Cole Taylor, MD

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Cole Taylor, MD

Cole Taylor, MD

@DocOfSports

Sports Medicine Physician • Board certified in musculoskeletal ultrasound • Non-operative sports medicine and ultrasound • Problem fixer

Salt Lake City, UT, USA Katılım Mart 2018
201 Takip Edilen273 Takipçiler
Mark Cuban
Mark Cuban@mcuban·
Everyone wants me to rip on TrumpRx. Reality is, it’s saving patients money on IVF and a few other drugs. A lot of money. IMO, anything that saves patients money is a win. And they truly do have some great people that are making smart moves. You just don’t know their names. Chris Klomp. Mark Atalla, Abe Sutton and so many more. When you talk to them, and see the work they put in, it’s obvious they are focused on trying to do the right thing for patients. Don’t forget they didn’t give the insurance industry a price increase they wanted, and those stock prices got crushed. TrumpRx is just getting started. @costplusdrugs is just getting started.
NBC News Health@NBCNewsHealth

Americans are furious about drug prices. The Trump administration’s answer? A new website. But more than a month after its launch, the site, TrumpRx.gov, remains small — offering discounts on just 54 prescription drugs. nbcnews.com/health/health-…

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Grok
Grok@grok·
Agriculture ~75% of Utah's total water diversions (mostly crop irrigation, esp. alfalfa/hay). Remaining ~14%: indoor residential (~7%), commercial, industrial & institutional uses. (Per Utah DWR data via USU Extension; totals 4.8M acre-feet diverted, 2021—recent budgets align.) Biggest lever for GSL: ag efficiency + transfers.
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Governor Cox
Governor Cox@GovCox·
We will not let the lake fail. Period. Thank you @POTUS for helping Utahns save the Great Salt Lake. 🇺🇸
Governor Cox tweet media
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Grok
Grok@grok·
In Utah, lawn maintenance by homeowners (primarily outdoor residential irrigation) uses about 11% of the state's total water diversions. That's roughly 60% of all residential water use. Xeriscaping with native/drought-tolerant plants + efficient irrigation can cut outdoor water use by 50-60%+ per yard—saving 30,000-100,000+ gallons per home annually, depending on size. Widespread adoption helps hit conservation goals for the Great Salt Lake without major lifestyle changes. Utah Water Savers offers up to $3/sq ft rebates to make it easy.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Key ways to save Great Salt Lake: - **Conserve aggressively**: Cut basin-wide use 35%+ (ag ~60% of diversions; voluntary farmer leases + crop shifts). Urban: xeriscape lawns, smart irrigation. - **Policy push**: Back 2026 bills like HB410 ($5M for ag water leases) & HB348 (streamline transfers to lake). State goal: healthy levels by 2034 Olympics. - **Shepherd water**: Ensure saved flows reach the lake, not reused elsewhere. Feds + $250M philanthropy already committed. Personal action + advocacy = biggest impact.
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@dollarsanddata Their budget for fiscal year ending in 2024 was $116.5 billion. They made $33.6 billion in tourism-related taxation. When you can cover 30% of your budget with money made from out-of-staters, it helps the math quite a bit.
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Nick Maggiulli
Nick Maggiulli@dollarsanddata·
How does this not bankrupt Florida? I know they have a sales tax and some property taxes would still apply (e.g., investment properties), but my intuition tells me the math won't work here.
Brandon Tseng@brandontseng2

Florida is becoming the most compelling state in the USA. 0% income tax rate; soon to be 0% property taxes, runs a budget surplus; has $15B in reserves. It will become the fastest growing state in the next year. States should take note of what is working there and try to emulate.

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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@JFurKSL I definitely like the way Norway approaches youth sports. But the reason they have so many medals is because they focus more on winter sports there. They currently have 19 medals in cross country skiing and biathlon combined. That isn’t because of a superior youth sports scene.
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Josh Furlong
Josh Furlong@JFurKSL·
You don’t have to agree with everything here, but there is a real problem with burnout and forcing kids to specialize way too early. Kids stop playing because it’s not fun and sports becomes a job at an early age.
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg

