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Rehabilitation Techniques in Athletic Therapy

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Rehabilitation Techniques in Athletic Therapy Tara Sutherland 867-2231 tsutherl_at_stfx.ca SOAP REVIEW (HORSP) S- subjective History taking , MOI , Pain etc O- objective ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rehabilitation Techniques in Athletic Therapy


1
Rehabilitation Techniques in Athletic Therapy
  • Tara Sutherland
  • 867-2231
  • tsutherl_at_stfx.ca

2
SOAP REVIEW (HORSP)
  • S- subjective
  • History taking , MOI , Pain etc
  • O- objective
  • Observing , special tests , palpations
  • A- Assessment
  • Impression as to what is wrong
  • P-Plan
  • Rehabilitation plan

3
Principles
  • Design of Rehab plans
  • Assess needs
  • Develop plan
  • Implement plan
  • Evaluate plan

4
Assess needs
  • Subjective information
  • Objective data
  • List problem areas

5
Develop plan
  • Establish goals
  • Select techniques based on available resources
  • Establish how changes will be documented and
    monitored
  • Implement return to plan /activity criteria

6
Implement Plan
  • Use procedures and techniques that will fulfill
    the plan and meet the goals
  • Incorporate the following into plan
  • Verbal motivation, visualization, imagery etc

7
Evaluate Plan
  • Compare original data with current data at
    frequent intervals
  • Modify goals according to changes in patient
    progress and activity level

8
Principles
  • Knowledge of the inflammatory process is crucial
    in understanding injury rehabilitation
  • Goals of Rehabilitation will be achieved through
    the use of therapeutic exercise to develop ,
    improve , restore/maintain
  • Neuromuscular control
  • ROM and flexibility
  • Muscular strength
  • Postural stability and balance
  • Cardiorespiratory fitness

9
GOAL SETTING GOALS BASED ON STAGES OF HEALING
  • Provide correct immediate first aid and
    management of the injury
  • ? swelling, pain, inflammation
  • Re-establish neuromuscular control
  • Restore ROM
  • Restore and increase muscular strength, endurance
    and power
  • Improve postural stability and balance
  • Maintain (improve) cardio fitness
  • Protect/prevent further injury

10
GOAL SETTING LONG TERM GOALS
  • Invariably to return the athlete to practice and
    or competition as quickly and safely as possible

11
BALANCE BETWEEN HEALING AND RETURN TO PLAY
  • Walking a thin line
  • Walking the tightrope
  • Pushing the envelope
  • REMAIN SAFE WITHIN CONFINES OF HEALING PROCESS

12
Rehab , what we know
  • RECOLLECT PAST LEARNING
  • Physiology and Exercise Physiology
  • Histology
  • Human growth and development
  • Motor Learning
  • Biomechanics and Kinetics
  • Strength and Conditioning
  • Personal Training
  • Sport Psychology

13
What we will cover
14
Inflammatory / Healing Process
  • PHASES OF HEALING
  • Inflammatory Phase
  • 2-4 days
  • Fibroblastic-Repair Phase
  • First few hours post-injury to 4-6 weeks
  • Maturation-Remodeling
  • 3 weeks to several years

15
PATHOMECHANICS
  • Knowledge of NORMAL and ABNORMAL mechanics of
    biomechanics and functional anatomy is crucial
  • Once again you need to know anatomy

16
Kinetic Chain
  • The therapist must understand the kinetic chain
  • If a system within kinetic chain is not working
    efficiently, the other systems are forced to
    adapt and compensate, this can lead to tissue
    overload, decreased performance and predictable
    injury patterns

17
Psychological Aspects
  • Individuals deal with injuries differently
  • Injuries and illnesses produce a wide range of
    emotions
  • Athletes vary in terms of pain threshold,
    cooperation , compliance, competitiveness,
    denial, depression, anger, fear , guilt and the
    ability to adjust to the injury
  • Belief that therapists are 95 psychologist and 5
    clinician

18
Tools
  • Electrical modalities, medications, massage,
    flexibility, strengthening, joint play,
    proprioception, alternative therapies,
    plyometrics, cardiovascular conditioning.

19
PAIN
  • All injuries will experience some kind of pain
  • Severity may help to determine extent of pain,
    however athletes individual pain threshold will
    determine a major component of the pain.
  • PAIN IS REAL

20
PAIN
  • The therapist should address pain levels at each
    therapy session, modalities and medicines will be
    used to help reduce the pain.
  • Pain levels will dictate the rate of progression,
    as pain decreases.. Healing will progress.

21
Re-establish neuromuscular control
  • Re-establish neuromuscular control is a prime
    concern
  • Traditionally, certified athletic therapists have
    used the terms proprioception, strength, and
    functional exercise. Neuromuscular control
    relates to all of these concepts.

22
Restoring ROM
  • Loss of movement can be attributed to a number of
    pathological factors
  • Resistance of Musculotendinous units to stretch
  • Contracture of connective tissue
  • Or combination of two
  • Crucial to restore normal ROM , with out it
    difficult to achieve many other goals of the
    rehab program

23
Restoring ROM
  • Stretching is utilized to increase flexibility
    when Musculotendinous units are involved
  • OR Joint mobilizations are used to increase
    accessory movement with in a joint

24
Restoring Muscular strength , Endurance and Power
  • A major goal in performing strengthening
    exercises is to work through a full pain free
    range of Motion
  • A functional rehab strength program should
    involve exercises in all three planes of motion,
    with concentric and eccentric exercise.

25
Restoring Muscular strength , Endurance and Power
  • Isometric
  • Progressive resistive exercise
  • Isokinetic
  • Plyometric
  • Core
  • Open and closed??

26
Maintain (improve) cardio fitness
  • This stage can be neglected by many
  • Injured athlete miss training time , the cardio
    fitness decreases rapidly
  • Activities must be found to replace this training
    time that they miss.. Alternative can be
    found..what are some of them ??

27
Criteria for Full Recovery
  • Physiological healing constraints
  • Pain Status
  • Swelling
  • ROM
  • Strength
  • Neuromuscular control
  • Cardio fitness
  • Sport specific demands
  • Functional testing
  • Prophylactic strapping and or bracing
  • Responsibility of athlete
  • Predisposition to injury
  • Psychological factors
  • Athlete education

28
FUNCTIONAL TESTS
  • Valid and reliable
  • Easy to apply, cost efficient, minimal time and
    space demands, applicable
  • Unilateral and bilateral function to ensure no
    compensation
  • Normative/pre-injury values exceptionally helpful
  • Limb symmetry
  • Ipsilateral limb/contralateral limb
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