Latissimus Tears: The Newest Injury for Throwing Athletes (Part I)

Just when you thought rehabbing pitchers was hard enough, a new injury has emerged in the throwing population

With Spring Training underway, baseball is officially back!  As a fan, I am more than excited.  As a medical professional and a PT who spends a lot of time treating the baseball population, I know my schedule is about to ramp up.  As Posner, et al (2011) found, April is the month with the highest injury rates for MLB players, with pitchers having a 34% higher injury than position players.  One of the injuries we are seeing more often than in years past in our professional pitchers are latissimus injuries.  For a lot of reasons, we will discuss below, it seems that latissimus injuries are being diagnosed more frequently than they were in decades past.  It was not until 2010 that the first lat repair surgery was performed on a professional baseball player, when Jake Peavy went under the knife.  Since then, many of the game’s biggest stars, including Stephen Strasburg, Fernando Rodriguez, Clayton Kershaw, Noah Syndergaard, and Cardinals top prospect Alex Reyes have sustained lat injuries.  In a systematic review of 30 professional baseball pitchers, Mehdi, Frangiamore, & Schickendantz (2016) found that the average time required to return to pitching was 99.8 days for the non-operative group and 140 days for the surgically treated group. As you can see, once you sustain a lat injury, the recovery is slow.

Because so few PT’s in the traditional clinic setting treat professional athletes on a regular basis, we created a massive two part blog for our audience to serve as an additional resource to develop a better understanding of the injury and implications for pitchers.  We hope you will enjoy!

In Part I, we will review latissimus anatomy and it’s involvement with pitching, theories for the increase in lat injuries for professional pitchers, and a brief review of the surgery.

In Part II, we will discuss common compensations for “lat dominant” athletes and demonstrate a few of our favorite functional exercises that specifically focus on addressing the common compensation patterns.

Anatomy

lat picture

The latissimus dorsi is the largest and most powerful muscle in our backs, originating from the T7-L5 vertebrae (basically our bra straps to our belt line), the thoracolumbar fascia, iliac crest, the bottom 3-4 ribs, and the inferior aspect of our scapula.  The lats then insert on the intertubercular groove of the humerus. THAT’S A LOT OF ATTACHMENTS, LEADING TO A LOT OF MOVEMENT INFLUENCES. To make matters more complicated, the lats have a lot of variability in respect to its specific attachment sites.

The general functions of the lats include extension, adduction, cross body adduction, and internal rotation of the shoulder.  For many recreational lifters, the lats become the dominant muscle with all vertical and horizontal pulling movements such as rows, pull ups, and pull downs.

How are the Lats involved with Throwing?

For baseball pitchers, the lats are one of the most important muscles in developing arm speed, and therefore, increasing throwing velocity.  As Eric Cressey (2016) has previously stated, the lat “connects the lower body to the upper body to allow for force transfer that ultimately leads to arm speed and ball velocity”. The lats have several very specific and important functions in the pitching motion, including the following:

throwing phases

  1. Initially, the lats work eccentrically during the cocking/lay back phase to control the shoulder external rotation occurring.
    1. When a muscle is working eccentrically, it is being lengthened under load. When a muscle is working concentrically, it is being shortened under load. For example, when you do a biceps curl, the curl portion of the movement is a concentric movement (shortening of biceps). As we slowly lower the weight, we are still using the biceps muscle eccentrically (lengthening of the biceps).
  2. Next the lats transition from eccentrically lengthening (storing elastic potential energy) during the cocking/lay back phase to concentrically shortening (utilizing that stored energy to generate high arm speeds) during the arm acceleration phase.
  3. Finally the lats continue working concentrically as the arm accelerates during throwing to release, acting as one of the major force generators during this phase. According to Fleisig, Andrews, Dillman, & Escamilla (1995), the throwing arm accelerates at over 7000 degrees per second, which is the fastest recorded human motion in sports (3).

The further the lay back phase, the mowagner.jpgre the elastic potential energy created by the lats, thereby providing more opportunities for increased velocity.  If you look at the picture below of Billy Wagner, one of the hardest throwing pitchers in the history of the game, you can appreciate the considerable amount of layback in his throwing shoulder, and it quickly makes sense how he became of the games hardest throwers. He generated vast amounts of elastic potential energy via the lats.

If the idea of elastic potential energy is still confusing, then check out this short video below which provides additional information.

What Does all that Energy Talk Mean Injury Wise?

