Community Corner

Elmhurst Teen Gets Big Break

Hockey player sidelined after tibia fracture.

Riley Purpur, 14, was doing a little night sledding with his friends at Berens Park in Elmhurst Jan. 13  when he broke his ankle.

“I had just completed a run and was on my sled at the bottom of the hill when my friend, who was next in line to go down, crashed into me,” he said.

The freshman at York High School, who has played competitive hockey for a decade and who snowboards and skis, hobbled to the side to assess the damage.

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“It didn’t really hurt at first, and I didn’t think it was broken,” he said.

Broken bones due to snowboarding and sledding top the list of common causes for visits to the emergency room during the winter months.  According to the Centers for Disease Control, one quarter of all emergency room visits are attributed to snowboarding accidents, and half of all cases were broken bones and sprains.

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“Chicagoans embrace winter with gusto largely because of the great love for hockey, sledding and iceskating,” said Gottlieb Memorial Hospital orthopaedic surgeon Daryl O’Connor, who formerly cared for U.S. Olympic ski and winter sports athletes in Salt Lake City, Utah. O’Connor is board certified in orthopaedic surgery and now specializes in sports medicine in the Orthopaedic Department at Gottlieb, part of Loyola University Health System.

Deborah Purpur, Riley’s mother, kept an eye on her son’s ankle that night and, after a recommendation by a friend the next morning, took her son to the emergency room for an X-ray. Gottlieb's Dr. Jeffrey Meisles explained the break in the tibia and then casted Riley, she said.

“I chose green, my favorite color,” Riley said of the boot that also causes him to use crutches.

“Riley suffered a fracture in the tibia, which is the most common long-bone fracture, and  will likely heal without any problems,” said Meisles, an orthopedic specialist. “The tibia is a weight-bearing bone, and it is important that it heal correctly, so we will assess his progress in the next few weeks.”

Some sports injuries can cause long-term problems. In some cases, even after the original injury heals, permanent or arthritic problems can occur, said O’Connor, who works with  Meisles at Gottlieb.

For Riley, the greatest pain hasn’t been the broken ankle, cast and crutches. “It really hurts to be sidelined from playing hockey during the season and to not be on the team,” he said. “I live for hockey, which is a much more dangerous sport, and am really disappointed to have been injured by sledding.”

—submitted by Stasia Thompson, Loyola University Health System


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