Norway consistently wins the most medals at the Winter Olympic Games, with a population of just 5.6 million people. A big part of their success is how they treat youth sports—and it’s the opposite of what we do in the US. Here’s what we can learn from Norway: 1. Scorekeeping: In the US: Youth sports tend to be hyper competitive even at early ages. Leagues almost always keep score. In Norway: Scorekeeping isn’t even allowed until age 13. Removing winners and losers keeps the focus on the process not outcomes. It keeps kids engaged longer because it minimizes pressure (and tears) and maximizes fun, learning, and growth. The goal isn’t to win a third grade championship. It’s to love sport and keep playing. 2. Trophies: In the US: If you give everyone a trophy, you’re creating snowflakes who will never gain a competitive edge. In Norway: Whenever trophies are awarded, they are handed out to everyone. If getting a trophy makes young kids feel good, we should give them trophies. Maybe they’ll come back and play again next year!! As for the creation of snowflakes with no competitive edge—Norway’s athletes are tough as nails and all they do is win. 3. Prioritizing Fun: In the US: Far too often, the goal is to win. In Norway: The national philosophy is “joy of sport.” Youth sports in the US are driven by adults, ego, and money. Youth sports in Norway are driven by fun. Only half of kids in the US participate in sports. The number one reason they drop out: because they aren’t having fun anymore. In Norway, 93% of kids participate in youth sports. Fun is the foremost goal. 4. Playing Multiple Sports: In the US: There’s pressure to specialize early and play your best sport year round. In Norway: Try as many sports as you can before specializing as late as college. Norway encourages kids to try all types of sport. This reduces injury and burnout and increases all-around athleticism. It also helps promotes match quality, or finding the sport you are best suited for as your body develops, which is impossible if you commit to a single sport too early. 5. Affordability In the US: There is increasingly a pay-to-play model with high fees for leagues, equipment, and travel. This excludes many kids from playing. In Norway: It’s a national priority to keep youth sports affordable and therefore accessible for all. Kids aren’t priced out, which creates opportunities for everyone to participate (and develop into athletes), regardless of their parents’ income level. We could learn a lot from Norway: In the US, 70% of kids drop out of youth sports by age 13. This not only diminishes an elite-athlete pipeline, but it also destroys an opportunity for healthy habits and all the character lessons kids can learn from sport. In Norway, lifelong participation in sport is the norm. The goal isn’t to have the best 9U team. It’s to develop the best athletes. Those are two very different things. And Norway has the gold medals to prove it.

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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@Retlouping Thank you for posting! I will make changes to my practice based on this research.
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@AdamMeakins I also took it for my own radicular pain from a herniated disc. It would take 5/6-level pain to maybe a 2/3. No side effects for me. Stayed low dose. NSAIDs pretty rough on my gut. Just one man’s experience. But similar to many patients of mine.
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The Sp⚽️rts Physio
The Sp⚽️rts Physio@AdamMeakins·
No outcome favours gabapentin over NSAIDs for cervical radicular pain. Gabapentin was associated with increases in opioid prescription, adverse safety events, and greater health service utilisation compared to NSAIDs. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41610778/
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@AdamMeakins Interesting. I use a lot of different tools for radicular pain and one of them is gabapentin. Biggest issue I run into is short term side effects from sensitivity to medication. Start slowly and monitor for these issues. But I don’t see issues longer term. Helpful for many.
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@DrJN_SportsMed A neutral wrist brace can also be helpful for the floppy wrist, to reduce stress on the common extensor tendon after injection, and to keep the PRP right where you injected it.
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James Noake
James Noake@DrJN_SportsMed·
Consent ✅ When doing PRP for common extensor origin pathology (specifically intra-tendinous defects / splits / tears) the injection can be very uncomfortable A moving patient makes targeting the small defects more challenging Using LA around the tendon is puported to negatively influence platelet activation So I find it really useful to spend an extra few minutes doing a radial nerve block just distal to the spiral groove (remember to warn them they will have a floppy hand for 1 hour!) I like to have the patient's elbow immediately in line with the US machine screen and use small footprint high resolution hockey stick probe Video - fenestrating / needling the tendinopathic zone and deep tear Can see PRP 'open' up the defect - the patient has zero pain
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@DrJN_SportsMed Agreed! They make a big difference. I do half lidocaine and half ropivacaine to provide immediate anesthesia for the injection procedure along with some longer-term relief in the hours after the procedure during platelet activation.
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Robert Berry, DO
Robert Berry, DO@txsportsdoc·
Nailed it!👊 Some who aren’t orthopedic surgeons commented concern looking at this video of @lindseyvonn I see that her knee is able to stand up to load and recover. This would give me even more confidence. Go Lindsey, Go!🙌🥇
NBC Olympics & Paralympics@NBCOlympics

ANOTHER successful training run for Lindsey Vonn. She finishes with a time of 1:38.28, more than two seconds faster than her Friday time. 👀 The women's downhill final begins 5:30am ET this Sunday on USA & Peacock. #WinterOlympics

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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@DanWolken I have treated a lot of ACL tears through the years with a lot of high level athletes. They generally cannot squat jump, box jump, side lunge and bend like she did 1 week after. That isn’t just being tough. Her knee is allowing her to do that. To me, that is the question here.
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Dan Wolken
Dan Wolken@DanWolken·
I’ve seen a lot of “Do we actually need ACLs?” comments today. While funny, I encourage you to read my piece where top orthopedic experts explained why Lindsey Vonn specifically can do this and why skiing is different from, say, basketball sports.yahoo.com/olympics/artic…
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@BrianSuttererMD @lindseyvonn Brian is an excellent sports med doc who takes care of these injuries and is pointing out that even highly motivated and exceptional athletes usually don’t recover this quickly due to the typical swelling and pain. He’s asking very appropriate questions to understand this.
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Brian Sutterer MD
Brian Sutterer MD@BrianSuttererMD·
Any prior ACL injuries in that knee? If so, the knee can absolutely learn to compensate in a very functional way. I’m not trying to minimize your accomplishment, it’s insanely impressive. as a sports medicine doctor who takes care of high level athletes and every day folks, there is some nuance in how quickly people can function after an ACL tear and that’s what im curious about as we communicate stories like this to the public. Best of luck, I truly am rooting for you
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Brian Sutterer MD
Brian Sutterer MD@BrianSuttererMD·
There’s a VERY important aspect of this that we do not know - What was the state of her ACL before the crash last week? What she is doing now would not be nearly as surprising in an elite athlete whose knee was already functioning like the ACL was torn at baseline. When you hear stories about “so and so played for years on a torn ACL”, that’s chronic, meaning the body has time to adapt and retrain muscles to support the knee. Also, someone who had a prior tear/surgery may not be as swollen and painful with a repeat injury. Bottom line, I don’t think this was a bread and butter, fresh ACL tear like everyone is thinking
Rodger Sherman@rodger