Muscles and tendons, throughout the body, are most vulnerable to injury during the eccentric phase of movement (being lengthened).  When you add large loads to the eccentric phase, as seen when throwing a baseball, and then ask the muscle-tendon complex to transition from being maximally lengthened to concentrically contracted at high speeds , we are asking for trouble. As you can see, the demands on the lats are very high during the throwing phase.

To provide a better visualization of what happens when you overload a muscle/tendon during the eccentric phase, check out this video below (beware of language).  At the 30 second mark, you will see a lady (wearing the ironic “Today is the Day” shirt) take a quick step back with her left leg, leading to an eccentric stretch to the Achilles, followed by an attempt to quickly concentrically contract and shorten her Achilles. Unfortunately for her, she overloads the tissue, rupturing her Achilles (if you don’t mind the language, you can literally hear the pop happen).

Why the Increase in Lat Injuries?

Clearly, pitching places a lot of demands and stresses on the body, particularly the lats, but the question remains, why such sudden increases in lat specific injury risk?  The answer appears to be multi-factorial.  Below, I have listed some of the probable causes.

    1. Pitchers are throwing harder: From 2008-2017 the average 4-seam fastball increased from 90.9 mph to 93.2 mph. Additionally, in 2008, there were only 196 pitches thrown 100+ mph in the league for the entire season.  In 2017, there were over 1,000 pitches thrown 100+ mph for the league (Clair, 2018).  As throwing velocity increases, so do the stresses placed on the entire body as whole; furthermore, Gowan, et al (1987) showed that professional pitchers (harder throwers) have a much higher lat recruitment during the arm acceleration phase than amateurs.  Simply put, velocity is rising, and as velocity rises, so do the stresses placed on the lats.
    2. Pitching Year Around: Year around throwing is the root of all evil. At OSSPT, we tell our pitchers that the risks of year around throwing are analogous to the risks of smoking. Similar to how smoking is the top risk factor for many health conditions, year around throwing is the top risk factor for almost all throwing injuries.  As amateur pitchers constantly jump from school ball to travel ball, and then indoor lessons, they never allow their body to take a break, resulting in excessive cumulative stresses placed on the lats, and body as a whole.  Also, we know that as we throw throughout the year, our body undergoes some specific changes which further increase lat injury risk.  For example, we know that throughout the season, pitchers have a significant decrease in shoulder internal rotation, total motion, and elbow extension (Reinold, et al, 2008).  Also, Zeppieri et al (2015) showed that collegiate pitchers lose hip ROM and strength throughout the throwing season.  Besides simply reducing the amount of cumulative stresses placed on the body, we also must take time off from throwing to receive adequate rehab to regain strength and motion losses prior to the next season.
    3. The American Sports Medicine Institute has released throwing guidelines and recommends no overhead throwing of any kind for a minimum of 2-3 months per year(http://www.asmi.org)
      • Weighted Ball Programs: Because pitchers and performance coaches are constantly searching for ways to increase velocities, weighted balls have become the newest trend in baseball. Based on the literature from Reinold et al. (2018), a 6 week weighted ball throwing program led to a 3.3% increase in throwing velocity. A velocity jump like that could be the difference between AA ball or the majors.  All good news right? Not quite, Reinold et al. (2018) showed that the weighted ball group had a 4.3° degrees increase in external rotation, meaning more lay back, which may explain the velocity jump, but it also means increased eccentric loading for the lats as well. Not surprisingly, in the study, the weighted ball group also had a 24% injury rate, while the control group had no injuries during the 6 weeks period.  Although the usage of weighted balls appears to have some performance benefits, we are still uncertain of how to safely implement these throwing programs in regards to how often, how heavy should the weighted balls be, what ages are most appropriate, etc. Because of all the uncertainties surrounding weighted balls, we strongly recommend that you proceed cautiously when attempting a weighted ball program.
      • Lat Dominance/Faulty Training: We will discuss this in much more detail in Part II, along with providing some of the exercises we utilize to retrain our lat dominant throwing athletes.
Surgery

While most lat injuries are Grade I or II strains (partial tears), occasionally a throwing athlete will sustain a tear large enough that requires surgical intervention.  Dr. Anthony Romeo performed the first lat repair surgery on a MLB player and has become the pioneer of the lat repair surgery.  According to Dr. Romeo’s website,

“The latissimus dorsi repair is done by making an incision in the back of arm, near the armpit. The ruptured tendon is then located, and sutures are placed in the end of the torn tendon. Those sutures are then used to pull the tendon back up to the arm bone where the tendon ruptured. Small metallic anchors, called buttons, are then used to fix the tendon to the bone.” (https://www.romeoorthopaedics.com/surgeries/latissimus-dorsi-repair).

