@Bruins de Boston

Mise à jour des blessures de David Pastrnak



Les Bruins de Boston sont de retour sur la glace et le camp d’entraînement a commencé. Nous avons des nouvelles qui ont probablement fait que quelques-uns d’entre nous retiennent notre souffle pendant une seconde. David Pastrňák, notre superstar, ne sera pas sur la glace pour les deux premiers jours du camp d’entraînement. Don Sweeney dit que c’est à cause de la tendonite, et bien que ce mot puisse sembler un peu effrayant, décomposons-le. Je vais expliquer ce qu’est réellement la tendonite, vous donner des exemples du monde réel, parler de ce que cela signifie pour David Pastrnak et les Bruins, et si les fans devraient réellement s’inquiéter. #NHLBRUINS #BOSTONBRUINS #BOSTONBRUINSNEWS #DAVIDPASTRNAK #NHL Source Steve Conroy – https://x.com/conroyherald/status/196866324096090116 Bridgettte Proulx – https://x.com/bridgetteproulx/status/1968360482974351449 X – https://x.com/bruinsdiehards x – https://x.com/courtlalonde Instagram – Obtenez l’accès aux avantages: https://www.youtube.com/channel/ucbf9nnqezwuo-th4gvszfnq/join

17 Comments

  1. The only thing to be concerned about is rushing it and not letting it heal properly. I had tendonitis in my wrists/forearms caused by repetitive motions at an old job. You ease off the activities that aggravate it (mind out of the gutter, sickos) and you go to a little physical therapy to slowly strengthen the tendons. Hopefully for Pasta's sake, it's not in the wrists because he'll hear about it in the locker room otherwise. 😂

  2. Although Im happy he was on the ice today I am also unhappy he was on the ice today skating & shooting – if rest & therapy are the answer to the rather ambiguous "tendonitis" then start resting & getting therapy!!!

  3. Yeah not too concerned over this really. I mean tendonitis is a fairly common thing in pro sports. Plus Sweeney specifically said he is still on the ice, just not practicing with the others. Also, we can breathe a sigh of releif its not team USA's doctor's diagnosing him. 😛🤨

  4. "usually if it's something bad the Bruins don't give us a lot of information"
    Exactly what I'm thinking.

    Even at lower level athletics, we hold back top performers at the beginning of the season…
    On team sports, they play more minutes.

    In individual event sports, like swimming, their season goes 2+ months longer, participating in states, regionals, Junior Olympics.

    So the season begins in October yet we don't have them competing until December.

    suspicious that was tuukka Rask's pattern in his later years

    Pasta has access to the best medical care in the world.

    I also learned with Charlie coyle's bum knee, he was playing injured for nearly two seasons before he let us know.
    Some of us noticed his coming to Bruins like a batouttahell, and then something wasn't the same.

    They didn't say anything until after the fact.

    Not worried until they go silent…

  5. Right now? Very low concern.
    If he's out for any length of time, or is slow to return to full participation/contact, THEN, time for some worry.

    I am still of the belief the B's will "possibly" be in contention for wild card, or just miss. WIthout big changes, I am not sure how deep a run the team makes come spring

  6. NOOOOO ! Put him in a hyperbolic chamber. Send him to Germany for stem cell bionic moon beam treatment!
    Magnetic treatment pillows!
    Anything. Further, he gets more on ice abuse than his star counterparts. I hope jeanot is going to impose himself on anyone that messes with Pasta this season.

  7. You can’t convince me this video wasn’t made because of the guy who commented that Pasta “would be out for an extended period of time” under the community post about the training camp groups, lol.

  8. As a retired physician, pediatrician, with a secondary interest in sports medicine, I have to say that you were spot on with your definition of tendinitis and its treatment options. The severity of the tendinitis determines the treatment pursued. Some examples of tendinitis are medial epicondylitis aka "tennis elbow' and, as you pointed out, patellar tendinitis aka 'jumper's knee'. Most examples of tendinitis resolve with avoidance of causative factors, rest, alternating cold and heat compresses to the area of concern, anti-inflammatory meds and physical therapy if needed. I can't imagine the Bruins taking less than a cautionary approach to dealing with this regarding their best player. As the saying goes, 'Time will tell". Having said this, tendinitis is not usually a significantly serious problem, as opposed to a sprain, muscle tear or a broken bone, and usually will resolve relatively quickly. Hopefully he will only miss a few sessions of training camp. I agree with you that this is only a temporary setback.

  9. I suffer from tendinitis in my right shoulder. When it flares up, it causes a great deal of pain, and nothing I have tried eases that pain. I just have to suffer through it. To top it off, the muscle in my right shoulder is degenerating. I have not had a serious flare-up in a while. Knock on wood.

    Seriously, though, when it acts up, it is gut-wrenching pain.

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