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Understanding the Mechanics of Injury

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Controlling the level of imposed stress is important in ... Close up of trabecula. OP effect on Diaphysis. Why is OP a problem? Decrease in bone strength ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Understanding the Mechanics of Injury


1
Chapter 15
  • Understanding the Mechanics of Injury

2
Stress
  • Controlling the level of imposed stress is
    important in training various tissues and
    avoiding injury.

3
Stress Continuum (Fig 15.3, 343)
  • Distress (Causes malfunction)
  • Pathologic underload zone
  • Pathologic overload zone
  • Eustress (Causes positive adaptation)
  • Physiologic loading zone
  • Physiologic overload (training) zone

4
Relationship of magnitude and frequency to type
of injury (Fig 15.5)
  • Acute loading
  • a single stress of sufficient magnitude to cause
    injury to a biological tissue. (Macrotrauma)
  • Repetitive loading
  • repeated application of a subacute stress that is
    usually of low magnitude (Microtrauma)

5
Injury Acute Definition (CDC)
Injury is defined as physical damage to an
individual that occurs over a short period of
time as a result of acute exposure to one of the
forms of physical energy in the environment, or
to chemical agents, or the acute lack of oxygen.
Excluded from this definition of injury are
cumulative trauma disorders, musculoskeletal
disorders of the back not caused by acute trauma,
and effects of repeated exposure to chemical or
physical agents. The three phases of injury
control are defined as prevention, acute care,
and rehabilitation.
6
Three Major Categories of Injury
Intentional injuries result from interpersonal or
self-inflicted violence, and include homicide,
assaults, suicide and suicide attempts, child
abuse and neglect (includes child sexual abuse),
intimate partner violence, elder abuse, and
sexual assault. Unintentional injuries include
those that result from motor vehicle collisions,
falls, fires, poisonings, drownings,
recreational, and sports-related activities.
Occupational injuries occur at the worksite and
include unintentional trauma (for example,
work-related motor-vehicle injuries, drownings,
and electrocutions), and intentional injuries in
the workplace.
7
Williams model of overuse injury (1993)
8
Williams model of overuse injury (1993)
9
Williams model of overuse injury (1993)
Decrease Training Effort
10
Preventing overuse injury in young pitchers
controversy
Split finger fastball vs Change up? Pain vs
soreness? 75 pitch limit vs Complete
Game? Science vs Tradition
Click on picture to read more
11
Fractures pain, deformation, disability
12
Types of Fractures
  • Simple - no break in skin.
  • Compound - protrusion through the skin.
  • Comminuted - fragmentation of the bone.
  • Avulsions - bone chip pulled away
  • Spiral - twisting break.
  • Impacted - opposite ends compressed together.
  • Stress - repeated low magnitude loading

13
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14
Site of Ankle Avulsion Fracture
15
Avulsion fracture of the patella following
B-PT-B repair of the ispsilateral ACL
16
Comminuted Fracture
Low Energy
High Energy
17
Ankle Trouble
18
Surgical BonePlates
19
Types of Fractures
What is the error?
20
Three Biological Phases to fracture healing
  • Inflammatory Phase
  • 3 to 7 days
  • immobilize the bone
  • activates cells for repair
  • step by step process that is critical to
    successful union

21
Three Biological Phases to fracture healing
  • Inflammatory Phase
  • Reparative Phase (bony union)
  • about one month
  • callus formation
  • provisional gt bony

22
Three Biological Phases to fracture healing
  • Inflammatory Phase
  • Reparative Phase (bony union)
  • Remodelling Phase
  • restoration of original contour

23
Changes in ACL surgery
  • Anterior Cruciate Ligament
  • Prevents anterior translation of tibia relative
    to the femur
  • 3rd degree sprain of ACL
  • Ruptured ACL
  • Torn ACL
  • Early 1980s
  • B-PT-B surgery
  • Patella
  • Patellar tendon (ligament)
  • Tibia Tuberosity

24
Changes in ACL surgery
  • Now performed arthroscopically
  • May be self-donor, or cadaver
  • Bone plugs inserted into tibia and femur
  • Initial screw for stability, let nature do the
    rest
  • Wolffs Law

25
Osteoporosis slide presentation(Aging(?), OA and
OP)
26
Click on logo for more information
World Health Organization
27
The mechanical basis ofOsteoarthritis(Osteoarthr
osis)
28
Osteoarthritis Slide Show
29
Osteoarthritis Slide Show
Click on the info button to read on NSAIDs
30
Role of Meniscii
31
Meniscii effect on mechanical stress
32
OA diseased joint
33
Progression of joint degeneration
34
Knee OA
35
Arthritic Hip
36
Arthritis in the hands
37
OA and Aging
  • Afflicts more persons than cardiovascular disease
  • 37 million Americans have OA
  • 5 at age 20
  • 85 at age 65

Source thehealthpages.com
38
And, of greater importance to many people, over
8,000,000 dogs.
Source www.pfizer.com
39
Why is OA a problem?
  • Pain
  • During motion
  • Night pain
  • Limping
  • energy cost
  • Shifts stress other joints
  • Limits ADLs of 35 over age 65
  • Economic Cost
  • Medical
  • Time from work

40
Factors Associated with OA
  • Genetics
  • Aging
  • Gender
  • Body weight
  • Bone density
  • Previous trauma

41
Factors Associated with OA
  • Genetics ?
  • Aging
  • Gender
  • Body weight
  • Bone density
  • Previous trauma

Mechanical Stress
42
OA is NOT an acute disease
  • Few cases develop from an isolated joint trauma
    (secondary OA)

