Results 351 to 360 of about 2,072,072 (383)
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SHOULDER INJURIES IN THE ATHLETE

Clinics in Sports Medicine, 1997
Musculoskeletal injuries constantly provide challenges to the team physician, including those to the shoulder. Shoulder injuries are common in athletes, whether as a result of direct contact from a collision or from repetitive overhead motion. This article reviews sports-related injuries to the shoulder, including similarities between sports, clinical ...
M J, Hulstyn, P D, Fadale
openaire   +2 more sources

ELBOW INJURIES IN ATHLETES

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1992
Most elbow injuries carry an excellent prognosis for return to a given sport. Early identification of overuse injuries and joint contractures can deter bone deformities in later life. Early evaluation can deter severe complications such as that of neurovascular injury.
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Nerve Injuries in Athletes

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1988
In brief: Nerve injuries in athletes may be serious and may delay or prevent an athlete's return to his or her sport. Over a two-year period, the authors evaluated the condition of 65 patients who had entrapments of a nerve or nerve root, documented with electromyography. They describe four case histories: Two patients had radial nerve entrapments, one
K, Collins   +3 more
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Hip Injuries in Athletes

Radiologic Clinics of North America, 2010
Hip injuries are common in athletes, and there is an extensive differential diagnosis of potential causes. This article reviews the anatomy of the hip, and discusses the imaging findings of hip pathology in athletes including skeletal, intraarticular, and extra-articular abnormalities.
Donna G, Blankenbaker, Arthur A, De Smet
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THORACOABDOMINAL INJURIES IN THE ATHLETE

Clinics in Sports Medicine, 1997
Although thoracoabdominal injuries are uncommon in the athlete, they can be catastrophic if unrecognized or if diagnosis and treatment are delayed. This article reviews thoracic, intrathoracic, abdominal, and groin injuries in the athlete, and how they can be diagnosed and managed.
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PREVENTION OF INJURY IN ATHLETICS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1956
• During the 1955 football season, nine deaths were recorded throughout the course of play. This alone shows the need for an active program concerning the prevention of athletic injuries. As a prerequisite to such a program, accurate statistics must be obtained to show types of injuries and rate per exposure for all sports.
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Shoulder Injuries in the Athlete

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1984
Most shoulder injuries in the athlete can be managed nonoperatively; prior to any management, however, they require careful evaluation for accurate diagnosis. Once the diagnosis has been made, few of these injuries will actually require surgery and most will obtain an excellent result with full return to function. Several specific shoulder injuries are
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ATHLETIC HEAD INJURIES

Clinics in Sports Medicine, 1997
Recent studies have shown a decrease in mortality from head and neck injuries, especially in American football. This has resulted from rule changes and their enforcement, equipment modification, improved coaching and training techniques, and educational programs for neck injuries. Morbidity data, however, are not as complete, particularly as they apply
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