honestly unbelievable: Lindsay Vonn attempted & completed her training run a week after tearing her ACL, hitting a top speed of 74 mph. They haven't fixed her ACL, it's just flopping around in there. And her other knee is made out of titanium. Very literally built different

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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@BrianSuttererMD @hjluks Love the conspiracy theory potential here. Makes an amazing Olympic story. Regardless, her ability to squat and move like this isn’t a total reflection of warrior spirit and toughness. Her knee is allowing that to happen and isn’t effused and severely painful.
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Brian Sutterer MD
Brian Sutterer MD@BrianSuttererMD·
Surely her knee was basically functioning like it was ACL deficient before the injury? If she had the average hemarthrosis they surely aspirated and may have even done a CSI Even still I don’t understand how they have such rapid control of the effusion. Unless she had none and her ACL was chronically torn
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Howard Luks MD
Howard Luks MD@hjluks·
Another reason why we need to stay fit. This is how you can bounce back quickly after injuries. Kudos to Lindsey...
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@PhysioDaveA @DrJN_SportsMed Tom runs MSKUS. I have attended a number of Tom’s courses through the years and had the privilege of attending multiple multi-day small group sessions that he has led. Tom’s “teaching tree”, including guys like Garry Ho and Sean Mulvaney, were key in my education.
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James Noake
James Noake@DrJN_SportsMed·
I wouldn’t do any of those I’d scan his neck first. Majority of deep scapular presentations are referred from CSp Or i’d block the GHJ with LA and provoke in the gym to eee if any change pain / function wise Surgeons will be surgeons
Orthobullets@orthobullets

Can you answer our FREE Question of the Day? An 18-year-old rugby player presents with pain along the "shoulder blade" that has been present since his senior year of high school. He has never reported a frank shoulder dislocation, but he complains that the shoulder feels "loose" when compared to the other shoulder during weighted dips and while bench pressing. An MRI confirms a posterior labral tear and a CT scan demonstrates associated posterior glenoid bone loss equivalent to 11% of the glenoid diameter leading the treating surgeon to recommend the procedure shown in Figures A and B. Which of the following statements is most true regarding this procedure if performed for this patient? 1. A modified McLaughlin results in lower recurrence rates than posterior bone block augmentation 2. Performing an isolated arthroscopic posterior labral repair would result in improved outcome scores and lower recurrence rates 3. Posterior bone block augmentation should only be performed in the setting of a large reverse Hill-Sachs 4. Recurrence rates of posterior instability are unchanged by addition of bony augmentation in contrast to cases of anterior instability 5. Subcritical bone loss is an appropriate indication for the procedure in competitive contact athletes QID: 219823 Comment your answer below, then check to see if you got it correct by clicking the link below to see the answer & explanation. bit.ly/4p9YmKL #orthopedics #orthopedicsurgeon #orthopaedics #orthopaedic #orthopedic #ortholife #orthobullets #orthoresidents #orthoresident #orthoresidency #medicalschool #medicalstudent #medstudent #doctor #physician

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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@BrianSuttererMD @DrJN_SportsMed It’s never worth billing trigger points. They reimburse like crap and are getting stricter with requirements for reimbursement. Can bill limited US or 76942 for guidance and then other peripheral nerve block.
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@BrianSuttererMD @DrJN_SportsMed Sometimes hard to differentiate. That pattern is often C7 so I look for posterior arm/middle finger involvement (although not all cervical nerve roots follow the rules perfectly). The treatment is so benign and I usually use a 4.5:.5 D5:Lido mix so I usually trial before neck.
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Cole Taylor, MD
Cole Taylor, MD@DocOfSports·
@DrNickColyvas @DrJN_SportsMed That’s why I was primarily replying to James and trying to add a potential treatment target for medial scapular pain. I was by no means trying to imply the original post/tx was somehow inappropriate. And of course the tx I suggested does not target instability.
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Nicholas Colyvas MD
Nicholas Colyvas MD@DrNickColyvas·
@DocOfSports @DrJN_SportsMed @DocOfSports sorry you lost the plot. In the real world this patient gets a holistic evaluation and the appropriate treatment, which very likely will be non- surgical first. But the post is a narrow focused question to torture/test residents about post instab surgery.
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