Skip to main content

Youth Baseball Can Lead to Overuse Injuries: What Parents Need to Know

Medically reviewed by Carmen Pope, BPharm. Last updated on March 13, 2024.

By Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, March 13, 2024 -- Baseball season is near, and one orthopedic surgeon is warning young players and their coaches and parents about the very real danger of overuse injuries.

Dr. Mark Cohen is a hand, wrist and elbow surgeon at Midwest Orthopaedics at RUSH, in Chicago. He's also an official team physician for the Chicago White Sox.

“I’m a huge baseball fan and have enjoyed treating professional and youth players for many years,” Cohen explained in a RUSH news release. “I love it when we can get a player back on the field. What concerns me is the rate at which Little Leaguers are experiencing big league conditions that may interfere with their body’s normal function as they grow.”

Some of these "big league conditions" include simple chronic arm pain, but also torn ulnar collateral ligaments (UCLs) in the elbow, Cohen explained.

UCLs often require extensive "Tommy John" surgeries -- named after the first major leaguer to get the surgery back in 1974.

According to one study of 261 youth and high school pitchers, published in 2023 in the Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, one in four suffered some kind of injury to their arm over the course of their career. The longer they pitched, the higher their risk for these injuries and the need for surgery, the study found.

“Ten years ago, Tommy John surgery was a treatment for Major League Baseball players,” Cohen said. “While my partners and I have been performing this surgery successfully on adults, I’m worried that the majority of patients are now under the of age 20. We are also seeing an increase in the prevalence of these elbow injuries in adolescents.”

Cohen blames the "epidemic" of baseball overuse injuries in the young to the increasing intensity of practice and play. Youth baseball often has players working year-round, and many concentrate on just the one sport.

Pitch counts (days of rest between pitching) are often unregulated, Cohen said, weighted balls are being used in pitching practice and there's strong pressure put on young players to increase their pitch velocity. All of that puts enormous strain on young throwing arms.

Taking the pressure off players

To help counter this, organizations like Major League Baseball (MLB) and USA Baseball initiated Pitch Smart. It urges that players ages 15 to 18 "take at least four months off from playing, including at least two to three continuous months off from any throwing," according to the RUSH news release.

But Cohen acknowledges the increasing popularity of off-season training programs can make that advice tough to follow.

Then there's efforts by Little League International, MLB and state high school associations to implement safe pitch counts. Cohen said that those guidelines are "subject to interpretation," however, so many teams might deviate from the rules, upping players' odds for an injury.

What to do?

Cohen offered up the following advice to parents of young pitchers:

SOURCE: Midwest Orthopaedics at RUSH, news release, March 12, 2024

Disclaimer: Statistical data in medical articles provide general trends and do not pertain to individuals. Individual factors can vary greatly. Always seek personalized medical advice for individual healthcare decisions.

© 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Read this next

The Pros & Cons of Robotic Knee Replacement Surgery

FRIDAY, May 10, 2024 -- Robot-assisted total knee replacements tend to have better outcomes on average, a new study reports. Unfortunately, there’s a downside &ndash...

Arthritis Can Often Follow ACL Surgeries in Young Adults

WEDNESDAY, April 10, 2024 -- Early-onset arthritis may hit as many as one in every four young people who undergo anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction surgeries, new...

You Can Safely Avoid Addictive Long-Acting Opioids After Knee Replacement

FRIDAY, March 8, 2024 -- It's well known that long-acting opioid meds raise the odds for addiction in users -- including folks dealing with pain after an orthopedic surgery. Now...

More news resources

Subscribe to our newsletter

Whatever your topic of interest, subscribe to our newsletters to get the best of Drugs.com in your inbox.