Doctors warn of shoveling, cold injuries
The University of Cincinnati's Rani Nasser and Petra Warner spoke with Spectrum News about warning signs for back injuries and frostbite when shoveling snow.
They said taking breaks and being aware of red flags is key to not injuring yourself.
“When you have weakness or numbness or a pain traveling down your leg, these are things that you want to get an expert to check you out for,” said Nasser, MD, associate professor in the Department of Neurosurgery in UC's College of Medicine and a UC Health physician. “As a spine surgeon, we see a lot of soft tissue injuries, meaning muscle injuries, as well as even some ligaments, sprains, strains, disk herniation in some circumstances, fractures, particularly in our population with osteoporosis, in our elderly."
Warner recommends dressing in layers and taking time to warm up so you don't get hurt.
“You’ll probably feel more a numbness, sometimes a tingling sensation, but most of all, you’re not aware of it because you start getting numb,” Warner, MD, adjunct associate professor in the College of Medicine and UC Health's burn director. Those are early signs of frostbite that can happen even when it’s not bitterly cold.
Read or watch the Spectrum story.
Featured photo at top of a person shoveling snow. Photo/Willowpix/iStock.
Latest UC News
- WVXU: The complicated history of the Supreme Court’s first anti-slavery justicePaul Finkelman, a visiting UC Law professor, spoke to WVXU's Cincinnati Edition about his Friday, January 17 lecture "John McLean: Southern Ohio's Homegrown Anti-Slavery Justice."
- Growing a business through vertical, sustainable farming80 Acres Farms is advancing agricultural sustainability and supporting local jobs through its innovative vertical farming technique.
- Small device, big impact on saving livesA team of University of Cincinnati researchers invented a lightweight, portable and cost-effective alternative to traditional ventilators with support from the 1819 Innovation Hub.
- Researchers decode genome of insect harmful to citrusThe Lake Okeechobee News highlights a UC study unlocking the genome of an insect that is harmful to the nation's citrus crop.
- UC researchers to study overdose hot spots in CincinnatiA federally funded study by UC criminal justice researchers and the Hamilton County Office of Addiction Response is taking a new approach to help combat the growing overdose crisis in the region.
- UC Blue Ash professor visits Vietnam as a Fulbright SpecialistDean Stocker, PhD, spent the final weeks of 2024 leading seminars half a world away while enjoying his first experience as a Fulbright Specialist.