Lodi News-Sentinel

Camera that sees like a shrimp could help pitchers recover

- By Christie L.C. Ellis

ST. LOUIS — Could a shrimp hold the secret to keeping Cardinals pitchers healthy? With the help of Washington University researcher­s, the answer might be yes.

A group of professors, led by Spencer Lake, professor of mechanical engineerin­g and materials science at Washington U., have been awarded a $388,541 grant from the National Science Foundation to develop a new imaging technique. Inspired by the eyes of the mantis shrimp, this technique could help treat and prevent a common elbow injury among baseball pitchers, which requires season-ending surgery.

One of the most devastatin­g yet common injuries for baseball pitchers is a torn elbow ligament known as the UCL (ulnar collateral ligament).

“The overhand throwing motion is one of the fastest recorded human motions at almost 7,000 degrees per second,” said Dr. Jeffrey Dugas, orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist at the Andrews Sports Medicine and Orthopaedi­c Center in Birmingham, Ala. “To say that it puts a fair amount of stress on the arm would be an understate­ment.”

The treatment for UCL tears is Tommy John surgery, a reconstruc­tion procedure first performed in 1974 on the eponymous Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher. In this surgery, the elbow ligament is reconstruc­ted using a ligament from elsewhere in the body, typically the wrist or knee, and reattached to the bone.

The number of Tommy John surgeries performed has skyrockete­d in the past two decades. In the 2017 MLB season, 26 percent of active pitchers had undergone the surgery, according to Joe Roegele of the Hardball Times, a baseball writer who has been tracking Tommy John statistics.

Twenty-four Cardinals have had Tommy John surgery since its invention, the second-highest in Major League Baseball — behind only the Atlanta Braves, at 26. This includes four pitchers in the past three seasons: Lance Lynn in 2015, Zach Duke in 2016, and Alex Reyes and Trevor Rosenthal in 2017.

Not only is the surgery expensive — easily exceeding $15,000, not including extensive physical therapy — but a team also loses the services of a valuable player.

Dr. Matthew Smith, professor of orthopedic surgery at Washington University School of Medicine and a collaborat­or on the new study, said that while Tommy John surgery has a high success rate, there is substantia­l room for improvemen­t in the recovery time, which is typically 12-18 months.

UCL tears aren’t just a problem at the profession­al level. “Since the midto late ‘90s there’s been a big increase, and it’s gotten younger,” Dugas said. “Now we see it in high school kids all the time, and even junior high school kids.”

Both Dugas and Smith cited the rise of year-round baseball and singlespor­t specializa­tion of youth players as likely factors in the rise of these injuries in adolescent­s.

Pitch style and speed can also factor into the likelihood of injuring the UCL.

“We know that throwing a curveball or a change-up, they place different stresses on the arm,” Dugas said.

Detecting change

The newly funded research plans to look at this ligament in more detail than was previously possible to see how it reacts to different stresses and accumulate­s damage over time. Using ligaments from human cadavers, researcher­s will repeatedly stress the ligament in ways that simulate different pitches.

“We can pull it and stretch it and hold it or whatever and see how it changes in real time,” Lake said.

The new technique will use familiar materials — a white LED light and a video camera — to see small details in ligaments as they move. To see these details, the technique borrows a trick from an unexpected place: the eyes of the mantis shrimp.

“They’re these crazy sea critters that, among other things, can sense difference­s in polarized light,” Lake said. Polarized light is “still just light,” said Lake, “but you can think of it as taking disorganiz­ed light and organizing it in a particular way.” That organizati­on is called polarizati­on. Polarized sunglasses take advantage of this to let in light that is organized a certain way and block out light that is organized in other ways.

In the new technique, polarized light is shone on the ligament. That light bounces off the collagen fibers, which make up the ligament and is recorded by the camera. Depending on what the ligament looks like at that time, the organized light will bounce off of it in a certain way and become slightly disorganiz­ed. As you move and change the ligament, the light bounces off in slightly different ways.

To see these subtle changes in how the light is reflected, small filters are placed over each pixel of the camera. Developed by Victor Gruev, a professor in electrical and computer engineerin­g at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, these filters work like the eyes of the mantis shrimp, detecting tiny changes in how the light is polarized. These small changes can be translated back to exact positions of the ligament, on a pixel-by-pixel level.

“Ligaments are very well organized tissues. You have these fibers that comprise these tissues that are all kind of aligned in the same direction, like a really strong net,” said Mark Buckley, professor of biomedical engineerin­g at the University of Rochester, “but when they become damaged, you lose some of this alignment . ... Polarized light is a really good way of looking at how aligned these fibers are.”

“Traditiona­lly, all we could do is look at how the tissue could stretch, but now we can look at how it reorganize­s,” Smith said. “We can look at what happens on the microstruc­tural level instead of what happens macroscopi­cally.”

Polarized light imaging could have distinct advantages over current methods of imaging ligaments and other tissues, such as ultrasound and MRI, according to Buckley. “Ultrasound you aren’t generally able to see fine structural features,” he said, and while MRI gives a more detailed look, it is both expensive and slow.

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