Sports Medicine

Helping You from Injury to Recovery and Beyond

When an injury takes you away from the activities you enjoy, Saint Vincent Hospital’s sports medicine specialists can get you back in the game. Our comprehensive Sports Medicine program is ready to help you get the treatment you need to return to the activities you enjoy.

Treatment That Fits

Whether you’re a professional athlete, a student getting ready for a tournament or an avid weekend warrior, our comprehensive sports medicine program can be tailored to meet your individual goals. Taking care of an injured athlete is more than applying a brace and advising rest. Your recovery requires the skilled hands-on evaluation and appropriate diagnostic testing to determine an overall plan of care.

Some common conditions we treat include:

  • ACL injuries 
  • Ankle sprains
  • Fractures
  • Knee and shoulder injuries
  • Tendonitis
  • Exercise-induced asthma
  • Concussions
  • Cartilage injuries

Connected with Our Community

In addition to our dedication to keeping you active and healthy, our clinical team is actively involved in educating local athletes, coaches and parents about injury prevention and recognition. By providing programs to the community that teach proper strength building, flexibility, conditioning, endurance and training techniques, we can help minimize the risk of injury.

Concussion Management

Our Concussion Management team is comprised of specialists who provide education about prevention and provide assessment and treatment post-concussion. We also administer pre- and post-concussion ImPact testing and will develop multidisciplinary care plans for post-concussion management.

Find an Orthopedic Specialist

Request one of our specialists to get a second opinion, or a really good first one.

More Information

Six Ways You’re Making Knee Pain Worse

While it may seem like knee pain is an inevitable fact of aging, you may be able to avoid it. 

In fact, you may be doing some things unintentionally that are causing your knee pain, or making the aches and twinges you already have worse. 

Do any of these sound familiar?

You’re overweight. Your knee joints are your shock absorbers and stabilizers. The more weight you carry, the more pressure on your knees. You don’t need to reach your so-called ideal weight to feel a difference; every pound you lose reduces the strain on your knees.

You don’t warm up or cool down properly when you exercise. Be sure to ease into workouts by starting slowly to give muscles a chance to warm up, and stretch adequately afterward, particularly the muscles in your legs. Flexibility is one important key to good knee health.

You jog or walk downhill a lot, or on hard surfaces. When you go downhill (or down stairs), you put more pressure on your knee joints. You can’t always avoid it, of course, but if you’re mapping out a walking or jogging route, you’re better off on gently sloping or flat surfaces. And speaking of surfaces, skip hard cement and pavement in favor of something with a little bit of bounce or give, like a running track or trail.

You wear ill-fitting shoes. Good arch support is important to help absorb some of the pressure your knees normally take. If you have flat feet, consider inserts for your shoes. (If you have arthritis, ask your doctor about special inserts specifically for you.) And avoid flip-flops and other very flat shoes with no support.

You don’t allow enough recovery time. Did you strain your knee playing tennis or some other sport? Most minor knee injuries will heal on their own with rest. (Try the RICE method: rest, ice, compression, elevation.) If you continue to exercise or play a sport when you have an injury, you’re more likely to make your pain worse and risk a more serious injury.

You’re resting too much. While you don’t want to, say, sign up for a 10K race when your knees hurt, avoiding movement altogether is also bad. The less you move, the weaker your muscles become. The weaker your muscles, the more work your joints have to do. With your doctor’s approval, find an activity that doesn’t aggravate knee pain, such as cycling, swimming, tai chi or walking.

Talk with your doctor for more information and treatment options for knee pain.