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Rehabilitation and Reconditioning

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Title: Rehabilitation and Reconditioning


1
Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
chapter 20
Rehabilitationand Reconditioning
David H. Potach, PT MS CSCS,D
NSCA-CPT,DTerry L. Grindstaff, DPT ATC SCS
CSCS,D
2
Chapter Objectives
  • Identify members of the sports medicine team and
    their responsibilities during injury
    rehabilitation and reconditioning.
  • Recognize types of injuries athletes sustain.
  • Comprehend timing and events of tissue healing.
  • Understand goals of each tissue healing phase.
  • Describe the strength and conditioning
    profes-sionals role during injury rehabilitation
    and reconditioning.

3
Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
  • Principles of Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
  • Healing tissues must not be overstressed.
  • The athlete must fulfill specific criteria to
    progress from one phase to another during the
    rehabilitative process.
  • The rehabilitation program must be based on
    current clinical and scientific research.
  • The program must be adaptable to each individual
    and his or her specific requirements and goals.
  • Rehabilitation is a team-oriented process
    requiring all the members of the sports medicine
    team to work together.

4
Section Outline
  • Sports Medicine Team
  • Sports Medicine Team Members
  • Communication

5
Sports Medicine Team
  • Sports Medicine Team Members
  • All members of the sports medicine team are
    responsible for educating coaches and athletes
    regarding injury risks, precautions, and
    treatments.
  • The sports medicine team also works to prevent
    injuries and rehabilitate injured athletes.
  • Several different professionals play important
    roles in assisting an injured athletes return,
    so effective communication is necessary.

6
Key Terms
  • team physician A person that provides med-ical
    care to an organization, school, or team.
  • athletic trainer A person typically responsible
    for the day-to-day physical health of the
    athlete certified by the National Athletic
    Trainers Association Board of Certification as a
    Certified Athletic Trainer (ATC).

7
Key Terms
  • physical therapist A person with a back-ground
    in orthopedics or sports medicine that can play a
    valuable role in reducing pain and restoring
    function to the injured athlete.

8
Key Terms
  • strength and conditioning professional A person
    who plays a valuable role within the sports
    medicine team and is an integral part of the
    rehabilitation and reconditioning process.
    Ideally, this person should be certified by the
    National Strength and Conditioning Association
    (NSCA) Certification Commission as a Certified
    Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS) to
    ensure that he or she has the knowledge and
    background to contribute to the rehabilitation
    process.

9
Key Terms
  • exercise physiologist A person who has a formal
    background in the study of the exercise sciences
    and uses his or her expertise to assist with the
    design of a conditioning program that carefully
    considers the bodys metabolic response to
    exercise and the ways in which that reaction aids
    the healing process.

10
Key Terms
  • nutritionist A person who has a background in
    sport nutrition may provide guidelines regard-ing
    proper food choices to optimize tissue recovery.
    Ideally, the nutritionist has been formally
    trained in food and nutrition sciences and is a
    Registered Dietitian (RD) recognized by the
    American Dietetic Association.

11
Key Terms
  • psychologist or psychiatrist A licensed
    professional with a background in sport may
    provide strategies that help the injured athlete
    better cope with the mental stress accom-panying
    an injury.

12
Sports Medicine Team
  • Communication
  • Strength and conditioning professionals must
    understand the following
  • The diagnosis of the injury
  • Indicationsforms of treatment required
  • Contraindicationsactivity or practice prohibited
    due to the injury
  • They must also inform the rest of the sports
    medicine team about the exercises performed by
    the athlete and the athletes response to the
    exercise.

13
Key Point
  • The sports medicine team includes a large number
    of professionals working together to provide an
    optimal rehabilitation and reconditioning
    environment. The relation-ship among members
    requires thoughtful communication to ensure a
    safe, harmoni-ous climate for the injured athlete.

14
Section Outline
  • Types of Injury

15
Key Point
  • Macrotrauma is a specific, sudden episode of
    overload injury to a tissue, resulting in
    disrupted tissue integrity. Microtrauma results
    from repeated, abnormal stresses applied to a
    tissue by continuous training or training with
    too little recovery time. Each injury requires
    specific rehabilitation strategies to allow
    return to function.

16
Section Outline
  • Tissue Healing
  • Inflammation Phase
  • Repair Phase
  • Remodeling Phase

17
Table 20.1
18
Tissue Healing
  • Inflammation Phase
  • Inflammation is the bodys initial reaction to
    injury and is necessary for normal healing to
    occur.

19
Tissue Healing
  • Repair Phase
  • Once the inflammatory phase has ended, tissue
    repair begins this phase allows the replacement
    of tissues that are no longer viable following
    injury.
  • This phase of tissue healing begins as early as
    two days after injury and may last up to two
    months.

20
Tissue Healing
  • Remodeling Phase
  • The weakened tissue produced during the repair
    phase is strengthened during the remodeling phase
    of healing.
  • Tissue remodeling can last up to two to four
    months after injury.

21
Key Point
  • Following injury, all damaged tissues go through
    the same general phases of heal-ing
    inflammation, repair, and remodeling.
    Characteristic events define each phase and
    separate one phase from another.

