Dr. Bicos did an exclusive interview with Channel 4 news on how to think like an olympian.

See the interview Interview on How to Think Like an Olympian — Channel 4 news

Dr. Bicos is a fellowship trained sports medicine orthopedic surgeon with William Beaumont Hospital. He is the Associate Program Director of the Orthopedic Sports Medicine Fellowship Program and is an Assistant Professor of Orthopedics at the Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine. He specializes in knee and shoulder injuries. He is a cartilage restoration expert in the knee and performs all shoulder related surgeries (including surgeries for dislocations, rotator cuff tears, labral tears, and shoulder replacements).

Dr. Bicos on Channel 4 commenting on Olympics in Rio!!

What Olympic Sport Would You Play?

Dr. Bicos discusses the Olympics and comments on the common question: What Olympic Sport Would You Play…

Dr. Bicos talks with Channel 4 news on What Olympic Sport Would You Play

Dr. Bicos is a consultant for USA Gymnastics and the National Gymnastics Team.
He is on staff at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan.
He is also the Associate Director of the Sports Medicine Fellowship and an Assistant Professor of Orthopedics at Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine.

Dr. Bicos attended the Olympic Trials for Men's Gymnastics in St. Louis, MO

Dr. Bicos attended the Olympic Trials for Men’s Gymnastics in St. Louis, MO

Drs. Guettler and Bicos part of national study on Cartilage Restoration!

Drs. Guettler and Bicos are part of a national study looking at Cartilage Restoration.

The goal is to use patients’ own cells to repair cartilage defects in the knee.

Here is the article as taken from www.clickondetroit.com

The story can be found here.

Dr. Bicos discusses Jones fractures from Kevin Durant’s Injury

Dr. Bicos was asked by Beaumont Hospital to discuss Jones fractures in regards to Kevin Durant’s injury.

Can you Still Lose Weight when Injured?

What happens when you’re in the middle of your weight loss journey and you suddenly get an injury? It could be a broken fracture, a sprain, a torn ligament or tendon that prevents you for exercising for a few weeks.

Or worse still, it could be an injury requiring surgery meaning none of your usual exercise for months.

Does it mean the end to your weight loss? read this at the exipure reviews

The simple answer is ‘no’ – with a little effort, you can continue to lose weight through your recovery.

It’s a Balancing Act

It’s not just your body that you need to keep balanced after an injury. Understandably, many clients panic when they can’t exercise as they worry about where all those calories they usually burn are going to go. But there’s no need to worry too much because the experts tell us that, “Exercise is not part of the weight-loss formula,” according to Wendy Scinta, MD and President-elect of the Obesity Medicine Association. “Weight loss is all about what goes into your mouth.” In other words, if you take in fewer calories than your body needs to just function (even with little movement), you should still lose weight.

This may seem like a conflicting message, but what we are actually saying is that, although exercise is preferable, it’s not absolutely necessary. Exercise won’t technically drop the number on the scale (without concentrating on diet), but it can help you look slimmer, since muscle is denser than fat. Plus exercise will speed up your resting metabolic rate, meaning you burn slightly more calories while you sleep. That and the fact that it contributes to your overall health means people who regularly exercise hate the idea of not being able to do their usual regime, but sometimes it just can’t be helped and we need to come up with plan B.

Putting Plan B into Action

The focus is now solely on your food. Make it count. Follow our tips to ensure you don’t over consume calories while in the recovery stage of your injury. Also, consider how many calories you used to burn each day through exercise and see if you can cut that from your diet. It may not be as much as you think – for instance, a one-hour walk may just burn roughly 250 calories each day so you don’t have a huge amount to cut.

This is the surgical fixation for a Jones fracture.  A screw can be seen in the 5th metatarsal bone.  (Note:  This is NOT a picture of Kevin Durant's foot)

This is the surgical fixation for a Jones fracture. A screw can be seen in the 5th metatarsal bone. (Note: This is NOT a picture of Kevin Durant’s foot)

Click here to read the article…

Dr. Bicos is an Assistant Professor in Orthopedics at the Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine

Catch Dr. Bicos on BCTV…last show

Dr. Bicos does an interview with The Community House on his upcoming shoulder lecture in April.

You can catch the show this week:

Friday at 2pm

Comcast Customers:
In Bloomfield Hills and Bloomfield Township BCTV is on Channel 15. In Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 18.

AT&T/U-verse Customers:
In Bloomfield Hills, Bloomfield Township, Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 99.

WOW! Customers:
In Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 18. BCTV is not available to Bloomfield Customers on WOW!

Catch Dr. Bicos on BCTV talking about shoulder pain…

Dr. Bicos does an interview with The Community House on his upcoming shoulder lecture in April.

You can catch the show this week:

Wednesday at 8pm
Friday at 2pm

Comcast Customers:
In Bloomfield Hills and Bloomfield Township BCTV is on Channel 15. In Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 18.

AT&T/U-verse Customers:
In Bloomfield Hills, Bloomfield Township, Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 99.

WOW! Customers:
In Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 18. BCTV is not available to Bloomfield Customers on WOW!

Detroit Tigers Jose Iglesias Out With Stress Fractures — Why?  Dr. Bicos talks Stress Fractures…

Spring is in the air. The snow is melting, and as we wrap up the basketball March Madness, the only thing left is opening day of baseball – hot dogs, peanuts and popcorn, the crack of the bat. But the Tigers will be without Jose Iglesias for the ENTIRE 2014 season due to stress fractures in his legs! How can this be? What are stress fractures and are they that bad that he cannot play the entire season?

