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Kevin Reynolds
@Kevinreynolds30
T.J. McDaniel chose an alternative recovery process after breaking his fibula and dislocating his ankle. No doctors gave approval. Team doctors didn't recommended it.
Nearly a year later, he's still not playing.
Story: https://smudailycampus.com/sports/i-have-no-clue-if-this-is-going-to-work-running-back-t-j-mcdaniel-chose-an-alternative-recovery-process-over-surgery-nearly-a-year-later-hes-still-not-playing
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7:15 AM · Oct 1, 2021
https://www.smudailycampus.com/sports/i-have-no-clue-if-this-is-going-to-work-running-back-t-j-mcdaniel-chose-an-alternative-recovery-process-over-surgery-nearly-a-year-later-hes-still-not-playing
Lying on the turf of Gerald J. Ford Stadium, T.J. McDaniel saw his foot pointed in the wrong direction.
SMUs starting running back had just fractured his fibula and dislocated his ankle on the first play of the Oct. 3 game against Memphis. He ripped the foot back into place before the medical team came out, trying to release the pressure built up in his leg.
By the time he was being carted off the field, McDaniel heard doctors talk about surgery. It is the standard protocol for a severe injury like this. And, for several days, he was resigned to that reality.
People obviously look down at an injury like mine and think surgery, McDaniel said.
But in the days after, McDaniel went all in on an alternative recovery path, at the urging of his brother. It was a decision that would ultimately change the direction of his collegiate football career. Instead of surgery, McDaniel decided to use an electrical machine made by his brothers company to heal his injury. The device, normally used to stimulate muscles, was untested on severe injuries such as broken bones, and his brother had no medical background.
*snip*
sakabatou
(42,152 posts)Maru Kitteh
(28,340 posts)Stupid is as stupid does.
ZonkerHarris
(24,226 posts)Skittles
(153,160 posts)ridiculous
Hav
(5,969 posts)and also disgusting. Imagine using your brother as the guinea pig to try this unproven technique for this kind of injury. It endangered not only his potential carrier but also his health.
Silent3
(15,212 posts)No, you dimwit. No such thing is scientifically proven.
And how is having a machine pulsing electricity through your leg for a few hours every day considered a natural alternative to surgery?
I recently started reading a Facebook group called Physics/Astronomy. There turns out to be some very occasional real science news in there, but I mostly keep looking now the way one might gawk at a traffic accident. The group is filled with pseudoscience and wackadoodle horseshit, with plenty of self-assured comments about what science says and what science proves made by people who clearly have no clue what theyre talking about.