WingNut
09-23-2006, 11:46 AM
Possibly this topic has been done to death, but I'd like to give my 2c worth.
I'm a new racer, in my first season, 41 yrs and a Dr here in NZ (Wanganui). Am a family Dr (GP) and also qualified in Accident and medical practice.
Had my first fall at speed in a race yesterday. Doing about 60km/hr downhill on a beautiful spring day in this part of the world. Car came opposite way, pack readjusted and I clipped the rear wheel of the guy in front and went down, bringing 2 others with me. I've read all about how to deal with a fall, which is inevitable in bike racing I'm told, books suggest rolling into a ball etc, my experience was it was so quick all I had time to do was scream like a baby before I was skidding down the road. Ended up in a dusty ditch.
Wrecked saddle, bar tape and both ultegra shifters, ripped all my clothes and my gloves.
Elbow and hip took the worst of it, then shoulder and back, all down the left side. Very sore to move L leg initially, could weight bear OK. Blood dripping from elbow.
Here's the advice (of course this is only for superficial wounds, if there are breaks, fat or bone exposed, get professional help. In fact if you are at all concerned about the possibility of a serious injury, see a Dr.)
1. Wash wounds immediately - .The sooner you get and dirt and debris out of a wound the better - also it hurts less to do it immediately than waiting even a few hours. Even if going on to medical care do this and do it early. At the scene I emptied my bottle (containing water) into my elbow, while vigorously rubbing the wound. Antiseptics kill cells and retard healing - in order to optimise healing use someting gentle - plain old water, and tap water is fine, and vigourous rubbing (with a clean hand) is all you need. Get somewhere with a shower as soon as possible and continue the cleaning - you don't need soap just clean water and lots of it and lots of rubbing, it will sting, but you're doing yourself a favour by doing this, and it gets worse the longer you leave it. I don't recommend topical antibiotics, I feel if antibiotics are required (and they probably wont be) get the wound professionally assesssed and take them systemically (by mouth) which is far more effective and less prone to invoking bacterial resistance.
Cover the wounds - don't let them dry into a scab which can crack, shrink and slow healing - There is a product called Fixomull which is outstanding (No shares owned by me) used for burns and this type of wound, shave around the area if hairy and apply plenty. A tip for optimising life of the dressing - use scissors to 'round off' any corners. This stuff needs to stay on for a week or more. I'd suggest Roadies consider having a supply at home.
(Blood and fluid will ooze thru the fixomull over the next day or so, just wash it off in the shower, it's important you don't remove the fixomull, let it stay and get stained and raggedy until it is ready to fall off ( week or more, you body is healing beatiuflly under it), the Fixomull is very adherent and will dry out and stay stuck-on)
Ice it as soon as you are out of the shower and the wounds are clean & covered - Use a cooler pad from yr freezer or get a zip-lock bag & put in ice and water and bandage it over the site.
This is what I did and this morning I am not feeling too bad, in fact will probably join the club for a recovery ride this morning, on my second bike unfortunately.
Hope this is of use to someone out there.
I'm a new racer, in my first season, 41 yrs and a Dr here in NZ (Wanganui). Am a family Dr (GP) and also qualified in Accident and medical practice.
Had my first fall at speed in a race yesterday. Doing about 60km/hr downhill on a beautiful spring day in this part of the world. Car came opposite way, pack readjusted and I clipped the rear wheel of the guy in front and went down, bringing 2 others with me. I've read all about how to deal with a fall, which is inevitable in bike racing I'm told, books suggest rolling into a ball etc, my experience was it was so quick all I had time to do was scream like a baby before I was skidding down the road. Ended up in a dusty ditch.
Wrecked saddle, bar tape and both ultegra shifters, ripped all my clothes and my gloves.
Elbow and hip took the worst of it, then shoulder and back, all down the left side. Very sore to move L leg initially, could weight bear OK. Blood dripping from elbow.
Here's the advice (of course this is only for superficial wounds, if there are breaks, fat or bone exposed, get professional help. In fact if you are at all concerned about the possibility of a serious injury, see a Dr.)
1. Wash wounds immediately - .The sooner you get and dirt and debris out of a wound the better - also it hurts less to do it immediately than waiting even a few hours. Even if going on to medical care do this and do it early. At the scene I emptied my bottle (containing water) into my elbow, while vigorously rubbing the wound. Antiseptics kill cells and retard healing - in order to optimise healing use someting gentle - plain old water, and tap water is fine, and vigourous rubbing (with a clean hand) is all you need. Get somewhere with a shower as soon as possible and continue the cleaning - you don't need soap just clean water and lots of it and lots of rubbing, it will sting, but you're doing yourself a favour by doing this, and it gets worse the longer you leave it. I don't recommend topical antibiotics, I feel if antibiotics are required (and they probably wont be) get the wound professionally assesssed and take them systemically (by mouth) which is far more effective and less prone to invoking bacterial resistance.
Cover the wounds - don't let them dry into a scab which can crack, shrink and slow healing - There is a product called Fixomull which is outstanding (No shares owned by me) used for burns and this type of wound, shave around the area if hairy and apply plenty. A tip for optimising life of the dressing - use scissors to 'round off' any corners. This stuff needs to stay on for a week or more. I'd suggest Roadies consider having a supply at home.
(Blood and fluid will ooze thru the fixomull over the next day or so, just wash it off in the shower, it's important you don't remove the fixomull, let it stay and get stained and raggedy until it is ready to fall off ( week or more, you body is healing beatiuflly under it), the Fixomull is very adherent and will dry out and stay stuck-on)
Ice it as soon as you are out of the shower and the wounds are clean & covered - Use a cooler pad from yr freezer or get a zip-lock bag & put in ice and water and bandage it over the site.
This is what I did and this morning I am not feeling too bad, in fact will probably join the club for a recovery ride this morning, on my second bike unfortunately.
Hope this is of use to someone out there.