Showing posts with label Sports Medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports Medicine. Show all posts

28 July 2013

Hammer Toe



Clinical Assessment of Foot & Toe Injuries
http://www.uta.edu/

The Foot
Briant W. Smith, MD
http://medicine.ucsf.edu/

The Foot
Jennifer L. Doherty, MS, LAT, ATC
http://www2.fiu.edu

The Foot & Toes Athletic Injury Assessment
http://hercules.gcsu.edu

Athletic Training Clinical Proficiencies 
Sue Shapiro, Ed.D.,L/ATC
http://www.udel.edu

Lower Leg, Ankle, and Foot Conditions
http://www.siskiyous.edu

Osteoarthritis Rheumatoid Arthritis Systemic Lupus Erythematosis Scleroderma
http://www.austincc.edu

Common Foot Problems
Garrett Post, MD
http://www.fpm.emory.edu

Diabetic Foot Infections: Diagnosis & Treatment
http://www.medicine.nevada.edu

Reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD)
http://at.uwa.edu

Bandaging and Taping
http://faculty.weber.edu

12 Published articles

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25 April 2012

Sports Medicine Ppt & 200 free full text articles



Radiation Exposure in Patients Undergoing VEPTR Treatment for Thoracic Insufficiency Syndrome
Derek Khorsand, Jonathan Swanson, MD, Kit Song, MD
Radiation Exposure in Patients Undergoing VEPTR.ppt

Essentials of Athletic Injury Management
Jason Scibek, PhD, ATC
Essentials of Athletic Injury Management.ppt

Introduction to Rehabilitation Medicine
Thomas McNalley, MD
Introduction to Rehabilitation Medicine.ppt

Sport Psychology: Past, Present and Future
Jean Williams & Bill Straub
Sport Psychology: Past, Present and Future.ppt

Contemporary Issues in Sport and Exercise Psychology
Sport and Exercise Psychology.ppt

Physical Therapy
PhysicalTherapy_000.ppt

Rehabilitation Techniques for Sports Medicine and Athletic Training
William E. Prentice
EstablishingCoreStabilityinRehabilitation.ppt

Gender-Based Pathology
Ann Sudoh, M.D., SMDC Sports Medicine/Medical Orthopedics
gender_based_pathology_sudoh.ppt

Sickle Cell Trait
Ron Courson, ATC, PT, NREMT-I, CSCS, Director of Sports Medicine
Sickle-Cell-Trait-Ron-Courson-ATC-PT-EMT-I.ppt

Understanding Concussion Assessment and Evaluation
Philip Schatz, PhD
Understanding Concussion Assessment and Evaluation.ppt
200 free full text articles