In the picture below, you can see OSSPT patient and San Francisco Giants prospect Caleb Simpson’s incision following his lat repair surgery.IMG_1797

To check out Part II, click here.

References

Clair, M. (2018, August 29). Are pitchers really throwing harder than ever? Retrieved from https://www.mlb.com/cut4/are-pitchers-really-throwing-harder-than-ever/c-292153594

Cressey, E. (2016, May 4). Pitching injuries: should lat strains even be happening? Retrieved from https://ericcressey.com/pitching-injuries-lat-strains

Cressey, E. (2018, July 9). 5 reasons for the increase in lat strains in baseball pitchers. Retrieved from https://ericcressey.com/5-reasons-lat-strains-baseball-pitchers

Fleisig, G. S., Andrews, J. R., Dillman, C. J., & Escamilla, R. F. (1995). Kinetics of baseball pitching with implications about injury mechanisms. The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 23(2), 233–239. https://doi.org/10.1177/036354659502300218

Gowan, I. D., Jobe, F. W., Tibone, J. E., Perry, J., & Moynes D. R. (1987). A Comparative Electromyographic Analysis of the Shoulder During Pitching. Professionals versus Amateur Pitchers. The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 15(6), 586-590.

Mehdi, S.K., Frangiamore, S.J., & Schickendantz, M.S. (2016). Latissimus dorsi and teres major injuries in major league baseball pitchers: a systematic review. American journal of orthopedics, 45(3), 163-167 .

Posner, M., Cameron, K., Wolf, J., Belmont, P.,  & Owens, B. (2011). Epidemiology of major league baseball injuries. The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 39(8), 1676-1680.

Reinold, M.M., Macrina, L. C., Fleisig, G. S., Aune, K., & Andrews, J. R. (2018). Effect of a 6-week weighted baseball throwing program on pitch velocity, pitching arm biomechanics, passive range of motion, and injury rates. Sports Health, 10(4), 327-333.

Reinold, M.M., Wilk, K.E., Macrina, L.C., Sheheane, C., Dun, S., Fleisig, G.S., Crenshaw, K., & Andrews, J.R. (2008). Changes in shoulder elbow passive range of motion after pitching in professional baseball players. American Journal of Sports Medicine, 36(3), 523-527.

Zeppieri, G., Lentz, T., Moser, M., & Farmer, K. (2015). Changes in hip range of motion and strength in collegiate baseball pitchers over the course of a competitive season: A pilot study. International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy. 10, 505-513.

https://www.physio-pedia.com/Throwing_Biomechanics (picture)

Enjoy The Tiger Woods Show While You Can, Because it May Be Over Sooner Than You Think

Tiger’s golf game may be peaking, but his movement suggests the end may be near

Tiger Woods

Unless you were on another planet this weekend, you could not have missed the Tiger Woods show in full effect.  It felt like a throwback to Tiger’s earlier years, with crowd sizes already in the thousands from the first tee box and growing with every hole and the eruptions getting louder with every made birdie putt, everything in the golf world felt right.  After seven top 12 finishes in 14 starts and a 2nd place finish this weekend at the PGA Championship, the buzz around the sports media world and general public has been unanimous… he is officially back.  On the newest issue of Golf magazine, the headline simply states “This tiger is for real”.

tiger magazine coverI myself am an admitted Tiger Woods fanboy.  You would be hard pressed to find someone else who follows Tiger Woods more closely than I do.  The idea of him hoisting another major championship trophy gives me butterflies.  I started playing the game of golf because of Tiger.  As my friends and family can attest, I am a Nike loyalist because of Tiger.  I even started buying Bridgestone golf balls this year because of Tiger.  With all that being said, I am truly worried about Tiger and it has nothing to do with his golf career or whether he ever wins again.  What I am ultimately worried about is his health in everyday life.  I am worried that if someone does not get Tiger basic functional movement patterns corrected soon that it could be the last straw for not only his career, but could permanently alter his day to day life for the worse.

