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Medical Articles

Hypoxic Fibrous Adhesion Production: Chemical Pathway and Clinical Importance

This article written by Dr. William Brady, an ART provider, details the importance and effects of soft tissue injuries and adhesion formation following such injuries.

Hypoxic Fibrous Adhesion Production:  Chemical Pathway and Clinical Importance

 

What is the Difference Between a Herniated, Bulging, or Degenerated Disc

Lumbar_HNP

Physicians need reliable terms that describe normal and pathological conditions of lumbar discs.  Terms that can be interpreted accurately,consistently, and with reliable precision are particularly important for communicating impressions gained from imaging  for clinical diagnostic and therapeutic decision making.  The following paper focuses on this issue and has become the standard in the field of spine medicine.

Nomenclature and Classification of Lumbar Disc Pathology:  Recommendations of the Combined Task Forces of the North American Spine Society, American Society of Spine Radiology, and American Society of Neuroradiology

Published in Spine Volume 26(5)  1 March 2001

View Pictures Detailing Types of Disc Pathology

   

The Pathology & Healing of Tendinosis

By Warren Hammer, MS, DC, DABCO

This article was origionally published in Dynamic Chiropractic in the April 22, 2002  Vol. 20, Issue 9

Tendonitis is a misnomer. With microtraumatic overuse injury, we are dealing most of the time with tendinosis. While the stages of pathology of the macrotraumatic inflammatory response are well-known, the tissue pathology of tendinosis needs more clarity.

In conditions such as tennis elbow, and overuse injuries in general, there is a fibroblastic and vascular response (tendinosis), rather than an immune blood-cell inflammatory response.1 In a normal tendon, collagen fibrils are embedded in a matrix of proteoglycans, glycosaminoglycans and water, surrounded by a loose connective tissue containing visceral and parietal layers. Vascularized tendons (de Quervain, etc.) are surrounded by epitenon with capillaries and penetrating vessels.2

   

Tendinitis, Tendinosis- New Terminology

By Warren Hammer, MS, DC, DABCO

This article origionally was published in Dynamic Chiropractic November 6, 1992  Vol. 10, Issue 23

It is often assumed that if there is pain, there must be inflammation. But on second thought, we realize that a myofascial trigger point or even fibrositis (which implies inflammation) may have a neurogenic origin and not be inflamed.

   

Should You Get a Flu Shot

 

Before You Do, Make Sure You Understand the Potential Risks

This article is not intended to encourage you to vaccinate or not to vaccinate against the flu, but rather to provide you with some basic information so you can decide for yourself.

Full Article Here in PDF

   

Little League Elbow Syndrome

 baseball3

The following article was written by Holly J Benjamin, MD, FACSM, FAAP and Igor Boyarsky, DO, was published on medscape on Jan 5, 2009 and is listed here as a reference detailing Little League Elbow.

   

Injury: Inflammation and Body Repair

The normal response to injury in the body is inflammation and the formation of scar tissue.  The following PDF reviews the stages of healing from acute injury through recovery.

Print Handout

   

The Sacroiliac Joint: A Comprehensive Review

Sacroiliac Joint Pain: A Comprehensive Review of Anatomy, Diagnosis, and Treatment

Steven P. Cohen, MD

   

Muscle Hyperplasia and Exercise

Current Research on Muscle Hyperplasia and Exercise

Each skeletal muscle fiber is a syncytium and develops by the fusion of many myoblasts. Myoblasts proliferate extensively, but once they have fused, they can no longer divide. Fusion generally follows the onset of myoblast differentiation, in which many genes encoding muscle-specific proteins are switched on coordinately. Some myoblasts persist in a quiescent state as satellite cells in adult muscle; when a muscle is damaged, these cells are reactivated to proliferate and to fuse to replace the muscle cells that have been lost. Muscle bulk is regulated homeostatically by a negative-feedback mechanism, in which existing muscle secretes myostatin, which inhibits further muscle growth

   

Musculoskeletal Issues and ART

The soft tissues of the body(muscles, tendons, and ligaments) control the movement of the joints.  Muscle imbalance due to contracted soft tissues that results from repetitive use or minor sports related trauma can accumulate over months and years.  Active Release Techniques® is a medically patented technique for soft tissue management that can detect and alleviate adhesions and scar tissue that is restricting muscle and joint function.  When proper soft tissue treatment is paired correctly with corrective rehabilitative exercise, many of the overuse chronic and nagging injuries can be completely resolved and allow a full return to activity and sport.

   

The Female Athlete Tetrad

The female athlete triad put forth by the ACSM in 1997 was defined as a triad of disordered eating, amenorrhea, and osteoporosis affecting female athletes.  Research on the female athlete triad for the past decade or so has culminated in an updated definition published by ACSM.  The 2007 ACSM positional stand looks at each disorder as it exists on a continuous spectrum instead of a serious pathologic endpoint.

Read Full Article in PDF

Patient Educational Handout

NOTE:  The Female Athlete Triad has now become the Female Athlete Tetrad.  Medical researchers have added cardiovascular disease after discovering that many women with the other three health issues often have a dysfunction with thier blood vessels, making them more likely to develop cardiovascular diseases.

For more Info go to http://www.femaleathletetriad.org/

 

   

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Thursday, February 23, 2012
   
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