A surgery that changed who it belongs to

Tommy John surgery, known in medicine as ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction, was invented to rebuild the elbow of a Major League pitcher. For decades it lived in that world. It does not anymore.

~57%
In a national review of insurance records from 2007 to 2011, patients aged 15 to 19 accounted for roughly 57 percent of all UCL reconstructions performed in the United States, the single largest age group.1

Over that same window, the overall rate of the surgery climbed about nine percent per year.1 This is not a story about professional pitchers. It is a story about high schoolers, and increasingly about kids younger than that.

What the UCL is, and why pitching threatens it

The UCL is a small band of tissue on the inner side of the elbow. Its job is to resist the elbow being pried open, and a baseball pitch pries the elbow open about as hard as anything in sports. At the moment the arm is cocked back and the shoulder is at full external rotation, the inside of the elbow experiences an enormous twisting load.

Here is the unsettling part. Laboratory studies show the force on the inside of the elbow during a hard pitch is in the same range that would tear the isolated ligament on its own.2 The UCL survives only because the forearm muscles wrap around it and share the load. When those muscles are fresh, the ligament is protected. When they fatigue, the ligament takes the hit. That single fact explains most of what follows.

There is no single pitch that tears it

Parents often want to find the one throw that did the damage, the curveball or the long inning. The research does not support that picture. UCL injuries in young pitchers are overwhelmingly an accumulation problem. The adolescents who needed surgery in the major case-control study had pitched more months per year, more innings per game, and more pitches per game than the healthy group, and they more often pitched while fatigued.3

In other words, the tear is usually the last straw on top of months or years of overload. That is actually good news, because accumulation is something you can manage. You cannot prevent every freak injury, but you have real influence over the slow build that causes most of them.

The velocity wrinkle

Throwing harder is the goal of nearly every young pitcher, and it does carry a cost at the elbow. In a study of professional pitchers, the group that ended up injured threw harder on average, 89.2 miles per hour versus 85.2, and the three hardest throwers in the group all needed surgery.4 More velocity means more torque on the same small ligament.

Note

This is not an argument to throw soft. Velocity is built into competitive baseball. It is an argument to respect that a pitcher gaining velocity is also raising the load on the elbow, which makes the boring stuff, rest and volume management, matter even more as they get better.

What actually lowers the risk

There is no magic exercise that immunizes an elbow. There is a short list of habits that the evidence keeps pointing back to:5

  • Cap the volume. Stay under daily pitch limits and roughly 100 competitive innings a year.
  • Honor the rest tables. Days off are when tissue recovers, and a tired arm is an exposed arm.
  • Take a real off-season. At least four months a year off competitive pitching, with two to three of those off all overhead throwing.
  • Do not chase the radar gun in showcases. Max-effort throwing to impress a gun is a high-load, low-reward activity for a developing arm.
  • Build and keep strength in the forearm, shoulder, and the whole body, so the muscles that protect the elbow can keep doing it deep into outings.
Watch for

See a sports medicine physician if your pitcher has pain on the inside of the elbow, a loss of velocity that does not bounce back with rest, numbness or tingling into the ring and pinky fingers, or a feeling that the elbow is loose or unstable. Early evaluation protects options.

If you ever hear "he just needs a Tommy John"

There is a persistent myth that the surgery makes a pitcher throw harder, that it is almost an upgrade. It is not. It is a major reconstruction with a recovery that typically runs twelve to eighteen months, and a return to the same level is not guaranteed. No young pitcher should ever be steered toward surgery as a shortcut to velocity. The goal is to keep the ligament they were born with healthy for as long as possible.

Education, not a medical diagnosis or treatment plan. If your pitcher has pain, consult a qualified sports-medicine professional.

Originally published on CritchPitch.