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Suicide, sport and medicine

British Journal of Sports Medicine, 2012
Dave Duerson (American football), Sammy Wanjiru (athletics), Hideki Irabu (baseball), Peter Roebuck (cricket), Derek Boogaard, Rick Rypien and Wade Belak (ice hockey), Jeret Peterson (freestyle skiing), Gary Speed (soccer). The list of suicides in sport in 2011 is extensive, and while a death by suicide is always tragic, in the case of sport it seems ...
Dominic, Malcolm, Andrea, Scott
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Sports Medicine

Pediatrics In Review, 1993
This article discusses several topics that are rather loosely related, including prevention of injury, disqualifying conditions, heat illness, proper nutrition in sports that have weight categories, anabolic steroids, and treatment of contusions. All but the last fit the theme of injury prevention.
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Reticulocytes in Sports Medicine

Sports Medicine, 2008
Reticulocytes are the transitional cells from erythroblasts to mature erythrocytes. Reticulocytes are present in blood for a period of 1-4 days and can be recognized by staining with supravital dyes, such as new methylene blue, or fluorescent markers, which couple residual nucleic acid molecules, a hallmark of the immature forms of erythrocytes ...
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Wheelchair sports medicine

The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 1984
Wheelchair sports medicine involves the assessment of recreational and competitive sport capacities of physically disabled individuals, medical classification to allow fair competition among athletes with various types and degrees of disability, the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of athletic injuries, and research into the biomechanics and ...
J G, Madorsky, K A, Curtis
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SPORTS MEDICINE

Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics, 1985
In brief: The subspecialty of sports medicine is not reserved for the physician, who is just one member of the team. Sports scientists, psychologists, dentists, optometrists, athletic trainers, physical therapists, orthotists and prosthetists, podiatrists, nutritionists, and others play an integral part on the sports medicine team. However, the primary
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Ethics in Sports Medicine

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 2000
Sports medicine physicians are not exempt from the ethical challenges of medical practice merely because their patients are robust and healthy. In fact, precisely because the patients with sports injuries are so healthy the moral issues remain subtle. Many ethical issues in sports medicine come about because the traditional relationship between doctor ...
J, Bernstein, C, Perlis, A R, Bartolozzi
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Sports Medicine: A Focus on Health

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1999
As part of a detailed survey, we recently asked our physician readers to define sports medicine. No single definition stood out. Words and phrases used included (among many others): art and science of medicine applied to physical activity, care of athletes, disease prevention and treatment, emphasis on function, enhancing fitness, exercise, health ...
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Misdiagnosis in Sports Medicine

Current Sports Medicine Reports, 2002
With the increase in participation sports comes an increased prevalence of sports injuries. Injuries of the shoulder and knee present the sports medicine practitioner with the challenge of obtaining a proper diagnosis and providing appropriate treatment. Commonly misdiagnosed injuries to the shoulder and knee include anterior cruciate ligament injuries,
Paul C, Murphy, Suzanne, Knight
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Ultrasound in sports medicine

Radiologic Clinics of North America, 2002
Musculoskeletal sonography has been shown to be effective for many applications related to sports medicine. Some advantages of sonography over MR imaging include portability, accessibility, high resolution, and relative lower cost. More importantly, dynamic imaging under sonography visualization allows diagnoses that cannot be made with routine MR ...
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Cryotherapy in sports medicine

Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, 1996
The use of cryotherapy, i.e. the application of cold for the treatment of injury or disease, is widespread in sports medicine today. It is an established method when treating acute soft tissue injuries, but there is a discrepancy between the scientific basis for cryotherapy and clinical studies.
C, Swenson, L, Swärd, J, Karlsson
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