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Brainpads: Could Your Child's Athletic Mouth Guard Be A Life Saver?

By: Toan Dinh Home | Recreation-and-Sports


Statistics show that of the more than 3.5 million kids [ages 14 and up] who are injured while playing sports and recreational activities each year, those with the highest rates of injury are young people who are part of a contact sport. It’s hardly surprising†As any athlete who has played soccer, football, hockey, rugby or another contact sport knows, one hit can have lasting effects. The head spins, the feet go weak, the heart races†and, unfortunately, serious damage can even take place.

While death from a contact sport injury is considered rare [though it does happen and is always tragic], the other possible medical problems related to intense contact are still quite significant. Brain damage, concussions, head trauma, loss of teeth, loss of sensation in parts of the body and broken bones are but a few of the potential disasters waiting to happen. However, this doesn’t mean that parents should shield their children and teens from playing sports, as athletic activity is highly recommended. [After all, team sports teach kids how to get along with others, how to maintain self-discipline and how to stay fit.] What the reality of potential sports injuries does mean is that moms and dads [and coaches] should mandate that their children wear athletic mouth guards whenever the sport is being played, even during practices.

Athletic mouth guards are not new products; they’ve been available to recreational and professional athletes for numerous years. Generally, though, they are assumed to only provide a "safety net" for the teeth, gums and tongue. What most people do not realize is that an athletic mouth guard can actually be a life saver.

For instance, when an athlete not wearing an athletic mouth guard sustains any kind of blow to the mouth or jaw area, the reverberations from that blow can travel throughout the skull, interfering with the functions of the brain. This happens even when the blow is relatively light. Those reverberations can cause trauma to the brain, possibly leading to anything from concussions to death.

On the other hand, when an athlete wears an athletic mouth guard that has been specially-designed to absorb the majority of the force to the mouth or jaw, the potential for damage to the brain is greatly lessened. This is the reason many professional athletes [almost all of whom wear athletic mouth guards] can recover so quickly from intense contact without losing consciousness or being forced off the playing field.

If you’re the parent of a child who plays a contact sport, it is essential that you invest in a state-of-the-art athletic mouth guard. Don’t simply rely on those that you see on the drugstore or grocery store shelves. Investigate to determine which athletic mouth guards have been strategically engineered to ensure the safety of the wearer. Otherwise, you could be playing a tenuous game of "Russian Roulette" with your son or daughter’s life.

For more information on athletic mouth guards and where you can obtain those with the best possible results, please visit BrainPads today.



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Brain-Pad allows customers to buy mouth guards suited to every sport, providing the best mouth guard for use as a basketball mouth guard, boxing mouth guard, football mouth guard, ice hockey mouth guard and more. For more information, visit BrainPads.com.

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