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| Тема |
Re: ОКС не издържат на напрежението на финала [re: shevchenko] |
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| Автор |
Balleta (Gaucho) |
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| Публикувано | 20.06.12 22:02 |
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ами то си беше крамп, така, че ни би трябвало да му е проблем да играе
Severe leg cramps such as the ones sustained by Miami Heat star LeBron James in Game 4 of the NBA Finals on Tuesday night generally require minutes to hours for a full recovery with proper stretching, rehydration and other therapeutic treatments, a specialist said.
Make no mistake, though, James was in severe pain as he was forced to leave a close game against the visiting Oklahoma City Thunder in the final minutes, said Dr. Bryson Lesniak, an assistant professor of orthopaedics for the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
The level of pain from such muscle spasms, Lesniak said, “can be anything from a very minor nuisance ... to something severely painful and debilitating to the point that it looked like [James] was going through: you can’t stand; you can’t walk. You can’t walk on that muscle without stretching it out and having severe pain.”
The good news, Lesniak said: the leg cramps are very likely to be short-lived.
“Recovery is usually fairly quick,” he said. “It’s a matter of minutes to hours as opposed to days. ... I wouldn’t expect him to have any residual cramping [Wednesday or Thursday], for example.”
What James might feel come the potentially-decisive Game 5 on Thursday is some residual soreness, Lesniak said.
“It’s usually not something that prevents participation or affects function,” he said. “It’s just a muscle soreness they notice is sticking around for a few days after the cramps. That’s normal.”
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