My story
Understanding elbow OCD—and why early diagnosis matters
Osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) is a condition in which a small area of bone beneath the cartilage becomes weakened, often due to repetitive stress and overuse. This can lead to pain, swelling, and loss of joint function, especially if it is not recognized and treated early. In my case, OCD affected the capitellum of my elbow, which is commonly seen in athletes who place repeated stress on their arms. Because symptoms can begin gradually and feel like normal soreness, OCD is often difficult to recognize early. This experience showed me how important injury awareness and early diagnosis are for protecting long-term joint health.
The turning point
From “push through it” to “listen to it”
I built this project after seeing how often young athletes normalize elbow pain—especially during growth spurts and heavy throwing seasons. What begins as a nagging ache can become a cartilage and bone injury at the capitellum that takes months to heal.
In many stories I’ve heard, the pattern is similar: pain shows up after pitching, serving, or tumbling; rest helps for a bit; then the pain returns—sometimes with stiffness, swelling, or a “catching” feeling. By the time imaging is done, the lesion may be more advanced than anyone expected.
If your elbow pain keeps coming back, it deserves an evaluation—not a tougher mindset.
A message to young athletes
This site is here to make the next steps clearer: what symptoms to watch for, what questions to ask, and where to find reputable references. It’s not medical advice, but it is a caring guide to help you advocate for timely, expert care.
What I wish we knew sooner
Red flags that shouldn’t be ignored
Not every sore elbow is OCD—but persistent, activity-related pain is a reason to pause and get checked. These are common warning signs families describe:
Pain with throwing or impact
Pain that shows up during pitching/throwing, serving, or weight-bearing skills—and returns when activity ramps back up.
Stiffness, swelling, or catching
Loss of motion, swelling after activity, or clicking/locking sensations can signal an injury that needs imaging and specialist input.
How this site can help
A simple path from concern to clarity
If you’re worried about elbow pain, you don’t need to figure it out alone. Use these steps to organize what you’re seeing and move forward confidently:
01
Notice the pattern
Track when pain happens (throw count, practice days, specific skills), what makes it better, and whether motion is changing.
02
Get the right evaluation
Ask about OCD of the capitellum and whether imaging is appropriate—especially if pain persists, returns quickly, or motion is limited.
03
Plan a safe comeback
Return-to-play should be gradual and guided. Pain-free motion, strength, and sport-specific progression matter more than the calendar.