Jason A. Smith DO, FAOASM, Sports Medicine
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Mon – Thurs: 8AM – 430PM | Fri: 8AM-12PM

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Location

1200 Medical Center Parkway
Maumee, OH 43537

Location

4235 Secor Road
Building 2, Second Floor
Toledo, OH 43623

  1. Heat‑Related Illnesses Are Rising — Especially in Youth Athletes

Hot, humid Midwest summers increase the risk of:

  • Exertional heat exhaustion
  • Exertional heat stroke
  • Exercise‑associated muscle cramps
  • Hyponatremia from over‑hydration

Athletes practicing on turf fields or in midday heat are especially vulnerable.

Why it matters: Heat illness is one of the most preventable causes of sports‑related collapse — and early symptoms are often ignored.

Learn more:

  • Heat illness warning signs
  • Safe hydration strategies

 

  1. Overuse Injuries Spike During Summer Training

Summer is prime time for:

  • Patellar tendinopathy (jumping sports)
  • Shin splints (runners, soccer players)
  • Rotator cuff irritation (baseball, softball, swimmers)
  • Low back pain (gymnasts, weightlifters)

Why? Athletes often increase training volume too quickly after a spring lull.

 

  1. Throwing Injuries Surge in Baseball & Softball

Pitch counts climb in summer leagues, travel ball, and weekend tournaments. The most common injuries we see:

  • Little League shoulder
  • UCL irritation
  • Biceps tendinopathy
  • Scapular dyskinesis

Early fatigue is the #1 predictor of arm injury — not pitch count alone.

 

  1. Shoulder Pain in Swimmers Peaks Mid‑Summer

“Swimmer’s shoulder” is one of the most common summer complaints. Causes include:

  • High‑volume training
  • Poor stroke mechanics
  • Scapular weakness
  • Hypermobile joints

Swimmers often delay evaluation, assuming pain is “normal.” It’s not.

 

  1. Running Injuries Increase as Mileage Climbs

Summer is peak season for runners preparing for:

  • Cross‑country
  • Fall marathons
  • Triathlons
  • Track conditioning

Most frequent injuries:

  • IT band syndrome
  • Plantar fasciitis
  • Achilles tendinopathy
  • Stress reactions

 

Why Early Evaluation Matters More in Summer

Heat, fatigue, and high training volume make injuries progress faster in summer. Early evaluation helps:

  • Identify the true source of pain
  • Start targeted treatment immediately
  • Prevent compensatory injuries
  • Shorten return‑to‑play timelines

Athletes who get evaluated early stay on the field — not the sideline.

 

Toledo Clinic Sports Medicine: Keeping Athletes Healthy All Summer

Whether it’s shoulder pain, knee soreness, heat illness, or something that “just doesn’t feel right,” early evaluation is the smartest move an athlete can make.

We provide:

  • Same‑week appointments
  • On‑site imaging
  • Sport‑specific rehab plans
  • Communication with coaches & trainers