JONATHAN GLASHOW, MD: That's a good question. I think I'd like to group them in two ways. There is the overuse kind of injuries that we see which may be known as tendonitis, like a tennis elbow or shoulder tendonitis. Then there's the macro-traumatic injury, when somebody lifts a weight incorrectly and their biceps ruptures or they dislocate their shoulder. Most commonly we see those overuse injuries. People lifting improperly, lifting too much, not resting enough, not stretching, etc. They're the most common. Occasionally we see ruptured muscles, strained muscles, strained ligaments in the knee from improper technique, excessive weight with improper technique. So I think grouped both ways the more common one would be the overuse injuries that we see at the gyms. The hockey club probably sees a few more of the macro-traumatic ones and gross ligament injuries and fractures, and things of that sort.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: The macro-traumatic, that would maybe be when you hear the popping sound or the breaking sound.
JONATHAN GLASHOW, MD: Or you see blood.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Jim, Jonathan alluded to, you work with the Rangers. What kind of injuries do you see with them? More of those intense injuries?
JIM RAMSAY: We do definitely see a lot of more acute type of stuff in terms of the sprains and strains, a strain being a muscle injury and sprain being a ligament injury. We have a lot of knee injuries. Mike Richter, for example, this year sprained his ACL.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Goal tender for the Rangers.