  1. The Student Committee of Sports Medicine Research Center: To be Independent or Not to Be? That Is the Question.
  2. Competency in musculoskeletal and sports medicine: evaluating a PGY-1 curriculum.
  3. Recommendations of the Polish Society of Sports Medicine on age criteria while qualifying children and youth for participation in various sports.
  4. Sports medicine in Wonderland? keep on running.
  5. Exercise and type 2 diabetes: the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Diabetes Association: joint position statement executive summary.
  6. Exercise and type 2 diabetes: the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Diabetes Association: joint position statement.
  7. Skeletal scintigraphy in pediatric sports medicine.
  8. Specialization without the Hospital: The Case of British Sports Medicine.
  9. Designs of studies published in two Brazilian journals of orthopedics and sports medicine, recently indexed in the ISI Web of Science.
  10. Systematic review of efficacy for manual lymphatic drainage techniques in sports medicine and rehabilitation: an evidence-based practice approach.
  11. An overview of recent application of medical infrared thermography in sports medicine in austria.
  12. Immediate post-concussion assessment and cognitive testing (ImPACT) practices of sports medicine professionals.
  13. ACCF/AHA/ACP 2009 competence and training statement: a curriculum on prevention of cardiovascular disease: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association/American College of Physicians Task Force on Competence and Training (Writing Committee to Develop a Competence and Training Statement on Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease): developed in collaboration with the American Academy of Neurology; American Association of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation; American College of Preventive Medicine; American College of Sports Medicine; American Diabetes Association; American Society of Hypertension; Association of Black Cardiologists; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Lipid Association; and Preventive Cardiovascular Nurses Association.
  14. AHA/ACCF [corrected] 2009 performance measures for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease in adults: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association task force on performance measures (writing committee to develop performance measures for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease): developed in collaboration with the American Academy of Family Physicians; American Association of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation; and Preventive Cardiovascular Nurses Association: endorsed by the American College of Preventive Medicine, American College of Sports Medicine, and Society for Women's Health Research.
  15. ACCF/AHA/ACP 2009 competence and training statement: a curriculum on prevention of cardiovascular disease: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association/American College of Physicians Task Force on Competence and Training (Writing Committee to Develop a Competence and Training Statement on Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease): developed in collaboration with the American Academy of Neurology; American Association of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation; American College of Preventive Medicine; American College of Sports Medicine; American Diabetes Association; American Society of Hypertension; Association of Black Cardiologists; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Lipid Association; and Preventive Cardiovascular Nurses Association.
  16. Current sport-related concussion teaching and clinical practices of sports medicine professionals.
  17. Scoring Points for Holistic Medicine: Anisio León, MD, MS and Pedro Carmona, BS, Natural & Traditional Medicine Unit, Sports Medicine Institute, Havana.
  18. Balancing Health and High Performance: Carlos Jiménez, MD, MSpMed, Deputy Director, Sports Medicine Institute, Havana.
  19. Time to bring sports medicine into play.
  20. A SMARTT future for sports medicine.
  21. Comprehensive Sports Medicine Treatment of an Athlete Who Runs Cross-Country and is Iron Deficient.
  22. Potential applications of pulsating joint loading in sports medicine.
  23. Sports medicine training in Canadian paediatric residency programs: Are we doing enough?
  24. Research methodology: endocrinologic measurements in exercise science and sports medicine.
  25. Medical malpractice and the sports medicine clinician.
  26. Sports medicine.
  27. Problem-based learning in sports medicine: the way forward or a backward step?
  28. Australian chiropractic sports medicine: half way there or living on a prayer?
  29. Physical activity and public health: updated recommendation for adults from the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association.
  30. Physical activity and public health in older adults: recommendation from the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association.
  31. Sports medicine meets musculoskeletal medicine.
  32. Germany may tighten its laws on sports medicine after doping incidents.
  33. The long dark night of the sports medicine soul.
  34. The reformation of sports medicine.
  35. [Imaging findings of muscle traumas in sports medicine].
  36. Fractured fairy tales: hyponatraemia and the American College of Sports Medicine fluid recommendations.
  37. Blood tests in tired elite athletes: expectations of athletes, coaches and sport science/sports medicine staff.
  38. [Status and progress of application of Chinese herbs in sports medicine].
  39. COX-2 inhibitors in sports medicine: utility and controversy.
  40. Sports medicine: not "just for jocks" any more.
