Dangerous Games
Perhaps it was boredom; perhaps it was a way of blowing off steam, but adolescents play some pretty dangerous games. This week, I treated two teens for injuries sustained by these games.
The first game was called "Knuckles". Forgive me if I get the rules of this game incorrect, but from what I understand is that teens challenge each other to a game of ramming their fists (knuckles) into a variety of objects, such as walls, doors, road signs, each other, etc.
One of my first patients in the morning was a 16 year old girl (yes, a girl!) holding her right hand. She had some tenderness of the fifth metacarpal -- the bone of the hand directly below the 5th or little finger. This was most likely a common hand fracture, often referred to as a Boxer's Fracture.
A quick trip to the x-ray revealed that she indeed had a 5th metacarpal fracture. It wasn't a bad fracture, but she will need a special cast on her hand for a month or so. A month in a cast should be plenty of time for her to ponder this decision to slam her knuckles into a stop sign on the way home from school. I am not sure how this game is won, but if getting a fracture is considered a point, then maybe she is a winner.
The second patient was brought in with some additional hand injury, mostly just pain and bruising. This was a result of a game called "Quarters". The mother was initially horrified by thinking her 14 year old was playing a drinking game of the same name in which a quarter is bounced into a shot glass. If you miss, you have to drink the shot of alcohol. Fortunately, it wasn't this game.
I know even less about this new quarters game, but apparently it involves the spinning of a quarter on the table. If this spinning quarter stops near your hand, you are awarded with having a quarter flicked into your knuckles. There was no need to x-ray this one. The treatment is simple: Stop doing that! We never played this game when I was a kid; we never had quarters!
This same patient freely shared another game called "Pong". In this game, you volley the ping-pong ball until you miss. If you do miss, then your opponent can hit a ping-pong ball as fast as they can at any part of your body you do not cover. Girls will cover their faces and end up getting a series of round, red welts on their chest and abdomen. Boys, naturally, will cover their groin, not wanting to get receive a line-drive in this area. They will likely end up with red welts on their face.
These are the only three games that I know of at this point, but I would welcome posting from other parents or teens on more of them.
Now, before you start becoming judgmental about teenage behavior, try and remember what YOU did at that age. When I think back on some of the dangerous games that we invented, I am surprised that I made it to adulthood unscathed.
We played Knuckle Poker. If you lost, the winner of the hand was allowed to hit your knuckles with the edge of the deck of cards. Not only was it painful and caused your knuckles to bleed, it encouraged cheating. A variation of this game involved slapping your tender forearm with two saliva-wet fingers. That, of course, stung like a bee and was on the unsanitary side.
The worst of the poker variation was in college, where I played (once) a game of Water Poker. The losers of the hand must drink a small Dixie cup of water…just plain 'ol water. Over the course of an evening, the unlucky ones developed some profound electrolyte imbalances, became dizzy, disoriented, and appeared intoxicated (water intoxication). You would think that future medical professionals would have known better, but in our defense, we did not have that class yet.
Later on, water was replaced by beer or Jack Daniels -- a game that I did not play. I have never been a fan of alcohol and I certainly am not a fan of being drunk. I only experienced alcohol intoxication ONCE in my college years from a drinking challenge (I needed the money, and it wasn't time to sell a pint to the Blood Bank) and vowed never to do that again.
To this day, I do not drink alcohol in any form. People who do not know me think I am either a Mormon (we do have five kids) or a recovered alcoholic! Apparently, it is not socially acceptable NOT to partake in a glass of wine without a detailed explanation.
And, yes, there were other dangerous games, like the various versions of Chicken. Not wanted to be painfully labeled as a coward or chicken, kids will try just about anything. We shot BB guns at each other, threw kitchen matches, threw darts into the air and tried to catch them on a piece cardboard.
We were also constantly challenged to eat various things, from horse manure to hot chili peppers. Not wanted to be a chicken, I would swing on a vine over a 50 foot drop into the canyon below, or sit in the Devil's Seat at Wolf Rocks -- a natural depression in a rock that hung out over a precarious drop off of several hundred feet. Does this sound like a popular television reality series?
I can't say that I was ever Triple-Dog Dared to do these things. I did them thoughtlessly and willingly; just the way kids are supposed to act. My mother knew nothing about any of these things that we did. Just as long as I came home by dark and did not require obvious medical attention, she was totally oblivious to our acts of adolescent stupidity. And, I lived to blog about it.
Related Topics: Media Messages Harm Teen, Child Health, 10 Perks for Teens Who Exercise
Technorati Tags: dangerous games, jackass, fear factor, teen behavior
The first game was called "Knuckles". Forgive me if I get the rules of this game incorrect, but from what I understand is that teens challenge each other to a game of ramming their fists (knuckles) into a variety of objects, such as walls, doors, road signs, each other, etc.
