Shoulder Surgery Helps Weightlifter Keep Pulling Toward Her Dreams

When Delaney Willingham damaged her right shoulder during a high school meet, she feared her competitive weightlifting days were over. But now, after arthroscopic shoulder surgery at Mayo Clinic, Delaney's fully recovered from her injury, and she's back to high-level competition.
Photo credit Lifting Life.

When Delaney Willingham damaged her right shoulder during a high school meet, she feared her competitive weightlifting days were over. But now, after arthroscopic shoulder surgery at Mayo Clinic, Delaney’s fully recovered from her injury, and she’s back to high-level competition.


Delaney
Willingham stepped to the mat, placed both hands on the barbell and prepared
her body and mind to complete a lift she’d done hundreds of times before. But
this time, as spectators of her high school weightlifting meet looked on,
something went terribly wrong. After Delaney completed the first part of her
lift, she suffered a serious injury. “I dislocated my right shoulder,”
she says.

After
being taken to Mayo
Clinic’s Florida campus
for evaluation, an MRI
revealed the full extent of the damage. In addition to dislocating
her shoulder
, the imaging showed that Delaney had
torn her labrum — the ring of
cartilage around the rim of the shoulder socket that helps stabilize the joint.

Even
though Delaney says the injury wasn’t painful, it was frustrating — especially given
all the hard work, training and personal sacrifice she’d invested in her senior
year of competition. And she was concerned that the shoulder injury would
derail her lifelong dream of lifting at collegiate and professional levels. “I
was told there was chance I’d never be able to compete again,” Delaney
says. “That’s what worried and frustrated me the most.”

Finding a way back

Her
desire to fully recover from her injury motivated Delany to seek the advice of Cedric
Ortiguera, M.D.
,
a Mayo Clinic orthopedic
surgeon
. “He’s so knowledgeable,” Delaney says. “He
walked me through exactly what had happened to my shoulder and exactly what he’d
do to fix it. He outlined what surgery would entail and even showed me a
complete video representation of how he’d repair my injury. It was very
interesting and comforting for me to see that.”

Encouraged
by that discussion, Delaney opted to allow Dr. Ortiguera to do everything he’d
said he would to surgically repair her injured right shoulder.

“Labral
tears at her young age don’t do very well when treated without surgery, so we
performed an arthroscopic procedure on her shoulder to repair the damage,”
Dr. Ortiguera says. “This required placing multiple anchors into her bone
to reattach her labrum to allow it to heal in its normal position.”

“I feel great. I’m totally recovered and back to lifting without restriction. It’s really cool.”

Delaney Willingham

Going
into the procedure, Dr. Ortiguera says he and his surgical colleagues had three
main goals. “Number one was to make sure her shoulder was stable and does
not dislocate again,” he says. “Number two was for her to live
pain-free after the procedure. And number three was for her to be able to
return to her desired lifestyle and activities.”

Delany
underwent the surgery in early 2018. Since then, her recovery has gone extremely
well, and she’s met all three of her care team’s presurgery goals. “I feel
great,” she says. “I’m totally recovered and back to lifting without
restriction. It’s really cool.”

Delaney
is particularly pleased with the progress she’s made because, at time of her
injury, she feared she may never again compete in the sport she’d come to love.
“Obviously when the injury happened, I was devastated because competitive
weightlifting is what I love to do, and it’s what I do with all of my free
time,” she says. “I had to sit out my senior year of high school
because of the injury, which was really hard for me, but being able to compete
again now is pretty incredible.”

Stronger than ever

Not
only is Delaney competing again, she’s competing at a high level as she
continues her education at the University of South Florida. “I’m on a new
team in Tampa now called ‘Keep Pulling,’ and I’m training with them,” she
says. “I qualified for the 2019 National University Championships almost
exactly one year after my surgery with Dr. Ortiguera. That was a big meet for
me and a really cool experience.”

To
arrive where she is now, Delaney says she had to start from scratch after her injury.
“I basically had to start over because weightlifting is such a technical
sport,” she says. “When you’re away from it for as long as I was —
six to seven months — it takes a lot to get back. Getting to where I am now has
been really rewarding because my strength level is actually higher than it was
before my surgery.”

“I had high expectations going into my surgery. I held my care team to those expectations, and they delivered on all fronts.”

Delaney Willingham

That
is music to Dr. Ortiguera’s surgeon ears. “It’s always nice to hear outcomes
like that from our patients,” he says. “I’m so glad Delaney’s doing
well and is back to doing what she loves.”

Now
that she is fully healed and fully recovered, Delaney says she hopes the best
is yet to come. “The end goal for any weightlifter is the National Championships,”
she says. “I’ve already competed in Team USA’s University Nationals, so my
next goal is to compete in Junior Nationals. After that, I’d like to make it to
Senior Nationals and be competitive there, as well.”

But
regardless of what her competitive future holds, Delaney’s thankful to her care
team for giving her the chance to return to her weightlifting career. “I’ve
always known Mayo Clinic is consistently one of the best hospitals in the
country. Because of that, I had high expectations going into my surgery. I held
my care team to those expectations, and they delivered on all fronts,” she
says. “I’m really happy with everything Dr. Ortiguera and everyone else
did for me because it obviously worked.”


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