  41. How should we teach sports medicine?
  42. The hoffmann reflex: methodologic considerations and applications for use in sports medicine and athletic training research.
  43. Importance of selected athletic trainer employment characteristics in collegiate, sports medicine clinic, and high school settings.
  44. Sailing and sports medicine: a literature review.
  45. The PEX study - Exercise therapy for patellofemoral pain syndrome: design of a randomized clinical trial in general practice and sports medicine [ISRCTN83938749].
  46. The use of therapeutic medications for soft-tissue injuries in sports medicine.
  47. 5. Recent advances in sports medicine.
  48. Optimising a curriculum for clinical haematology and biochemistry in sports medicine: a Delphi approach.
  49. Classifying sports medicine diagnoses: a comparison of the International classification of diseases 10-Australian modification (ICD-10-AM) and the Orchard sports injury classification system (OSICS-8).
  50. The use of diagnostic imaging in sports medicine.
  51. The use of therapeutic medications for soft-tissue injuries in sports medicine.
  52. Clinical productivity measures of ambulatory sports medicine in an academic department.
  53. Pediatric residency education: is sports medicine getting its fair share?
  54. Are sports medicine journals relevant and applicable to practitioners and athletes?
  55. What do we mean by the term "inflammation"? A contemporary basic science update for sports medicine.
  56. Licensed athletic trainers: a traditional, unique, and proactive approach in Wisconsin sports medicine.
  57. Defining the sports medicine specialist in the United Kingdom: a Delphi study.
  58. American football and the evolution of modern sports medicine.
  59. Clinical governance in sports medicine.
  60. Musculoskeletal medicine/sports medicine.
  61. Survey of sports medicine faculty.
  62. The current status of sports medicine training in United States internal medicine residency programmes.
  63. The impact of MR imaging in sports medicine.
  64. Sports medicine training in Turkey.
  65. Sports medicine and the accident and emergency medicine specialist.
  66. Sports medicine training in the United States.
  67. Recent advances: Sports medicine.
  68. The future for the field of sports medicine.
  69. Sports medicine clinics on the NHS: a patient survey.
  70. A profile of patients attending sports medicine clinics.
  71. Ethics, molecular biology, and sports medicine.
  72. Evidence-based sports medicine.
  73. Recommendations for preparticipation screening and the assessment of cardiovascular disease in masters athletes: an advisory for healthcare professionals from the working groups of the World Heart Federation, the International Federation of Sports Medicine, and the American Heart Association Committee on Exercise, Cardiac Rehabilitation, and Prevention.
  74. Sports medicine education.
  75. Sports medicine in The Netherlands.
  76. What is a sports medicine specialist?
  77. Sports medicine training in the United States.
  78. Exercise for cancer patients: a new challenge in sports medicine
  79. What is a sports medicine specialist? A pilot study.
  80. Sports medicine education in Australia.
  81. Fellowship in Sports Medicine.
  82. Pro-sports medicine from the inside.
  83. Sports medicine? The ultimate folly.
  84. Exercise for cancer patients: a new challenge in sports medicine.
  85. What is sports medicine? Medical students don't know.
  86. AHA Science Advisory. Resistance exercise in individuals with and without cardiovascular disease: benefits, rationale, safety, and prescription: An advisory from the Committee on Exercise, Rehabilitation, and Prevention, Council on Clinical Cardiology, American Heart Association; Position paper endorsed by the American College of Sports Medicine.
  87. Sports medicine handbook
  88. General practitioners' training for, interest in, and knowledge of sports medicine and its organisations.
  89. Child abuse and the sports medicine consultation.
  90. Sports medicine in The Netherlands: a long road to a new start.
  91. Sports medicine: practical guidelines for general practice
  92. ACSM/AHA Release Recommendations for fitness facilities. American College of Sports Medicine / American Heart Association.
  93. "British Association of Sports Medicine".
  94. Sports medicine at work.
  95. Clinical coding in sports medicine--it's good to talk.
  96. The "Hoddle Muddle": using faith healers and other complementary therapists in sports medicine.
  97. Setting standards in sports medicine education.
  98. Diagnostic ultrasound in sports medicine.
  99. Assessing agreement between measurements recorded on a ratio scale in sports medicine and sports science.
  100. Bone imaging in sports medicine.
  101. Sports medicine: a century of progress.
  102. The coming of age of sports medicine.
  103. Proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation techniques in sports medicine: a reassessment.
  104. Clinical tests in sports medicine, Achilles tendon rupture.
  105. A review of the British Journal of Sports Medicine 1991-5.
  106. Clinical tests in sports medicine: more on Achilles tendon.
  107. The Olympic Games and sports medicine.
  108. The future of sports medicine.
  109. Dr John G P Williams, born 15 September 1932, died 18 July 1995: a pioneer of British sports medicine and soft tissue injury.
  110. Sports medicine and coaching inseparable interests for Vancouver physician.
  111. Sports medicine on the line?
  112. ABC of sports medicine. Sudden death in sport.
  113. ABC of sports medicine. Temperature and performance--II: Heat.
  114. ABC of sports medicine. Temperature and performance. I: Cold.
  115. Sports medicine. Booster doses are not needed.
  116. Sports medicine. Heel tabs can cause injury.
