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  • Book
    written by Zoë Hudson, Claire Small.
    Summary: Managing the Injured Athlete is an innovative clinically-focused pocketbook which aims to support the clinician out in the field, helping answer clinical queries and solve problems when there may be nothing else to refer to. It focuses on developing the clinician's clinical reasoning skills, recognizing that patterns of clinical presentation are the key to problem-solving and formulating a diagnosis. As well as covering assessment, treatment and rehabilitation, the experienced authors discuss the clinician's role within a team, athlete confidentiality, travelling with athletes, drugs and doping issues, working in different climates and return to play considerations. Throughout the pocketbook patterns of positive findings are given as a key to indicate how frequently clinicians can expect to come across certain subjective and objective markers for a given condition. Starts from the point of subjective and objective examination - assessment not diagnosis Highlighted evidence points to solid literature supporting the intervention described Clinical Tips and Further Reading Case studies demonstrate principles of injury rehabilitation in practice Handy, durable format small enough to use in the field and for quick reference.

    Contents:
    Chapter 1. Working in sport
    Chapter 2. Assessment and diagnosis of the injured athlete
    Chapter 3. Rehabilitating a player back to sport
    Chapter 4. Returning to play
    Chapter 5. Comprehensive player management
    Glossary.
    Digital Access ScienceDirect 2011
  • Article
    Gall F, Franke F, Husfeldt J.
    Thoraxchir Vask Chir. 1977 Apr;25(2):83-7.
    In 84% of 115 femoro-crural arterial occlusions stage III and IV was present. All operations to revascularisation, including second operations could be performed without lethality. On leaving hospital in 93% the bypass was patent. Two to nine years after the operation in 64% of the venous grafts were good. Only eleven patients have had to subject amputations because of bypass occlusion since reconstruction. Our results prove that the femoro-crural reconstruction in arterial occlusion of the lower leg is superior to lumbar sympathectomy and the conservative treatment.
    Digital Access Access Options