One of my first patients in the morning was a 16 year old girl (yes, a girl!) holding her right hand. She had some tenderness of the fifth metacarpal -- the bone of the hand directly below the 5th or little finger. This was most likely a common hand fracture, often referred to as a Boxer's Fracture.
A quick trip to the x-ray revealed that she indeed had a 5th metacarpal fracture. It wasn't a bad fracture, but she will need a special cast on her hand for a month or so. A month in a cast should be plenty of time for her to ponder this decision to slam her knuckles into a stop sign on the way home from school. I am not sure how this game is won, but if getting a fracture is considered a point, then maybe she is a winner.
The second patient was brought in with some additional hand injury, mostly just pain and bruising. This was a result of a game called "Quarters". The mother was initially horrified by thinking her 14 year old was playing a drinking game of the same name in which a quarter is bounced into a shot glass. If you miss, you have to drink the shot of alcohol. Fortunately, it wasn't this game.
I know even less about this new quarters game, but apparently it involves the spinning of a quarter on the table. If this spinning quarter stops near your hand, you are awarded with having a quarter flicked into your knuckles. There was no need to x-ray this one. The treatment is simple: Stop doing that! We never played this game when I was a kid; we never had quarters!
This same patient freely shared another game called "Pong". In this game, you volley the ping-pong ball until you miss. If you do miss, then your opponent can hit a ping-pong ball as fast as they can at any part of your body you do not cover. Girls will cover their faces and end up getting a series of round, red welts on their chest and abdomen. Boys, naturally, will cover their groin, not wanting to get receive a line-drive in this area. They will likely end up with red welts on their face.
These are the only three games that I know of at this point, but I would welcome posting from other parents or teens on more of them.
Now, before you start becoming judgmental about teenage behavior, try and remember what YOU did at that age. When I think back on some of the dangerous games that we invented, I am surprised that I made it to adulthood unscathed.
We played Knuckle Poker. If you lost, the winner of the hand was allowed to hit your knuckles with the edge of the deck of cards. Not only was it painful and caused your knuckles to bleed, it encouraged cheating. A variation of this game involved slapping your tender forearm with two saliva-wet fingers. That, of course, stung like a bee and was on the unsanitary side.
The worst of the poker variation was in college, where I played (once) a game of Water Poker. The losers of the hand must drink a small Dixie cup of water…just plain 'ol water. Over the course of an evening, the unlucky ones developed some profound electrolyte imbalances, became dizzy, disoriented, and appeared intoxicated (water intoxication). You would think that future medical professionals would have known better, but in our defense, we did not have that class yet.
Later on, water was replaced by beer or Jack Daniels -- a game that I did not play. I have never been a fan of alcohol and I certainly am not a fan of being drunk. I only experienced alcohol intoxication ONCE in my college years from a drinking challenge (I needed the money, and it wasn't time to sell a pint to the Blood Bank) and vowed never to do that again.
To this day, I do not drink alcohol in any form. People who do not know me think I am either a Mormon (we do have five kids) or a recovered alcoholic! Apparently, it is not socially acceptable NOT to partake in a glass of wine without a detailed explanation.
And, yes, there were other dangerous games, like the various versions of Chicken. Not wanted to be painfully labeled as a coward or chicken, kids will try just about anything. We shot BB guns at each other, threw kitchen matches, threw darts into the air and tried to catch them on a piece cardboard.
We were also constantly challenged to eat various things, from horse manure to hot chili peppers. Not wanted to be a chicken, I would swing on a vine over a 50 foot drop into the canyon below, or sit in the Devil's Seat at Wolf Rocks -- a natural depression in a rock that hung out over a precarious drop off of several hundred feet. Does this sound like a popular television reality series?
I can't say that I was ever Triple-Dog Dared to do these things. I did them thoughtlessly and willingly; just the way kids are supposed to act. My mother knew nothing about any of these things that we did. Just as long as I came home by dark and did not require obvious medical attention, she was totally oblivious to our acts of adolescent stupidity. And, I lived to blog about it.
Related Topics: Media Messages Harm Teen, Child Health, 10 Perks for Teens Who Exercise
Technorati Tags: dangerous games, jackass, fear factor, teen behavior



16 Comments:
Some things we use to do as children were not the smartest either. I truly believe we should give children the space to do what they want though. When I was younger my brother, sister and I never did have broken bones, but we should have. We would jump off of our deck down to the backyard, we would go to my uncles farm and jump from the hay loft down onto a trampoline and do much more. I look back at stunts that we pulled and am amazed that we never got hurt.
I was hoping to speak to someone re: a ear problem I am having.I guess speaking to an expert isn't the way to go since there is no expert available.