  117. Sports medicine. Anaesthetist attends boxing contest.
  118. ABC of sports medicine. The overtraining syndrome.
  119. ABC of sports medicine. Osteoporosis and exercise.
  120. ABC of sports medicine. Fitness for older people.
  121. ABC of sports medicine. Female athletes.
  122. ABC of sports medicine. Assessment of physical performance.
  123. ABC of sports medicine. Pulmonary limitations to performance in sport.
  124. ABC of sports medicine. Management of the acutely injured joint.
  125. ABC of sports medicine. Infections in sport.
  126. ABC of sports medicine. Head injury in sport.
  127. ABC of sports medicine. Musculoskeletal injuries in child athletes.
  128. ABC of sports medicine. Sport for people with disability.
  129. Magnetic resonance imaging in sports medicine--an overview.
  130. ABC of sports medicine. Overuse injury in sport.
  131. ABC of sports medicine. Nature, prevention, and management of injury in sport.
  132. ABC of sports medicine. Benefits of exercise in health and disease.
  133. Sports medicine on the line?
  134. The fluoroscope in a traditional sports medicine setting.
  135. What do we expect from the International Federation of Sports Medicine (FIMS)?
  136. Sports medicine electives. Are they available in Canadian family medicine programs?
  137. "All physicians are not created equal." understanding the educational background of the sports medicine physician.
  138. Sports medicine: some ethical issues.
  139. Hong Kong Sports Institute: sports medicine and science from theory to practice.
  140. Audit of knee injuries seen in a sports medicine clinic.
  141. Sports medicine and national fitness.
  142. Society of Apothecaries diploma in sports medicine.
  143. The National Sports Medicine Institute. 1. BASM's contribution to its formation.
  144. Sports medicine--where are the specialists?
  145. Sports medicine in New Zealand.
  146. Sports Medicine: What family physicians see and what they need to learn.
  147. Aspects of psychology in sports medicine.
  148. Protecting the sportsman's brain (concussion in sport). Annual guest lecture 1990, London Sports Medicine Institute.
  149. The sports medicine approach to occupational low back pain.
  150. Potentially fatal asthma and syncope. A new variant of Munchausen's syndrome in sports medicine.
  151. Education in Sports Medicine: A resident perspective.
  152. Sports medicine in Thailand.
  153. A National Sports Medicine Centre-soon.
  154. Establishing a pattern for sports medicine centres in Scotland.
  155. International Federation of Sports Medicine: physical exercise--an important factor for health.
  156. History of sports medicine in The Netherlands.
  157. Sports medicine in the Federal Republic of Germany.
  158. Eye injuries and eye protection in sports. A position statement from the International Federation of Sports Medicine (F.I.M.S.).
  159. British Journal of Sports Medicine--historical development.
  160. A sports medicine clinic in the community.
  161. Sports medicine: does the family physician need to acquire new knowledge and skills?
  162. A brief history of sports medicine in Canada: the last twenty years.
  163. Postgraduate degree in sports medicine in Finland.
  164. Sports medicine.
  165. Physical medicine and rehabilitation: wheelchair sports medicine.
  166. Physical medicine and rehabilitation: sports medicine-muscular strain.
  167. Beijing to Hong Kong super-marathon--sports medicine research.
  168. A personal review of the XXII World Congress on Sports Medicine, Vienna, 1982.
  169. Why not sports medicine in general practice?
  170. General and family practice-epitomes of progress: sports medicine-objectives of the preparticipation evaluation.
  171. Sports medicine as part of family practice.
  172. Sports medicine-health care information-supply and demand.
  173. Sports medicine: specialized care for the athlete in everyone.
  174. The contribution of clinical psychology to sports medicine.
  175. Administrative issues in the management of a sports medicine program.
  176. The role of orthopaedic surgery in sports medicine.
  177. Ethics in sports medicine--some medico-legal considerations.
  178. Ethics in sports medicine--the sports physician.
  179. The Adolphe Abrahams Memorial Lecture. Sports medicine in crisis.
  180. Proceedings of the Sports Medicine Symposium at Exeter University-September 1979.
  181. Riposte! Health professions in sports medicine.
  182. A physiotherapist's comments on sports medicine services.
  183. The nurse and sports medicine.
  184. Neglect of sports medicine.
  185. The development of sports medicine in nova scotia.
  186. Sports medicine and the student.
  187. The ancient Greek origins of sports medicine.
  188. Sports medicine is a discipline that has a lot of growing to do.
  189. Proceedings: Symposium on the future of sports medicine in Britain. Answering sport's needs-2.
  190. Proceedings: Symposium on the future of sports medicine in Britain. Answering sport's needs. Foreign precedents.
  191. Proceedings: Symposium on the future of sports medicine in Britain. Consultant training.
  192. Proceedings: Symposium on the future of sports medicine in Britain. The new diploma in medical rehabilitation.
  193. Proceedings: Symposium on the future of sports medicine in Britain. Some academic aspects.
  194. Proceedings: Symposium on the future of sports medicine in Britain. Sports problems.
  195. Proceedings: symposium on the future of sports medicine in Britain. Sports problems. The future of sports medicine.
  196. Letter: Dimensions of sports medicine.
  197. Dimensions of sports medicine.
  198. Letter: Dimensions of sports medicine.
  199. The dimensions of sports medicine.
  200. New perspectives in sports medicine.