Tiger has already undergone an L5-S1 fusion approximately 1 year ago to help alleviate his pain and shooting symptoms into his legs.  The reason for his fusion is simple: he lacked the ability to control his spine at that L5-S1 segment leading to excessive shear on the vertebrae and disc, leading to breakdown and nerve damage.  Because Tiger could not stabilize that joint effectively on his own, the solution is to provide artificial stability via the surgical procedure.  To be clear, the disc breakdown was not the problem, it was the symptom.  No different than if we have a hole in the roof and every time it rains, it ruins the carpet on the floor.  The carpet getting ruined is not the problem; it is a symptom of having a hole in the roof.  No sane person would ever recommend just replacing the carpet after every rainstorm.  They would quickly identify the hole in the roof and fix that before ever replacing the carpet.  Tiger’s actual underlying problem was the inability to control the spine; therefore, if Tiger, or anyone else who undergoes spinal surgery, does not learn to control the spine postoperatively, then it’s only a matter of time before they break down again.  The only difference is that the next time they break down, it most likely won’t be at the fused segment; but rather, it will be at a segment above or below the previous surgery.  Want proof?  In a 2018 study looking into reoperation rates following spinal fusion, researchers found that over 12% of patients required a reoperation within 2 years of the initial surgery, and almost 20% required reoperations within 4 years of initial surgery.  The number one reason why they required re-operation was adjacent segment pathology, meaning the segment above or below the surgical site breakdown (1).

The common misconception is that a fusion can and/or will fix all your pain and complaints.  As we stated above, a spinal fusion treats the symptoms, NOT the underlying movement dysfunctions that led to needing the surgery in the first place.  To better understand, we will use the example of a patient experiencing a heart attack.  When excessive blockage of blood flow to the heart happens, it can trigger a heart attack.  When this happens, a cardiothoracic surgeon will often perform angioplasties by inserting balloons and/or stents to open up the restricted blood vessels, or may perform a bypass procedure whereby blood flow is redirected from blocked vessels to healthy vessels.  Even though the surgery was necessary, the cardiothoracic surgeon realizes that a combination of factors led to the patient needing the surgery and will attempt to address all those factors post-operatively to ensure the patient is better, including diet, weight loss, stress, sleep, exercise, smoking, etc.  The cardiothoracic surgeon does not perform the heart procedure and then just give the patient a pat on the back and send them on their way.  Too often, post-surgical spinal patients believe that the spinal surgery fixed the underlying problem and that they now just need to let time take place for healing.  Furthermore, over half (55%) of surgeons do not send their patients to physical therapy following spinal surgery (2).  I was shocked when I first read this statistic because we work with so many great spine specialists on a regular basis that appreciate what we can offer patients, but it made me realize that even with all the spine patients we treat postoperatively, that there is another half of the population who are never referred to physical therapy postoperatively.

So back to Tiger and why I am so concerned… As I mentioned previously, Tiger revealed a significant movement dysfunction this weekend.  So what movement dysfunction am I talking about?

After Tiger completed his round and walked off the course, he began climbing stairs on the walkway. While stepping up, Tiger displayed a major asymmetry when climbing the steps. As you can see in the picture and video (starting at the 21 second mark) below,.

Tiger Comparison

Tiger displays a major asymmetry in posture when standing on one leg and lifting the other up to the next step. On the left picture, Tiger is standing on his right leg only and lifting his left leg up toward the next step. He does an excellent job of stabilizing his R leg while in single leg stance, he keeps his spine neutral and unloaded, and keeps his pelvis in line. This movement will lead to a happy and healthy back. For the picture on the right side, he is now standing on his L leg while lifting his R right toward the next step. In this picture, Tiger displays the classic lumbar extension rotation movement impairment syndrome, with his spine rotating and falling into excessive extension (look at the difference in shirt wrinkles on the left verses nothing on the right) resulting his buttocks falling out to the right, all resulting in excessive compression and shearing on the lower lumbar spine.

Asymmetries as massive as the one displayed above is a major issue and something we seek to identify and correct in all our patients. How can we expect our high level athletes to move correctly during a high velocity movement such as a golf swing, if they cannot simply stand on one leg while flexing the other hip and be incapable of maintaining a stable spine position?  The answer is simple, we cannot and should not. One might think I am over exaggerating the seriousness of matter, but the reality is that for most people repeated small abnormal stresses, known as repetitive microtrauma, are placed on the body leading to breakdown, not singular traumatic events.  Even for Tiger, he did not damage his spine from a car wreck, fall, or one traumatic swing.  His low back has been breaking down for years due to the accumulative effects of repetitive microtrauma from not only his swing, but also the day-to-day movement dysfunctions while walking, climbing stairs, squatting, lunging, etc.  Because his L5-S1 are now fused together and he has still not corrected the underlying movement dysfunction that led to his initial breakdown, the next time he gets injured it will either be at the hips (below segment) or at the L4-L5 region. The irony of the situation is that the way he moves off the golf course may play a bigger role in his future breakdown than how he moves on the course itself. World renowned physical therapist, Shirley Sahrmann, says it so simply “we must undo in our day to day life what the sport does to us.” Every sport has very different demands. With golf, the biggest demand is rotation. The problem is not that Tiger is rotating while playing golf; the problem is that he continues to rotate through his spine through all his other day to day movements, thereby putting fuel on a fire, instead of undoing those faulty movements.

