I've worked in sports medicine for nearly 10 years and treated athletes at the highest level there is.
I've boiled most of what I've learned into 15 concepts of rehab that will fix any injury
These are what I use daily to fix athletes of all sports and any injury
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How much better is Education and Exercise for treating Gluteal Tendinopathy than corticosteroid or a wait-and-see approach?
This #MediationAnalysis assesses the differences between approaches at 1-year
Read it now, here 👉 https://t.co/qdCPK7RyMv
#yourJOSPT#Tendons#Glutes
More evidence that older adults are not at risk from cervical manipulation...In Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older who received cervical spinal manipulation, the risk of cervical artery dissection is no greater than that among control groups. https://t.co/nx44BQ1hc8
Here is a simple bit of phrasing I use around back pain
I feel this reflects the concerns people often have, whilst trying not to invalidate the experience
Check out this paper on key concerns in LBP
https://t.co/SEs9ReaSRb
🤯90% of ACL ruptures healed WITHOUT surgery🤯
These are outstanding preliminary results from the 12 week Cross Brace Method Trial from Australia!!!
This could be a game changer for ACL management! 😍
Thanks @mickwhughes for sharing!
I know I’m a numpty but when did Physios switch to“we don’t need a diagnosis to treat effectively”mantra?
What is the point of receiving a history & doing any sort of examination with intent, if you do not come to a diagnostic conclusion?
I honestly think we are losing the plot
@PTPintcast Primary Care. Not enough physicians in PC. PTs need to fill a role similar to how we do in the military; as frontline neuromusculoskeletal experts.
Hot off the press: Injury prevention programs that include plyometric exercises reduce the incidence of anterior cruciate ligament injury: a systematic review of cluster randomised trials
https://t.co/BmmAQqPOtC
@jawebsterjr@FederalPT Hmmm, there’s lots of good stuff out there. I’ve referenced this before: https://t.co/YdiYxdfSRr Anything in particular you’re interested in? Nothing gets me going in the morning like nomograms!
@BridgetNolanPT It’s important to care, but also learn from mistakes or missed opportunities. What separates the wheat from the chaff is maximizing success with the greatest number of possible patients. Next is knowing who to get the ones you couldn’t help to.
One of the most common consults we see in neurosurgery is the 'cauda equina syndrome (CES) rule-out.' CES can be diagnostically challenging & panic-inducing due to its highly variable presentation & grave consequences if missed.
How to evaluate suspected CES: a thread 🧵
(1/9)
I have been pondering on the Sacroiliac Joint and some clinicians fascination with it. I think that it is the source of more “evidence based ostriches” than any other joint.
Yes a brief thread
The SI joint and pelvis are not a “pubics cube” we do need to stop the madness.
There are plenty of ways to waste time online.
But, we can be learning from world-class teachers for free.
Here are 7 masterclasses on all things osteoarthritis:
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Protective effects of physical activity in colon cancer and underlying mechanisms: a review of epidemiological and biological evidence
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https://t.co/MKjwRRez6B