During the Super Bowl XLIII pregame show, Andrea Kremer reported on the sidelines that Hines Ward was doing everything he possibly could to make sure he could play. Although his hyperbaric oxygen chamber was a well-known component of his recovery, Kremer also reported on a medical procedure known as ACP - Autologous Conditioned Plasma.The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette has an article about the procedure as it relates to Ward.
According to the P-G's description, the therapy involves taking blood from out of the patient, centrifuging it, and re-injecting the afflicted area with platelets from the centrifuged blood. Apparently, this helps the injury to heal faster.
Because the therapy only involves the use of the patient's own blood and does not use any sort of drug, it is not barred by the NFL for usage. The doctor interviewed in the P-G article said that he has performed the procedure on Major League Baseball players as well to help them heal their injuries.
This procedure in no way enhances the performance of the athlete...it simply makes their injury heal faster. Which makes me wonder, since it worked for Ward, how much more common will this procedure be?
There seems to be little doubt that this procedure helped Hines Ward be ready in time for the Super Bowl. The type of injury he suffered was nearly identical to one that sidelined team-mate Willie Parker for five weeks this year, and yet Ward was ready to play in the Super Bowl - and come up with two big catches and numerous big blocks - in a short two weeks.
If this worked so well for Ward, will we soon see other star players using this technique? If LeBron James pulls a hamstring, will we see it used to have him back sooner? Could this procedure make being a "fragile" player much less of a burden on a team? Will leagues eventually ban this procedure from being used, and if so, what possible justification could they have?
2 comments:
when i first heard her report during the game, the first thought through my head was "blood doping." obviously that isn't what this is. but it seems weird to me that this is different in the eyes of the sport from performance-enhancing drugs. it's sure as hell not natural. i guess it's just because it's all things from the player's own body.
i don't know, i just feel weird about it. though i guess it's not drastically different from a cortisone shot, or something like that.
Exactly. It isn't doping, because all things come from the person's own body. It's only un-natural in the sense that injecting centrifuged plasma is un-natural.
I personally find it very cool, and I think it will have a lot of positive affects on sports medicine. Imagine what kind of career AJ Burnett could have had if he'd done this a few times.
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