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| Thaiboxing and Kickboxing The official discussion forum for the Thaiboxing Association of the USA. Discuss the latest training methods and events in the world of Thaiboxing and Kickboxing. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Novice
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I've been training in Thai for about 6 months now, and I just recently noticed a bump on my shinbone that is about a half-inch in diameter. I think it's a calcium deposit, but I'm not sure. It may not even be related to Thai boxing, but I don't know. It doesn't really hurt , but I can feel it when I kick.
Any help on what it is and how to get rid of it would be greatly appreciated. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: The pub
Posts: 157
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Hey
Im currently in a similar situation. I started getting a pain in my shin after I connected with my sparring partners knee during a low kick. Ive taken my knocks before in a similar way so i just brushed it off and figured it would just be bruised. period. Fought in a karate tournament a few days later and was repeatedly hammering my poor goju-ryu opponents with my right shin. I connected with their elbows a lot and hurt my shin again. I figured I was just hurting the same spot. Back at Muay Thai training i felt a cold pain in my shin when i connected on that same spot. The pain was more intense than before and forced me to stop. A boxing instructor at the gym took a look and said it was a Stress Fracture and that i should get it xrayed. So... you could either have a plain ol bump due to usual swelling... or it could be a stress fracture of sorts. The bump on my shin is from the fracture itself... hard to explain. Ask someone about it. And get it xrayed if need be. If you continue using it you could run the risk of doing yourself more harm than good if it IS a Stress Fracture.
__________________
5th Dan in Origami |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 25
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A sure fire way to tell if its a fracture is to take a tuning fork, strike it against something hard and hold the end to the bone. You'll know right away if its a fracture because it will hurt like h e double hockey sticks. Good luck
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