That catch erased everything that had happened during the past few years,” Mayer says.

Courage recognized

In recognition of Mayer’s determination, he was awarded the Cleveland Clinic Courage Award at the Greater Cleveland Sports Awards in January. The honor is given annually to an athlete who displays courage beyond the boundaries of the playing field and who inspires others. Mayer was nominated by Dr. Bergfeld. “Any of the injuries Jeff sustained would have taken the average athlete out of competition,” he says. “In all my years of caring for amateur and professional athletes, I have never seen an athlete display Jeff’s courage despite all adversity, both on and off the field.” So what kept Mayer motivated? “You can’t control most of the things that happen to you. You can either sit on the sideline or turn a negative situation into something positive,” he says. “A positive attitude is what gets you through.”

2001 – 2006 Recipients»

2006 Recipient: Mariano Gannon, Rocky River High School, Football

2005 Recipient: Ahmad Motley, Shaker Heights High School, Football, Wrestling

2004 Recipient: Jamie Supan, Kenston High School, Basketball, Track & Field

2003 Recipient: Steven Steele, Black River High School, Football, Basketball

2002 Recipient: Aimee Dombrowski, Beaumont High School, Cross Country

2001 Recipient: Tony Franklin, St. Peter Chanel High School, Football

Competitive Edge

Competitive Edge is a free quarterly newsletter for athletes, coaches and parents of athletes, written by the staff of Cleveland Clinic Sports Health. Each quarter, topics related to injury prevention, strength and conditioning and nutrition are included along with health tips for athletes and coaches. See below for current and past issues of Competitive Edge.

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KidSports

Today's young athletes are more competitive than ever. From swimming to lacrosse to football, this publication will keep you informed of the latest health topics, concerns and trends.

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