If you have an emergency, call 9-1-1 or go to the nearest emergency room.

News

Tamaqua High Goalie Back in Net after St. Luke’s Repairs Two ACL Tears
May 18, 2018

Mason Dolinsky saw the soccer ball heading directly into the net, just outside his reach, and knew he needed to jump.

A starting junior goalkeeper for the Tamaqua High School varsity soccer team last fall, Mason willed himself into becoming the only obstacle between the ball and the goal. With a mighty leap, Mason jumped into the air and not only got to the ball, but made the save. There was just one complication, a major one. He landed hard on his left leg, tearing the ACL.

Today, Dolinsky is back on his feet defending the goal thanks to incision-less surgery performed by Chandra Reddy, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon with St. Luke’s Orthopedic Care working out of St. Luke’s Miners Campus.

Dolinsky’s extraordinary recovery is particularly remarkable considering he had torn the ACL in his right knee just two years before

“Most people say you feel a lot of pain when you tear an ACL,” Mason says. “I didn’t feel any pain in either of my tears. The first one, I played a couple of games with it. This second one, I knew it was more serious.”

For both surgeries, Mason and his family turned to Dr. Reddy, who used an all-inside technique for both surgeries with outstanding results.

“I took his own hamstring autograft and did it all inside,” Dr. Reddy explains. “It was completely arthroscopic, so he had no incision. It was all keyhole surgery.”

Mason is certainly an extraordinary athlete after coming back from the first surgery, and is taking the same approach in his comeback from the second surgery.

“The first injury was heartbreaking because soccer was taken away from me,” says Mason, who has a second-degree black belt in karate and used to play catcher in baseball, which always left his knees feeling sore.

“After the surgery, I couldn’t do basic things like walking. As we progressed through physical therapy at St. Luke’s in Hometown/Tamaqua, I got a sense of accomplishment. Doing it this second time, I feel that same sense of accomplishment.”

Mason received extraordinary care not only from Dr. Reddy, but from the physical therapists. Brendan Kash, PT, DPT, LAT, ATC, finished up his rehabilitation after the first surgery and is guiding him through his second physical therapy stint.

When Mason first tore the ACL in his right knee in October of 2015, he attempted to kick a soccer ball and struck the ground with great force. He put up with the pain for two weeks – discipline he learned from karate and baseball – before finally seeing Dr. Reddy.

Because Mason was 14 at the time, the growth plates in his bone hadn’t closed yet, so Dr. Reddy pinned the autografted strain of hamstring muscle to a different location.

One of the reasons Mason’s mom and dad, Michelle and Rick, chose Dr. Reddy for the surgery is that he offered them to get a second opinion and an option to go to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

“He gave us a second option, and I was impressed with that,” Michelle Dolinsky remarks. “He drew pictures, told us everything he was going to do and was always straight-forward with us. He had a confidence about him and didn’t pull any punches. I didn’t know one doctor from the next, but when he told me he had worked at Shriner’s Hospitals for Children in Philadelphia, that impressed me.”

Dr. Reddy says that Mason is so in-tune with his physical therapy regimen this time around that he’s ahead of schedule, but being held back to ensure the reconstruction has enough time to properly mend.

It requires 6-9 months of rehabilitation to be cleared for full contact, and Mason is primed to return to the soccer field for his senior year at Tamaqua. A straight A student, he’s been considering a career in medicine and will be shadowing a variety of doctors within the St. Luke’s University Health Network to understand everything from orthopedics to anesthesiology.

Mason is certainly an extraordinary athlete who is befitting from extraordinary care, both now and into his future.

###

Media Contact:

Brenda Hageter, Media Relations, (484)-526-3051, Brenda.hageter@sluhn.org 

About St. Luke’s

Founded in 1872, St. Luke’s University Health Network (SLUHN) is a fully integrated, regional, non-profit network of 14,000 employees providing services at 10 hospitals and over 300 outpatient sites.  With annual net revenue of $1.9 billion, the Network’s service area includes 10 counties: Lehigh, Northampton, Berks, Bucks, Carbon, Montgomery, Monroe and Schuylkill counties in Pennsylvania and Warren and Hunterdon counties in New Jersey.  Dedicated to advancing medical education, St. Luke’s is the preeminent teaching hospital in central-eastern Pennsylvania.  In partnership with Temple University, St. Luke’s created the region’s first and only regional medical school campus.  It also operates the nation’s longest continuously operating School of Nursing, established in 1884, and 28 fully accredited graduate medical educational programs with 226 residents and fellows.  St. Luke’s is the only health care system in central-eastern Pennsylvania to earn Medicare’s five-star rating (the highest) for quality, efficiency and patient satisfaction.  St. Luke’s has earned the 100 Top Major Teaching Hospital designation from IBM Watson Health (formerly Truven Health Analytics) repeatedly – six times total and four years in a row including 2018.  It has also been cited by IBM Watson Health as a 50 Top Cardiovascular Program.  Utilizing the EPIC electronic medical record (EMR) system for both inpatient and outpatient services, the Network is a multi-year recipient of the Most Wired award recognizing the breadth of the SLUHN’s information technology applications such as telehealth, online scheduling and online pricing information.  St. Luke’s is also recognized as one of the state’s lowest cost providers.