43
2o OA Dr. Browns left (healthy) knee
44
2o OA Dr. Browns right knee
45
OA is NOT an acute disease
  • Few cases develop from an isolated joint trauma
    (secondary OA)
  • Most diagnosed as idiopathic (no identifiable
    cause)
  • Eric Radin OA reflects the cumulative effect of
    pathological load bearing
  • How the body deals with impulsive loading

46
Impulsive Load
A load that reaches a relatively high magnitude
in a short period of time.
  • Contact (impact) forces
  • collisions

47
Transmission Attenuation of Impact Force
(Impulsive Load)
48
Impulsive Load
A load that reaches a relatively high magnitude
in a short period of time.
  • Contact (impact) forces
  • collisions
  • Muscle force
  • bursts of high force

49
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50
Bone Response to Stress
  • Wolff's law (1892)
  • tissue adapts to level of imposed stress
  • increased stress
  • hypertrophy (increase strength)
  • decreased stress
  • atrophy (decrease strength)
  • SHAPE REFLECTS FUNCTION
  • Genetics, Body weight, physical activity, diet,
    lifestyle (see note clippings)

(review the stress continuum)
51
Mechanical model of initiation and progression of
OA
Impulse Loading Trabecular Microfracture Bone
remodeling Resultant Bone Stiffening Increased
stress on articular cartilage Cartilage
Degeneration Functional Incapacitation
52
Mechanical model of initiation and progression of
OA
Impulse Loading Trabecular Microfracture Bone
remodeling Resultant Bone Stiffening Increased
stress on articular cartilage Cartilage
Degeneration Functional Incapacitation
53
Mechanical model of initiation and progression of
OA
Impulse Loading Trabecular Microfracture Bone
remodeling Resultant Bone Stiffening Increased
stress on articular cartilage Cartilage
Degeneration Functional Incapacitation
54
Q-angle
Implications for joint loading?
55
Knee alignment effects on stress patterns
56
Muscle relationship with OAQuadriceps example
Varus alignment Decreased QF efficiency Fatigue
Decreased shock absorption Increased load on
joint Increased risk of joint damage
57
Muscle relationship with OAQuadriceps example
Varus alignment Decreased QF efficiency Fatigue
Decreased shock absorption Increased load on
joint Increased risk of joint damage
Fitness Level (age) Critical ability
58
Pain effects on movement
59
Possible interventions for pain
PAIN
Maintain Activity
Rest
MODIFIED ACTIVITY
  • Modify equipment
  • Modify task
  • Modify environment

60
Major Benefit of Exercise/Activity
  • Improved sense of well-being
  • Control over life
  • Better future health
  • Better sleep
  • Better diet
  • More energy

61
Modify the environment
62
Cane Use
Biomechanical rationale to hold cane in the hand
opposite to the injured side.
63
Lifestyle Factors and the Prevention of
Osteporosis
64
Bone Mineral Density
65
BMD
66
Bone strength depends on integrity of support
structures
67
Healthy Vertebral Body
Note trabecular structure, density of cortical
bone
68
Osteoporotic Vertebral Body
Note loss of trabecular integrity, thinning of
cortical bone
69
Close up of trabecula
70
OP effect on Diaphysis
71
Why is OP a problem?
Decrease in bone strength Increased risk of
fracture (osteoporotic fracture)
72
Osteoporosis and Stress/Strain
73
Costs
74
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75
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76
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77
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78
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79
Treat the Symptoms Deal with it as an aesthetic
problem
80
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81
Total Hip Implants
Acetabular Component
Metal Shell
Polyethylene Liner
Head
Collar
Stem
Osteotomy Line
Femoral Component
82
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83
Traditional Approach to OP Intervene after
the disease becomes symptomatic Treat the
symptoms
84
Prevention not Treatment
85
Osteoporosis is basically an imbalance between
the rates of bone production and bone resorption
86
OP as a balance of Osteoblasts and Osteoclasts
87
Critical factors in development of OP
  • Peak BMD
  • Age of peak BMD
  • Rate of loss of BMD

88
Effect of Peak BMD on osteoporosis
BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
89
Effect of Peak BMD on osteoporosis
Menopause
BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
90
Effect of Peak BMD on osteoporosis
Typical peak BMD
BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
91
Effect of Peak BMD on osteoporosis
BMD
Low peak BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
92
Adolescence
  • Critical years for
  • Developing attitude
  • fitness/lifestyle
  • Increasing BMD

93
Effect of Peak BMD on osteoporosis
High peak BMD
BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
94
Effect of attaining peak BMD at later age
Peak reached at typical age
Peak reached at later age
BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
95
Effect of Peak BMD on osteoporosis
Can the rate of BMD decrease be altered?
BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
96
Avoiding osteoporosis
High peak BMD reached at later age
Reduce loss rate
Typical BMD
BMD
Fracture Threshold
20
50
80
AGE (years)
97
Bone Response to Stress
  • Wolff's law (1892)
  • tissue adapts to level of imposed stress
  • increased stress
  • hypertrophy (increase strength)
  • decreased stress
  • atrophy (decrease strength)
  • SHAPE REFLECTS FUNCTION
  • Genetics, Body weight, physical activity, diet,
    lifestyle (see note clippings)

(review the stress continuum)
98
Measuring BMD
  • Bone sample
  • DEXA scan
  • OsteoGram hand x-ray

99
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100
Recommended Calcium in Diet
101
Effect of Asymmetrical Loading on BMD
102
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103
DEXA (Hologic QDR-4550) was used to perform the
bone scans.
Femoral Neck
Lumbar Spine
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