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Assessment of Injuries Lecture 6
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Assessment with a sports related injury the athletic therapist is expected to evaluate the situation, assess the extent and seriousness of the injury and determine the necessary next step ie. treatment, referral to physician, hospital etc
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Assessing an Injury History, Observation, Range of motion, Special tests and Palpation’s
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History history taking requires practice and patience and involves asking lots of questions the therapist must listen and establish a rapport with the athlete a complete history includes primary complaint, mechanism of injury, extent of pain, disability due to the injury, pervious injuries and family history
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Observation is a visual analysis of the overall appearance, symmetry, motor function, posture and gait of the individual often the therapist will see the injury happen, however many times they will not in observation the therapist will note the individuals willingness to move, ability to move, did they walk in, crutches etc
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here a posture assessment may be performed inspect the injury site deformities, discoloration, swelling, scars,
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Range of Motion
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I) Active Range of Motion shows their ability and willingness to move is joint motion performed voluntarily by the individual determines possible damage to contractile tissue measures muscle strength
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II) Passive range of motion body part is move with no assistance from the injured individual distinguishes injury to noncontractile tissue (bone, ligament, bursae)
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III) Resisted movement outside resistance is added to the movement isometric contraction assess muscle strength
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Special Tests 1) Stress tests each body segment has a series of special tests to assess joint function and integrity test ligaments, intra-articular structures, impingement’s and joint capsule stability
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1) Neurologic testing nerve roots – named by where they depart the spinal column each nerve root supplies nerve impulses to a series of muscles and an area of skin myotome – a group of muscles innervated by a single nerve root dermatome – a region of skin supplied by a single nerve root
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3) reflex testing exaggerated, distorted or absent reflexes indicate degeneration or injury to the nervous system most familiar – patella reflex or knee jerk (L3)
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Palpation bilateral palpation of paired anatomical structure can help to detect temperature changes, swelling, point tenderness, crepitus, muscle spasm, pulses and sensations palpate painful area last, start on uninjured side and compare
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