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Sports Injury Treatment/Management Health Feed

Asked for male, 34 years old from The Nilgiris
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BHMS

Homeopathy Doctor•Hooghly
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If your sports person injury will occur but it is how you dealt with that most important, more your fit less you have chances of injury,
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MBBS, PG - Diploma In Clinical Pathology...read more

General Physician•Sri Ganganagar
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Once the surgery is completed, you might have to stay in the hospital for 3-5 days depending on how well you recover.
14 people found this helpful
Asked for male, 43 years old from Bangalore
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Erasmus Mundus Master in Adapted Physica...read more

Physiotherapist•Chennai
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Resisted terminal knee extension: make a loop with a piece of elastic tubing by tying a knot in both ends. Close the knot in a door at knee height. Step into the loop with your injured leg so the tubing is around the back of your knee. Lift the other foot off the ground and hold onto a chair for balance, if needed. Bend the knee with tubing about 45 degrees. Slowly straighten your leg, keeping your thigh muscle tight as you do this. Repeat 15 times. Do 2 sets of 15. If you need an easier way to ...more
68 people found this helpful
Last Updated: 2 years ago • Featured Quiz
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1103 people found this helpful
Asked for male, 39 years old from Coimbatore
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D.P.T, BPTh/BPT, MD Acupuncture, Advance...read more

Physiotherapist•Hyderabad
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If you have low on cartillage you cannot jog or do cycling but only walk, take proper medicines and calcium to regenerate cartillage.

Knee strengthening exercises everyday and wearing knee support brace will helpfull to avoid increase in pain while walking.
19 people found this helpful
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Asked for female, 47 years old from Tirupati
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BHMS

Homeopathy Doctor•Noida
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I need details of the case.in the meanwhile follow this 1. Take your breakfast every day. Don't skip it. U should eat whatever your mother or grandparent eat in bfast. I mean to say whatever is your traditional food. If punjabi eat paratha, if belongs to south then take idli/ dosa etc.
2. Don't overeat3. Don't take tea empty stomach. Eat something like a banana (if you are not diabetic) or any seasonal fruit or soaked almonds and a glass of plain water first thing in the morning (preferably ...more
218 people found this helpful
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I'm uma, 25 age. I diagnosed with pcl buckling. Please do suggest me what should I do to avoid surgery. Technique sequences pdfs, sag, coronal t2 axials findings ⚫ medial meniscus - there is thinning of medial meniscus with grade ii tear its posterior horn. • lateral meniscus grade ii tear of posterior horn of lateral meniscus. • anterior cruciate ligament - there is complete tear of acl with clumping fibres in intercondylar fossa. • posterior cruciate ligament - buckling of pcl. ⚫ medial collateral ligament - grade ii sprain of mcl. • posture-lateral corner grade I sprain of arcuate ligament. Popliteal muscle - normal -popliteo-fibular ligament - normal -popliteo-fibular ligament complex - normal short & long head of tendons of biceps femoris- normal - menisci-popliteal fascicles - normal, - lateral collateral ligament - grade ii sprain of lcl. • quadriceps tendon and patellar ligament - normal. • patella and patellar cartilage - normal. There is medial tibial-femoral joint space reduction with thinning of cartila muscles around knee - normal. Loose bodies-absent ⚫ contusions noted in posterior cortex of tibia. Mild joint effusion & suprapatellar effusion. Impression: • chronic complete tear of anterior cruciate ligament with clumping of fibres in intercondylar fossa. • grade ii tear of posterior horn of lateral meniscus. Thinning of medial meniscus with grade ii tear of its posterior horn. • grade ii sprain of medial collateral ligament. posture-lateral corner injuries as described. Mild joint effusion & suprapatellar effusion. Suggested clinical correlation and further evaluation.

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Erasmus Mundus Master in Adapted Physica...read more

Physiotherapist•Chennai
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The typical symptoms of a posterior cruciate ligament injury are:
•pain with swelling that occurs steadily and quickly after the injury.
•swelling that makes the knee stiff and may cause a limp.
•difficulty walking.
•the knee feels unstable, like it may "give out"
the posterior cruciate ligament (pcl) is the strongest ligament in the knee. It extends from the top-rear surface of the tibia (bone between the knee and ankle) to the bottom-front surface of the femur (bone that ex...more
50 people found this helpful
Asked for male, 33 years old from Vadodara
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Erasmus Mundus Master in Adapted Physica...read more

Physiotherapist•Chennai
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Knee ligament laxity if you have problem in your legs then it might be due to ligament laxity where your legs would become very weak due to the old ligament injury and that should be treated immediately. Wear knee cap so that you will feel firm while walking or climbing stairs.
This is a general strain and for this you can follow these measures: one keep a pillow right under the knee while sleeping, next is you can keep ice in the painful area for about 5--10 minutes, if pain still persists ...more
40 people found this helpful
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