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Rehabilitation

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Must also prevent injuries & rehab those already sustained ... Physical Therapist- background in orthopedics or sports medicine ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rehabilitation


1
Rehabilitation ReconditioningCh. 23
2
Sports Medicine Team
  • All members responsible for educating coaches
    athletes regarding injury risks, precautions,
    treatments
  • Must also prevent injuries rehab those already
    sustained
  • Several different professionals play role in
    assisting injured athlete to playing field

3
  • Team Physician- provides medical care to
    organization, school, or team
  • Makes final determination of athletes readiness
    for return to competition
  • Responsibilities may also include injury
    prevention, supervision of athletes during games,
    injury illness education diagnosis, referral
    to other professionals as needed
  • Family, orthopedic, etc.
  • Also prescribes medications as needed
    anti-inflammatories, pain, cold, etc.

4
  • Athletic Trainer- person typically responsible
    for day-to-day physical health of athlete
  • Works under supervision of team physician
  • Responsibilities include acute injury mgmt.,
    rehab, application of prophylactic treatment,
    including preventive exercise equipment (tape
    brace), serves as administrator for sports
    medicine team
  • Since has significant amount of contact with
    athlete, key role in promoting communication of
    sports medicine team, coach, athlete

5
  • Physical Therapist- background in orthopedics or
    sports medicine
  • Typically in clinics have close relationship
    with variety of medical specialists
  • Consulted for specific treatment strategies or
    supervise long-term rehab
  • Becoming more involved with sports

6
  • Strength Conditioning Professional
  • Consults with ATC or PT uses understanding of
    proper technique application of several types
    of exercises to develop conditioning program to
    ready injured athlete for return to competition
  • Exercise Physiologists
  • Uses expertise in exercise science to assist with
    design of conditioning program that considers
    bodys metabolic responses to exercise how
    reaction aids healing process

7
  • Nutritionist
  • Provide guidelines regarding proper food choices
    to optimize tissue recovery
  • Psychologist
  • Provide strategies that help injured athlete
    better cope with mental stress accompanying an
    injury

8
Communication
  • Communication between SMT is essential
  • ST C pro. deals mostly with ATC
  • ST C pro. must understand diagnosis of injury
    ex. indication contraindication
  • Indication- form of treatment required by
    rehabing athlete
  • Contraindication- activity that is inadvisable or
    prohibited due to given injury

9
Types of Injury
  • Macrotrauma- specific, sudden episode of overload
    injury to given tissue, resulting in disrupted
    tissue integrity
  • Bone trauma- can lead to contusion or fracture
  • Skeletal fractures can result from direct blow
    be given variety of classifications (closed,
    open, avulsed, incomplete)

10
  • Joint trauma- may result in laxity or instability
  • Dislocation- complete displacement of jt.
    surfaces
  • Subluxation- partial displacement of jt. surfaces
  • Ligamentous trauma- termed sprain
  • 1st degree- partial tear of lig. without
    increased jt. laxity
  • 2nd degree- partial tear with minor joint
    instability
  • 3rd degree- complete tear with full joint
    instability

11
  • Musculotendinous trauma-
  • Contusion- direct trauma
  • Area of excess accumulation of blood fluid in
    tissues surrounding injured muscle
  • May severely limit injured muscles mvmt. (ROM)

12
  • Strains- indirect trauma, tears of muscle fibers
  • 1st degree- partial tear of individual fibers
  • Characterized by strong, but painful muscle
    activity
  • 2nd degree- partial tear with weak
  • Painful muscle activity
  • 3rd degree- complete tear of fibers
  • Very weak, painless muscle activity

13
  • Tendon- can rupture if tensile load applied
    exceeds its limit
  • Tendons collagen fibers stronger than muscle
    fibers
  • Failure occurs more within muscle belly,
    musculotendinous junction, or tendons attachment
    to bone than within tendon itself

14
  • Microtrauma- overuse injury
  • Results from repeated, abnormal stress applied to
    tissue by continuous training with too little
    recovery time
  • May be due to
  • Training errors (poor program design)
  • Suboptimal training surfaces (too hard or uneven)
  • Faulty biomechanics or technique during
    performance
  • Insufficient motor control
  • Decreased flexibility
  • Skeletal malalignment predisposition

15
  • 2 most common overuse injuries
  • Bone- stress fracture
  • From body type structure often from excessive
    volume on hard surfaces
  • Tendinitis- inflammation of tendon
  • If cause left uncorrected, chronic tendinitis or
    tendinopathy may develop
  • Each injury requires specific rehab strategies to
    allow return to function

16
Tissue Healing
  • Severity rate of events occurring within each
    phase are different for each tissue type
  • But, all tissues follow same basic pattern of
    healing
  • 3 phases inflammation, repair, remodeling
  • Phases overlap one another

17
Inflammation Phase
  • Inflammation- bodys initial reaction to injury
  • Necessary for normal healing to occur
  • Injured area becomes red swollen due to
    increased blood flow, changes in vascularity,
    capillary permeability
  • Hypoxic environment lead to tissue death
  • Release of histamine bradykinin- increases
    blood flow capillary permeability
  • Edema created escapes into surrounding tissue
  • Inhibits contractile tissue limit athletes
    function