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21 February 2012

Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation - PNF Ppt and Published articles



PNF - Propriocpetive neuromuscular facilitation is exercise based on the principles of functional human anatomy and neurophysiology

Muscle Strength  and Endurance
http://users.rowan.edu/

Proprioceptive  Neuromuscular Facilitation When  and Why?
PNFstretch.ppt

Warm-Up  and Stretching
by Ian  Jeffreys, MS; CSCS, NSCA-CPT
warmup.09.ppt

Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation
PNF patterns.ppt

Restoring  Range of Motion and Improving Flexibility Importance  of Flexibility
Improving Flexibility.ppt

Training  and Conditioning Techniques
http://www.iwu.edu/~bkauth/firstaid/326-2.ppt

Principles  of Flexibility
Flexibility.ppt

Lecture Notes in pdf format

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31 October 2010

The Athlete’s Knee



The Athlete’s Knee
Presentation by:
John R. (Trey) Green, III, MD
University of Washington
Sports Medicine Clinic
206-543-1552

Anterior Knee Anatomy
* Superficial fascia
* Quadriceps muscle group
* Patella
* Synovium / plicae
* Bursae

Anterior Knee Anatomy
* Quadriceps muscle group
o Rectus femoris
o Vastus medialis
o Vastus lateralis
o Vastus intermedius

Quadriceps Muscle Group
* Vastus medialis
o Larger, and more distal insertion than vastus lateralis
o Oblique distal fibers (VMO)

Patella Articular Surface

* Thickest articular cartilage in the body (5mm)
* 25% non articular (inferior pole)

Anterior Knee Anatomy

* Bursae
o Occur to assist tissue gliding
o Variable location

Patellofemoral Biomechanics

* Patella function
o Act as a fulcrum to increase the lever arm of the quadriceps muscle

Resultant Force on the Patella

* Compression
* 2-3 x body weight
* Maximum force at 70-80 degrees of flexion

Q Angle

* Angle between the quadriceps tendon and patella tendon in full extension

Anterior Knee Pain History
* Pain
* Instability
* Catching
* Crepitation
* Weakness
* Swelling

Physical Examination

* Gait

Physical Examination

* Limb length

Physical Examination
* Compartment assessment (crepitation)
* Observation
Effusion
Prepatellar Bursal Fluid
* Range of Motion (ROM)
* Anterior knee
* Patellar position
* Patellar tracking
* Muscle tone/bulk
* Thigh circumference
* Sitting
* Lying
* Hip abductor strength
* Prone quadriceps tightness

Radiologic Examination
Rosenberg View
Merchant View
Measuring Merchant’sView
Anterior Knee Pain Treatment
* Rehab with therapist
Anterior Knee Pain Treatment
* Refer to Orthopaedist

Assessment of Meniscus, Ligament and Articular Cartilage Injuries
* Most require orthopaedic consultation
History
Pain Location
Meniscus Tears
* Meniscus tears are common
* Rapid flexion with rotation is most common mechanism
* A history of mechanical symptoms and joint line pain and tenderness suggests meniscal tear
Meniscus Tear Types
Meniscus Tears
* Arthroscopy is the gold standard for diagnosis and treatment
* Basic principles of meniscus surgery are:
o Conserve meniscal tissue
o Remove abnormal tissue
o Prevent further tear propagation
o Repair when possible
Articular Cartilage Injury
* Limited intrinsic repair capability
* Likely to eventually progress to arthrosis
* History of pain with recurrent effusions may indicate cartilage lesion
Articular CartilageTreatment Options
Medial Collateral Ligament
Beware Co-existing ACL or PCL Injury
Lateral Sided Ligament Injury
ACL Tear
PCL Tears
Knee Physical Exam
Physical Examination
Collateral Ligament Testing

The Athlete’s Knee.ppt

Read more...
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