共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 125 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
《Sport》2014,30(2):98-105
Soccer is a physically demanding and highly competitive sport with a high rate of injuries. The foot and the ankle joint are especially at danger. Risk factors of foot and ankle injuries in soccer players are: lack of structured warm up training, neuromuscular deficits, inadequate training, chronic fatigue, previous injuries, foul play, artificial turf, and others. While the most common injury is the ankle sprain, complex injuries like fractures, ligament tears, and cartilage damage can occur. Such injuries have a high impact on the player's career. Professional soccer players are pressured to meet the expectations of the clubs, and the public. While most injuries to the foot and ankle joint can be treated conservatively, complex injuries require anatomic reconstruction to allow for quick rehabilitation and return to play earliest possible. 相似文献
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
For specific indications, ultrasound is an inexpensive and efficient alternative to magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the ankle and foot. In addition to the tendons, the anterior joint, retrocalcaneal bursa, ligaments, plantar fascia, and soft tissues can be imaged with ultrasound. Tenosynovitis, tendon tears and tendinosis, joint effusions, intra-articular loose bodies, ganglion cysts, plantar fasciitis, and Morton neuromas can be demonstrated with ultrasound. In most cases, a focused ankle or foot ultrasound can be performed more rapidly and efficiently than magnetic resonance imaging. Direct correlation with the site of pain and rapid comparison with the asymptomatic ankle are possible with this modality. As pressure for cost containment continues, demand for ultrasound of the ankle and foot will likely increase. 相似文献
10.
11.
12.
For patients with disabling foot or ankle pain, medical or surgical treatment decisions can be difficult to make when multiple joints show changes of osteoarthritis or if the patient's pain clinically is related to a joint or tendon that is normal by other imaging studies. For these patients, injection of anesthetic, steroid, or both, into joints or tendon sheaths of the foot and ankle provides important diagnostic information and therapeutic relief. Diagnostic injections may show that the joints noted by other imaging studies have osteoarthritis that are not responsible for a patient's pain or that a normal joint is responsible. When multiple joints show changes of arthritis, anesthetic injections can help decide which and how many joints could benefit from surgical arthrodesis. Relief of pain after anesthetic joint injection correlates well with postoperative pain relief subsequent to arthrodesis. This article discusses the indications and the contraindications for performing diagnostic and therapeutic joint injections, and also presents the techniques for performing these studies. 相似文献
13.
David B. Thordarson 《The Physician and sportsmedicine》2013,41(10):58-64
Midfoot and forefoot fractures commonly seen in a primary care practice include navicular and metatarsal stress fracture, tarsometatarsal fracture-dislocation, and acute fracture of the metatarsals, sesamoid, great toe, or lesser toes. A careful history to determine the mechanism of injury and a methodical physical exam to detect sites of tenderness are essential. X-rays are usually required, but stress fractures may warrant bone scans. Compared with ankle and hindfoot fractures, sports-related midfoot and forefoot fractures are more often treated conservatively with casting or wooden shoes. Tarsometatarsal disruption and Jones fractures are more likely to require surgery. 相似文献
14.
15.
16.
17.
《Radiologic clinics of North America》2023,61(2):319-344
18.
19.