Let’s go back to March 31, 2013, almost one year ago, in the first half on an Elite Eight matchup between Louisville and Duke during the NCAA tournament in Indianapolis, IN. A player by the name of Kevin Ware attempted to block a 3 point shot, landed awkwardly, and broke his shin bone in half on prime time TV. Not only did he break his leg in half, but the bone came protruding out of his skin.

Massive traumatic sports injuries like that, after just landing from a jump, are almost always caused by a stress fracture or a stress reaction to the bone which pain can be controlled with natural medicine like this THC syrup. It is as if the bone is “hanging on by a thread” and it just takes that one awkward maneuver for the whole thing to go.

This is why Jose Iglesias is benched for the entire season and basically has to do non-weightbearing conditioning (i.e. he can’t put weight on both his legs) for the next 3 – 6 months. Stress fractures are real, stress fractures are dangerous, and stress fractures can lead to devastating injuries, why not find out more and learn how to deal with your health.

How do stress fractures happen?

When it comes to bone injuries, a stress fracture is often the result of a chain of events that can be prevented. Typically, our bodies give us warning signals of pain that prompt us to limit our physical activities before a stress fracture occurs. However, in some cases, we may ignore these signals and push our bodies too hard, causing the injury to progress toward a full fracture. This is why it is crucial to pay attention to our bodies and take preventive measures to avoid more severe injuries. In the event of a bone injury, it is always best to seek medical attention, including at Sheepshead Bay urgent care, to ensure proper diagnosis and treatment.

Our bones are alive, and even though they don’t look like they do much except support our body, they are constantly being replaced by new bone. When we are very young, that new bone growth adds to our height, but when we stop growing, our bones need to be maintained. There is a constant balance between the body removing old bone and replacing it with new bone. That is why we are better than machines – we can technically heal ourselves with new bone or skin, while machine parts can only wear out.

As we place stress on our body, you can think of it as wearing down some bone. That is actually healthy for our bodies, because we put down new bone in response to stress. Hence, we recommend an active lifestyle as one of the preventers of osteoporosis (or brittle bones). But…and this is important…you can do too much damage to the body so that the body can’t keep up with the amount that it has to repair. This is technically the beginning of the chain of events that lead to a stress fracture. The chain of events has many “checkpoints” that our body builds in. There is pain to let us know that we have done too much. There is swelling also to let us know that we have done too much. But if we disregard these clues, bad things can happen.

The chain of events is broken down to normal bone, painful bone, stress reaction, and stress fracture.

If you ever have a chance to look at an old foundation of a house, you see cracks. The cracks are usually small enough that the house does not collapse. The smaller cracks are the same as a stress reaction on a microscopic level. There are certain situations that the cracks develop into a size where part of the house actually collapses – this is a stress fracture.

A stress fracture of the shin bone.  (Red arrow points to stress fracture)

A stress fracture of the shin bone. (Red arrow points to stress fracture)

What is the treatment for a stress fracture?

REST!!! What a stress fracture or even the precursor to a stress fracture is telling us is that the balance between making new bone and taking new bone away is off. The easiest way to correct that balance is rest. Often times, this is the hardest thing for athletes to do, because they are either in season, training in the off-season, or competing in too many sports. I routinely hear the words, “I can’t take any time off because…”, and the excuses are many, ranging from “If I take time off I will lose my position”, “If I take time off I will be kicked off the team”, or “If I take time off I will fall behind the other kids”.

But my point of view is that if you do not take time off you can end up with a catastrophic injury like Kevin Ware, where you have your shin bone sticking out of your skin. These injuries are not made up, they are real.

Your sporting career is not a sprint, it is a marathon. And from that standpoint, you need to give your body adequate time to heal.

Even though Jose Iglesias has stress fractures in both legs, what is he doing? Resting!!

One can say that he has already made it in his profession and that as a high school kid there is even more to prove, but if the pain you have is not letting you reach your true potential, then you are not doing your self any favors.

Bottom line?

Seek out someone who understands athletes and what the pressures are that they face. This is typically a fellowship trained sports medicine physician, such as the ones found at Performance Orthopedics. From there, listen to what they say, because the only thing we want to see is for you to get back in the game, what ever your game may be.

Catch Dr. Bicos on BCTV!

Dr. Bicos does an interview with The Community House on his upcoming shoulder lecture in April.

You can catch the show this week:

Tuesday at 7:30pm
Wednesday at 8pm
Friday at 2pm

Comcast Customers:
In Bloomfield Hills and Bloomfield Township BCTV is on Channel 15. In Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 18.

AT&T/U-verse Customers:
In Bloomfield Hills, Bloomfield Township, Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 99.

WOW! Customers:
In Birmingham, Beverly Hills, Franklin and Bingham Farms BCTV is on Channel 18. BCTV is not available to Bloomfield Customers on WOW!

Sports Medicine Conference 2014 Registration – Sports Medicine from Head to Toe

The 11th Annual Sports Medicine Conference is Saturday, May 3rd, 2014 at William Beaumount Hospital Royal Oak Campus in the AB West Auditorium of the Administration building. Conference doors will open at 8:00am and presentations will begin at 8:30am and continue until 1:00pm. Our conference is free of charge, and continuing education units (CEU’s) are offered for those in attendance. All attendees are encouraged to register prior to the conference so that we provide adequate services for everyone who attends. Thank you!

For more information, click here.

Register Now!