18
  • Phagocytosis increased blood flow removes
    tissue debris pathogens
  • Macrophages- search for remove cellular debris
    that may slow healing
  • Inflammatory substances stimulate sensory nerve
    fibers causing athlete to sense pain can
    decrease function
  • Typically lasts 2-3 days
  • can last longer depending on blood supply
    structural damage
  • If lasts too long, delays rehab process

19
Repair Phase
  • Allows replacement of tissues that are no longer
    useable
  • Original, damaged tissue regenerated scar
    tissue formed
  • New capillaries connective tissue form in area,
    collagen randomly laid down to serve as
    framework for repair

20
  • Collagen positioned randomly, alignment not
    optimal for sufficient strength
  • Strongest when laid down longitudinally to line
    of stress, ones laid down transversely limit
    ability to transmit force
  • Phase starts as early as 2 days after injury
    can last up to 2 months

21
Remodeling Phase
  • Weakened tissue produced in repair phase is
    strengthened, improves structure function
  • Production of collagen fibers decreased
  • Increased loading allows collagen of scar tissue
    to hypertrophy align themselves along lines of
    stress

22
  • The thicker better aligned collagen fibers are
    the stronger they become allow athlete to
    return to function
  • New tissue will never be as strong as tissue it
    replaced
  • Can last 2 months up to a year

23
Rehabilitation Reconditioning Strategies
  • Consider athletes subjective response
    physiological mechanisms of tissue healing
  • Process of return to competition involves healing
    of tissues, preparation of tissues to function,
    use of techniques to maximize rehab
    reconditioning

24
  • Each athlete responds differently to injury, each
    rehab progresses uniquely
  • Healing tissue must never be overstressed
  • Athlete must meet specific objectives to progress
    from one phase of healing to next
  • ROM, strength, activity

25
Inflammation phase goals strategies
  • Prevention of new tissue disruption prolonged
    inflammation with use of relative rest passive
    modalities
  • R.I.C.E.- Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation
  • Function of cardiorespiratory surrounding
    neuromusculoskeletal systems must be maintained
  • No active exercise for injured area
  • ATC provides most of treatment during this phase

26
Repair phase goals strategies
  • Prevention of excessive muscle atrophy joint
    deterioration of injured area
  • Function of neuromusculoskeletal
    cardiorespiratory systems must be maintained
  • Possible exercise options include
  • Submaximal isometric, isokinetic, isotonic ex.
  • Balance proprioceptive training activities
  • Proprioception- ability of muscle to respond to
    abnormal positions situations
  • Provides sense of jt. position mvmt

27
Remodeling phase goals strategies
  • Optimization of tissue function
  • Progressive loading of neuromusculoskeletal
    cardiorespiratory systems as indicated
  • Possible exercise options include
  • Joint-angle specific strengthening
  • Velocity-specific muscle activity
  • Closed open kinetic chain exercises
  • Proprioceptive training activities

28
  • Kinetic Chain- combination of several
    successively arranged joints working together to
    successfully complete desired motor task of body
  • Closed kinetic chain- exercise in which distal
    joint segment is stationary on ground, wall, etc.
  • Open kinetic chain- exercise is combination of
    successively arranged joints in which distal
    joint is free to move

29
Program Design
  • Same principles used to design aerobic RT
    programs for uninjured athletes should be used
    during rehab reconditioning
  • Resistance Training- several programs have been
    developed to assist with design of RT programs,
    many have been advocated for use in rehab setting
  • DeLorme Watkins
  • Oxford
  • Daily Adjustable Progressive Resistive Exercise
    (DAPRE)

30
DeLorme Watkins Strength Progression
  • Set Reps
    Weight
  • 1 10
    50 of 10RM
  • 2 10
    75 of 10RM
  • 3 10
    100 of 10RM

31
Oxford Technique of Strength Progression
  • Set Reps
    Weight
  • 1 10
    100 of 10RM
  • 2 10
    75 of 10RM
  • 3 10
    50 of 10RM

32
DAPRE System of Strength Progression
  • Set Reps
    Weight
  • 1 10 50 of
    working wt.
  • 2 6 75 of
    working wt.
  • 3 as many as possible 100 of
    working wt.
  • 4 as many as possible adjusted
    from 3rd set
  • Adjustment guidelines next slide

33
DAPRE adjustment guidelines
  • of reps done 4th set wt.
    Next day wt.
  • in prior set based on 3rd set
    based on 4th set
  • 0-2 decrease wt.redo set
    decrease wt.redo set
  • 3-4 decrease by 0-5 lb.
    keep same
  • 5-7 keep same
    increase by 5-10 lb.
  • 8-12 increase by 5-10 lb.
    increase by 5-15 lb.
  • 13 or more increase by 10-15 lb.
    increase by 10-20 lb.

34
  • Aerobic Training- designing implementing proper
    conditioning exercises to stress this energy
    system following indications contraindications
    of the particular injury rehabilitation phase
    of athlete
  • No specific training program out there
  • Use Upper Body Ergometer (UBE), bike, pool, etc.
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