“A string player is just as susceptible to soft tissue and tendon damage as a tennis player,” said Benjamin, a pediatric sports medicine specialist at the University of Chicago Medicine Comer Children’s Hospital. “The hours a musician spends practicing with repetitive movements are similar to those of an elite athlete practicing his or her sport-specific techniques.”
Claire Roesler, 19, of Western Springs, Ill., had a passion for the violin from an early age. By the time she was in middle school, she was playing in two performance groups. But shortly after a long holiday concert during her 8th grade year, Claire felt pain in her neck and shoulder. Throughout the winter, it became increasingly difficult for her to pick up her instrument, much less play it. “Even brushing my hair and laying in bed hurt,” she said.
Advice from the first three specialists she saw ranged from “stop playing the violin” to “the pain may be in her head” to “I don’t think she has a real injury.”
“I was ready to quit,” Claire said, “but my mom told me we would never give up searching for the cause of my pain.”
The Roesler family eventually found Benjamin, who performed the same shoulder and neck exam that she would on a tennis or baseball player. An MRI was done to rule out other conditions.
Benjamin diagnosed Claire with muscle strain in her neck and shoulder impingement — soft tissue injuries caused by compression of the rotator cuff tendons in the shoulder and posture issues. But there was more. Claire had developed a condition referred to as complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) in which pain reaches severe levels out of proportion to the injury.
I want to be a doctor because I want to be like Dr. Benjamin. She believed in me, found out what was hurting me and gave me hope. Like her, I will be a doctor who doesn’t give up.
Benjamin prescribed pain medication and a progressive physical therapy to loosen the neck and shoulder, strengthen it and restore normal movement. Claire slowly improved and was able to tolerate intensive physical therapy. Within three months, she had recovered enough to play her violin for five minutes. Gradually, she was able increase her practice times.
Throughout the next four years, Claire played in her high school orchestra, attended summer music camps in the U.S. and toured cities in Europe, Peru and China with music groups. Now at Emory University in Atlanta, she performs in the college’s orchestra and in a quartet.
Although Claire loves being a musician, she has decided to pursue a career in medicine.