22
Section Outline
  • Rehabilitation and Reconditioning Strategies
  • Goals of Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
  • Inflammation Phase
  • Treatment Goal
  • Exercise Strategies
  • Repair Phase
  • Treatment Goal
  • Exercise Strategies
  • Remodeling Phase
  • Treatment Goal
  • Exercise Strategies (continued)

23
Section Outline (continued)
  • Rehabilitation and Reconditioning Strategies
  • Program Design
  • Resistance Training
  • Aerobic and Anaerobic Training

24
Rehabilitation and Reconditioning Strategies
  • Goals of Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
  • Choose a level of loading that neither
    overloadsnor underloads healing tissue.
  • Healing tissue must never be overstressed.
  • But, controlled therapeutic stress is needed to
    optimize collagen matrix formation.
  • The athlete must meet specific objectives
    (established by the physician, athletic trainer,
    physical therapist, or a combination of these) to
    progress from one phase of healing to the next.

25
Loading During Rehabilitation
  • Figure 20.3 (next slide)
  • Loading during rehabilitation should neither
    overload nor underload the athletes healing
    tissue.

26
Figure 20.3
27
Soft Tissue Injury Response
  • Figure 20.4 (next slide)
  • Pain is often used as a guide for tissue health.
  • Pain levels often decrease well before tissue
    healing is complete, which may lead athletes to
    believe they can return to competition before the
    body is actually ready.

28
Figure 20.4
Reprinted, by permission, from Leadbetter, 1992.
29
Rehabilitation and Reconditioning Strategies
  • Goals of Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
  • Inflammation Phase
  • Treatment Goal
  • Preventing disruption of new tissue
  • Exercise Strategies
  • General aerobic and anaerobic training and
    resistance training of uninjured extremities,
    with priority given to maximal protection of the
    injured area

30
Rehabilitation and Reconditioning Strategies
  • Goals of Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
  • Repair Phase
  • Treatment Goal
  • Preventing excessive muscle atrophy and joint
    deterioration in the injured area maintaining
    muscular and cardiovascular function in uninjured
    areas
  • Exercise Strategies (after consultation with team
    physician, athletic trainer, or physical
    therapist)
  • Submaximal isometric exercise
  • Isokinetic exercise
  • Specific exercises to improve neuromuscular
    control

31
Rehabilitation and Reconditioning Strategies
  • Goals of Rehabilitation and Reconditioning
  • Remodeling Phase
  • Treatment Goal
  • Optimizing tissue function by continuing and
    progressing the activities performed during the
    repair phase and adding more advanced,
    sport-specific exercises
  • Exercise Strategies
  • Transition from general exercises to
    sport-specific exercises
  • Specificity of movement speed an important
    variable
  • Velocity-specific strengthening exercises
    (velocities must progress to those used in the
    athletes sport)

32
Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation
  • Figure 20.5 (next two slides)
  • Exercises generally transition from
  • (a, b) isolation exercises to
  • (c, d) multijoint, sport-specific exercises.

33
Figure 20.5a and b
34
Figure 20.5c and d
35
Key Term
  • closed kinetic chain An exercise in whichthe
    terminal joint meets with considerable resistance
    that prohibits or restrains its free motion that
    is, the distal joint segment is stationary.

36
Closed Kinetic Chain Exercises
  • Figure 20.6 (next slide)
  • Closed kinetic chain exercises
  • (a) squat exercise
  • (b) push-up exercise

37
Figure 20.6
38
Key Term
  • open kinetic chain An exercise that uses a
    combination of successively arranged joints in
    which the terminal joint is free to move open
    kinetic chain exercises allow for greater
    concentration on an isolated joint or muscle.

39
Open Kinetic Chain Exercise
  • Figure 20.7 (next slide)
  • Example of an open kinetic chain exerciseleg
    (knee) extension exercise

40
Figure 20.7
41
Kinetic Chain Sprinting
  • Figure 20.8 (next slide)
  • Sprinting offers an example of open and closed
    kinetic chain movements occurring together.

42
Figure 20.8
43
Rehabilitation and Reconditioning Strategies
  • Program Design
  • Resistance Training
  • Several programs have been developed to assist
    with the design of resistance training programs
    for injured athletes, including the De Lorme and
    Oxford programs and Knights DAPRE program.
  • DAPRE allows more manipulation of intensity and
    volume.
  • The demands of the athletes sport determine the
    training goal, which should dictate the design of
    the resistance training program during the
    remodeling phase.

44
Rehabilitation andReconditioning Strategies
  • Program Design
  • Resistance Training
  • Daily adjustable progressive resistive exercise
    (DAPRE) system
  • First set requires 10 repetitions of 50 of the
    estimated 1RM.
  • Second set requires six repetitions of 75 of the
    estimated 1RM.
  • Third set requires the maximum number of
    repetitions of 100 of the estimated 1RM.
  • The number of repetitions performed during the
    third setdetermines the adjustment to be made in
    resistance for the fourth set.

45
Table 20.2
46
Rehabilitation andReconditioning Strategies
  • Program Design
  • Aerobic and Anaerobic Training
  • Although research has yet to determine an optimal
    aerobic training program for use in the
    rehabilitation setting, the program should mimic
    specific sport and metabolic demands.

47
Key Point
  • Designing strength and conditioning programs for
    injured athletes requires the strength and
    conditioning professional to examine the
    rehabilitation and recondi-tioning goals to
    determine what type of program will allow the
    quickest return to competition.
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