Others will comment, but we have seen OSD fixed with barbell training many times, and never caused by it.
Son is 17 y.o., 5' 6", 165 lbs. NLP for about 2.5 mos., since mid-November. Squatting 315x5x3. Deadlift is a little higher.
We notice a bump about the size of a small olive on the tibial tuberosity, just below the insertion of the pateller tendon. It has been present over the past three weeks, and has grown to its current size.
Though it is painless and seems benign, it does have him wondering each session whether it's safe to squat *this time*.
If there is no pain, can this be an instance of Osgood-Schlatter disease?
I do plan on taking him to an orthopedic practice for a diagnosis.
Vince
Others will comment, but we have seen OSD fixed with barbell training many times, and never caused by it.
It is almost certainly tibial apophysitis / OSD. Virtually all active teenage boys will have it. The symptomology ranges from non-existent to severe. With no symptoms, you'd probably be better off burning your money in your fireplace than going to an orthopaedic surgeon for this. A "diagnosis" is virtually worthless, because you already know what it is.
If.....your son started developing constitutional symptoms, malaise, night pain in the knee, non-mechanical pain of the knee...especially boaring, gnawing pain...a radiograph will need to be taken ASAP.
He is more than likely going to develop symptoms at some point in the future. Management of OSD is relatively easy, and the information for proper management is not something you must schedule a physician appointment for most of the time.
Squatting is generally palliative to OSD, except in the cases where someone demonstrates a lot of anterior knee slide at the bottom. I'd watch carefully to see if he drops into his knees at the bottom.
OSD is a condition of youth, so you do not have it.
Ok, I see what I did. I have the fallout from it in that the tops of my tibias have protrusions that make it quite painful to kneel down. I misunderstood the doc when he said I had it when I pointed them out. I had PSD as a kid, and since it wasn't fixed, I'm left with these.