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Choosing a Strength Training Program for Kids
Authors:Holly J. Benjamin  Kimberly M. Glow  Patricia D. Mees
Affiliation:1. Dr Benjamin is a sports medicine physician in the departments of pediatrics and orthopedic surgery and rehabilitation medicine at the University of Chicago.;2. Dr Glow is a fellow in adolescent and young adult medicine at Rush-Presbyterian-St Luke's Medical Center in Chicago.;3. Ms Mees is an assistant editor with The Physician and Sportsmedicine.
Abstract:Calcific tendinitis of the shoulder causes pain that is not activity dependent and often severe. Because its cause is uncertain and because calcium deposits can also be asymptomatic, diagnosis is made primarily by history and physical examination in conjunction with radiographs. Tenderness over the greater tuberosity generally differentiates calcific tendinitis from other conditions. For both the subacute and acute forms, needling, or using a hypodermic needle to disrupt the deposits, followed by corticosteroid injection into the subacromial space, can be diagnostic and therapeutic. If limitation of motion and weakness persist after this treatment, impingement syndrome or adhesive capsulitis may be the cause.
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