To be clear, I am not critiquing any of Tiger’s current or previous medical providers. We have no idea what has been discussed or attempted with Tiger. Based on multiple reports, Tiger has been known to be stubborn and it’s very possible, his health providers have attempted to fix these movement dysfunctions, and Tiger might see the fixes as unimportant and unnecessary.  What I can tell you is that no one can move with those flaws and expect to stay healthy long term, much less the game of golf’s greatest player ever who has a history of knee issues, 4 previous spinal surgeries, and a swing speed over 125+ mph. The good news is it’s never too late to improve movement quality. For the millions of Tiger fans and more importantly, for Tiger himself, I hope he addresses these issues sooner rather than later, so he can not only keep playing the game he loves, but also enjoy his life with his children down the road.

References

  1. Irmola, TM, Häkkinen, A, Järvenpää, S, et al. Reoperation rates following instrumented lumbar spine fusion. Spine. 2018; 43:4. Doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000002291
  2. McGregor AH, Dicken B, Jamrozik K. National audit of post-operative management in spinal surgery. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders. 2006;7:47. doi:10.1186/1471-2474-7-47.

 

Our Profession Owes You an Apology

When an individual has a heart related condition, they see a cardiologist… When an individual has a skin related condition, they see a dermatologist… When an individual has a cancer related condition, they see an oncologist.

In every area of our lives we search for the experts, why should physical therapy be any different?

The quality of care we have come to expect from the physical therapy profession has become so low that the assumption is that all physical therapy is the same; however, this could not be further from the truth. When a physical therapist graduates from school, in a sense, they become a “jack of all trades”. They have a very broad knowledge base making them novices in all aspects of physical therapy including orthopedics, pediatrics, acute care rehab, neurological, spine,  sports rehabilitation, etc; similar to how graduates of medical school have developed a foundation of cardiology, neurology, immunology, etc. The major difference between medical school and physical therapy school, is that for the majority of physical therapists, the structured training ends after PT school, unlike medical school graduates who then advance to a multiyear residency program focused on a singular specialty, often followed by fellowship training to further specialize.

As any orthopedic surgeon would agree, not until the residency and/or fellowship programs do they become confident in providing the quality of care necessary to make measurable improvements for their patients.

“I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times.”

– Bruce Lee

Why don’t more physical therapists undergo additional training?

The unfortunate, but honest answer is that it’s not required and patients aren’t demanding that their physicians refer them to the experts. Most patients do not search for the best physical therapy clinic to attend and often go wherever the doctor recommends. Unfortunately, many of these referral decisions are based on location, personal relationships, or financial ties with that clinic. Furthermore, Less than 10% of physical therapists have completed a post graduate residency program and less than 2% of physical therapists have completed a manual therapy fellowship program, so the public often does not even know these residency and fellowship programs exist.

Does this mean that you can not be a good quality PT without completing a residency or fellowship program? 

Definitely not. I know quite a few good PT’s who have not completed residency and fellowship training, but I know for a fact that  these same PT’s would love to  complete a residency program if the costs were not so high, the time demands were not so much,  if their employers were more supportive, and if insurance reimbursement was paid based on results.

How is OSSPT any different?

First, every one of our therapists has completed fully accredited advanced orthopedic and/or sports residency programs. Also, our physical therapists have completed or are actively completing a manual therapy fellowship program to further improve his/her skills. Additionally, our company is independently owned by the same physical therapists treating you in the clinic with no outside influence by any hospitals, medical groups, or corporations, so patients can take a lot of confidence in knowing that the only reason physicians recommend us is based on the quality of care we provide and our excellent results. Finally, we are such strong advocates of residency and fellowship training that we cover the entire cost to complete the programs for all new physical therapy employees.

Moving forward, I challenge you, the patients, to demand more from us. Do your homework and seek a higher level of physical therapy care. We spend hours debating the best restaurants to eat, searching the internet for the best shopping deals, and researching the best physicians and surgeons, then blindly go to the nearest physical therapy clinic to our home/work without thinking twice. Ask friends for recommendations, ask your physician if they have any financial ties to the clinic they are referring, drive the extra 5 minutes to receive a superior level of care, understand you have a right to choose where you want to attend physical therapy.

If you have the choice of a superior level of care, for the same price, with the same therapist each visit, why not choose OSSPT? If you have more questions or would like to specifically discuss your case please reach out to me personally at Jeff@OSSPT.com or call us at 405.735.8777 to schedule an evaluation.