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Micah's Injury Explained by a Doctor...

Discussion in 'Nuttin but Net' started by GatorPlanet, Mar 18, 2024.

  1. GatorPlanet

    GatorPlanet GC Hall of Fame

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    This is a really good analysis of this type of injury:
     
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  2. GatorPlanet

    GatorPlanet GC Hall of Fame

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    And yeah, this was a big blow to the team. Two minutes in and Micah already had two rebounds and was in the process of grabbing his third.
    Speedy and full recovery, big fella!
     
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  3. SJB612

    SJB612 GC Hall of Fame

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    Yeah, it looked like he really came to play yesterday. Just terrible luck for him.
     
  4. gatordavisl

    gatordavisl VIP Member

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    Don't wanna click the vid. Any Cliff's notes? Was it confirmed to be a compound fracture and what was the surgical procedure?
     
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  5. grant1

    grant1 GC Hall of Fame

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    agreed, did they say how long rehab typically takesa?
     
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  6. antny1

    antny1 GC Hall of Fame

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    If it's the same video I ran across he doesn't show the injury
     
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  7. paidinfull

    paidinfull GC Hall of Fame

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    It doesn’t show the actual injury, just explains it. Safe to watch, even for the queasy.

    *will add, this guy is just explaining what he thinks happened. He’s not Micah’s dr, and doesn’t have access to his medical records. I thought it was informative and interesting, none the less.
     
    Last edited: Mar 18, 2024
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  8. ThePlayer

    ThePlayer VIP Member

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    It was a 'low-frequency open tibia fracture' caused by Micha's body rotation rather than direct downward force.
    The procedure included putting a rod through the tibia for stabilization.
     
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  9. exiledgator

    exiledgator Gruntled

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    I went through a similarly displaced fracture of my fibula a few years ago. Same thing as here - non-contact, low impact, pivoting fracture. I have a 7" plate on my fib and that healed up relatively quickly and entirely.

    The ligament and tendon damage that I also incurred took much longer to heal. That said - I sustained the injury in February, I was in my mid-to-late-40s, I was playing again in October.

    TIFWIW. which is nothing.
     
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  10. GatorPlanet

    GatorPlanet GC Hall of Fame

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    Don't worry, the doc only shows the vid right up to a split-second before the break. He made a point of that. But he uses the video to show why this occurs.
     
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  11. audiogatorjim

    audiogatorjim GC Hall of Fame

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    I saw this last night. If there are no issues from infection, skin issues, and/or collateral tissue/muscular problems, the predicted outcome is good. The recovery period, depending on a reasonable healing process, can be from 3 - 6 months.
     
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  12. gatordavisl

    gatordavisl VIP Member

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    That's great news, thanks. Per recent tweets, it sounds like the procedure went off w/o a hitch. Maybe that means no early signs of infection. :emoji_fingers_crossed:
     
  13. GatorPlanet

    GatorPlanet GC Hall of Fame

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  14. ApexNC

    ApexNC GC Hall of Fame

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    So happy he’ll be with the team in Indy!
     
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  15. tampajack1

    tampajack1 Premium Member

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    Seems like he won't be playing on Friday.
     
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  16. unclerob

    unclerob Junior

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    If there is no infection or torn ligaments, 6 weeks of non weight bearing, then maybe 3 months to get to 85-90% preinjury. Sometimes they remove the hardware afterwards. I had a similar injury (non compound) and still have the plate and screws 19 years later.
     
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  17. GatorPlanet

    GatorPlanet GC Hall of Fame

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    I saw somewhere that it takes 3 to 6 months. Then I saw somewhere else 8 to 10 months. I like the first estimate better.
    Even if he can't participate in active drills for a few months, he could probably spend a lot of time working on free throws and maybe developing some left hand low-post shots. His left leg is the injured one, so left-hand layups would be working off the healthy right leg. Plus he can build his upper body in the weight room.