Here is my problem:: About 8 months ago I had just stepped from my shower & was drying off as my usual routine after a shower. I was drying off my ears as I have done a millions times. My right ear began to bleed a little. It bleed for about 45 seconds then quit. A few days after that I had a doctors appt for some routine things so I asked my doctor about it. He looked at my ear & said he couldn't see anything wrong, not even some dried blood that I thought he might see. After that I went home & everything seem to be ok. That night I went to be & I woke up in the middle of the night for bathroom reasons & found that my right ear seemed plugged up. In just a few minutes I felt it clear itself. So I felt relieved. The next night I went to bed & found that if I lay my head on the right side my right ear gets plugged up for just a few seconds then it clears itself. This has been going on for the last few months. Have been back to the doctor for other things since & every time I asked my doctor about what is happening in my right ear & he tells me that he still can't see anything. Well last night I went to bed & woke up this morning with my right ear plugged up & its not clearing itself. I can hear muffled sounds out of it but cannot hear well out of it as well as before. I go back to the doctor in 2 weeks but am concerned that its not becoming unplugged as it did before. Can you suggested anything. Its really quite irratating not to hear from that ear. Thank you in advance
Jan...copy your message to the WebMD Ear Disorders Board. I will be more than happy to address your ear concern there....not on this Blog.
http://boards.webmd.com/roundtable_topic/56
Dr I copied my message to you per your request & went to the WebMD Ear disorder board but have no idea where to put my comments. There is nothing there to put ccomments. I really need some help here since I can't get into my doctor for 2 more weeks. Can't you just tell me what I can do???? I will try again but its really getting aggravating to do all this in order to get an answere. Thank you in Advance
Hi Jan,
Once you're on that board you can click on the Start Discussion link above all the discussions there in order to post your questions.
We look forward to seeing you there.
Dr. Moser,
I'm a little confused... The link to water intoxication you provided says you cannot overdose on water (which we all know to be incorrect after the Chico State hazing incident).
Is Dr. Somer wrong?
Water intoxication...
I will check that link, but when a person drinks excessive amounts of plain water, they will have excessive urination. The urine contains sodium, potassium, and other electrolytes, that will eventually deplete your stores, resulting in hyponatremia (low blood sodium) and/or hypokalemia (low potassium). These essential electrolytes are needed for such things as your heart....
Water loading or "intoxication" is a dangerous game to play. I know, it happened to ME once as a college freshman. I vividly remember my disorientation and other effects. College students need to be warned about this DANGEROUS GAME.
I hope you never took up the challenge to eat horse manure. Yuck!
I've never played any, but I've spectated. I've seen the game with a quarter played, except one end of the quarter had been sharpened!
We also had a different version of "Knuckles" in which you and another person would slam your knuckles against each others...well, it was actually more like one person held the fist still, while the other brought theirs down and their knuckles "Brushed" against each other....painfully. They'd take turns doing this. First person to back out was the loser.
There were several others I saw, but I can't remember what they're called. But, really...as long as there are teens, there will be new games like those.
Since I am a teenager I am aware of most of these games. Where I live the most popular of these games is tenis. In this game, the two players hold hands and take turns smacking each others hand. The first one to let go looses. The slap obviosly stings. The worst damage ive seen from this game is small bruises or a readened hand.
what about "slaps"? this is a game in which two peple lock hands and take turns slapping the others hand until one member quits. i have seen little matches go on for10-30 minutes and both hands are bleeding.i also would like to kno how overdosing on mountan dew would affect the human body. would dehydration,exsessive sugar crash or nutrient imbalance do more dammage?--
The rules of quarters is pretty simple. A group of kids get together and the game is initiated by spinning a quarter on a flat surface, usually a table. The kids each take turns flicking the side of the quarter to keep it spinning. Whoever flicks the quarter, and makes it stop moving is then hit with the quarter. The most common way I've seen it done is the person who dropped the quarter plants his fist on the table so that the knuckles are against the table, then one of the other participants places the quarter under their thumb with their index and middle fingers to either side. They stretch their hand back as far as possible and then bring their thumb up to the hand as fast as possible, hurdling the quarter at the loser's knuckles.
we used to take bottle caps and put them against a friends shoulder then punch them as hard as we could. this would leave a cut roughly the shape of the cap, the goal was to get the complete circle cut into your opponents are before he could do the same to your arm. this led to a sort of branding where one would stick a bottle cap onto the end of a knife or fork by stabbing it with the crimped edge out, heating it up with a lighter then sneaking up on a friend and branding their shoulder or something.
Does any one know what Jan found out about her ears? Either here or in the real world
knouvion:
This is a question that Dr. Moser addresses often on his message board. You can find similar questions and answers there.
Thanks for asking!
there is also a game called bloody knuckles.i used to play this game.its when you put your knuckles flat on the ground and you take turns sliding quarters into them.its very painful
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