#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

Fatigue Fracture in the Physiotherapist and Physician Practice


Authors: L. Satrapová;  D. Pánek;  D. Pavlů
Authors‘ workplace: Katedra fyzioterapie UK FTVS, Praha vedoucí katedry doc. PaedDr. D. Pavlů, CSc.
Published in: Rehabil. fyz. Lék., 22, 2015, No. 2, pp. 85-88.
Category: Case Report

Overview

Fatigue fracture (stress fracture) is a relatively common diagnosis occurring predominantly in patients who have sustained physical stress, such as professional athletes or soldiers. For proper treatment is important the correct and early diagnosis, which is in this disease not always entirely clear. From the perspective of physical therapy can promote healing of the organism and long-term care to reduce or eliminate the consequences of the disease. In the first part we would like to present a case report of a patient with an atypical stress fracture - Osgood – Schlatter disease.

Keywords:
stress fracture, Osgood – Schlatter disease, physiotherapy, sports training


Sources

1. BRUKNER, P. et al.: Stress fractures: A review of 180 cases. Journal of Sport Medicine, 6, 1996, 2.

2. BURR, D. et al.: Bone microdamage and skeletal fragility in osteoporotic and stress fractures. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 12, 1997, 1.

3. BURR, D., MILGROM, CH.: Muskuloskeletal fatigue a stress fractures. CRC Press, 2000, ISBN 0849303176.

4. DAFFNER, R., PAVLOV, H.: Stress fractures: Currenct concepts. American Journal of Roentgenology, 1992, 159.

5. DRAGHI, F. et al.: Overload syndromes of the knee in adolescents: Sonographic findings. Journal of Ultrasound, 11, 2008.

6. FREY, S.: Tibial tuberosity fractures in adolescents. Journal of Children Orthopeadics, 2, 2008.

7. GERBINO, P.: Adolescent anterior knee pain. Operative Techniques in Sports Medicine, 14, 2006.

8. HANADA, M. et al.: Relationship between the clinical findings and radiographic severity in Osgood–Schlatter disease. Journal of Sports Medicine, 2012, 3.

9. HONG-MAN, CH., HYUN–JU, CH.: Multiple stress fractures of the lower extremity in healthy young men. Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, 13, 2012, s. 110-111.

10. CHANG, G.: Lower extremity overuse injuries in pediatric athletes: Clinical presentation, imaging, findings and treatment. Clinical Imaging, 37, 2013.

11. LLOPIS, E., PADRÓN, M. :Anterior knee pain. European Journal of Radiology, 62, 2007.

12. PIHLAJAMÄK, H., MATTILA, V., PARVIAINEN, M., KIURU, M., VISURI, T.: Long-term outcome after surgical treatment of unresolved Osgood-Schlatter disease in young men. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 91, 2009, 10, s. 2350-2358.

13. SAILLY, M., WHITELAY, R., JOHNSONN, A.: Doppler ultrasound and tibial tuberosity maturation status predicts pain in adolescent male athletes with Osgood-Schlatter´s disease: A case series with comparison group and clinical interpretation. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 47, 2013, s. 93-97.

14. SANDO, J., MCCAMBRIDGE, T.: Nontraumatic sports injuries to the lower extremit. Clinical Pediatric Emergency Medicine, 14, 4.

15. SOUTHAM, J. et al.: Sacral stress fracture in a professional hockey player. Orthopedics, 32, 2010, 11.

16. WEILE, R., INGRAM, M., WOLMAN, R.: Osgood - Schlatter disease. Britisch Medical Journal, 2011, 343, d4534.

17. YANAGISAWA, S., OSAWA, T., SAITO, K., KOBAYASHI, T., TAJIKA, T., YAMAMOTO, A., IIZUKA, H., TAKAGISHI, K.: Assessment of Osgood-Schlatter disease and the skeletal maturation of the distal attachment of the patellar tendon in preadolescent males. The Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine, 2, 2014, 7, s. 1-4.

Labels
Physiotherapist, university degree Rehabilitation Sports medicine
Login
Forgotten password

Enter the email address that you registered with. We will send you instructions on how to set a new password.

Login

Don‘t have an account?  Create new account

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#