Clinical sports medicine /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Brukner, Peter, 1952-
Edition:2nd ed.
Imprint:New York ; London : McGraw-Hill, c2001.
Description:xxix, 918 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
Language:English
Subject:Sports medicine.
Athletic Injuries.
Sports Medicine.
Sports injuries.
Sports medicine.
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/4672176
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Khan, Karim.
ISBN:0074706519
Notes:Previous ed.: 1993.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
committed to retain 20170930 20421213 HathiTrust
Table of Contents:
  • Foreword to the first edition
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • The authors
  • The contributors
  • Part A. Fundamental principles
  • Chapter 1. Sports medicine: the team approach
  • The sports medicine team
  • The challenges of management
  • The coach, the athlete and the clinician
  • Love thy sport
  • Chapter 2. Sports injuries
  • Acute injuries
  • Overuse injuries
  • But it's not that simple...
  • Chapter 3. Pain: where is it coming from?
  • Pain-producing structures
  • Referred pain
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 4. Beware: conditions masquerading as sports injuries
  • How to recognize a condition masquerading as a sports injury
  • Conditions masquerading as sports injuries
  • Chapter 5. Biomechanics of common sporting injuries
  • Correct biomechanics
  • Lower limb biomechanics
  • Biomechanics of walking
  • Biomechanics of running
  • Abnormal lower limb biomechanics
  • Common structural abnormalities
  • Assessment of lower limb biomechanics
  • Correction of biomechanics
  • Upper limb biomechanics
  • Biomechanics of swimming
  • Biomechanics of tennis
  • Biomechanics of other overhead sports
  • Biomechanics of cycling
  • Chapter 6. Principles of injury prevention
  • Warm-up
  • Stretching
  • Taping and bracing
  • Protective equipment
  • Suitable equipment
  • Appropriate surfaces
  • Appropriate training
  • Adequate recovery
  • Psychology and injury prevention
  • Nutrition and injury prevention
  • Chapter 7. Principles of diagnosis
  • Making a diagnosis
  • History
  • Examination
  • Investigations
  • Radiological investigation
  • The diagnosis
  • Chapter 8. Principles of treatment
  • Initial treatment
  • To mobilize or immobilize?
  • Therapeutic drugs
  • Heat and cold
  • Electrotherapeutic modalities
  • Manual therapy
  • Acupuncture
  • Dry needling
  • Hyperbaric oxygen
  • Extracorporeal shock wave therapy
  • Surgery
  • Chapter 9. Principles of rehabilitation
  • The rehabilitation program
  • Muscle conditioning
  • Flexibility
  • Proprioception
  • Functional exercises
  • Sport skills
  • Correction of biomechanical abnormalities
  • Cardiovascular fitness
  • Hydrotherapy
  • Progression of rehabilitation
  • Stages of rehabilitation
  • Monitoring the rehabilitation program
  • Psychology and rehabilitation of injury
  • Conclusion
  • Part B. Regional problems
  • Chapter 10. Minor head injury in sport
  • Applied pathophysiology
  • Grading of concussion
  • Complications of concussion
  • Management of the concussed athlete
  • Post-concussion syndrome
  • Recurrent episodes of concussion
  • Prevention of concussion
  • Chapter 11. Headache
  • Clinical approach to the patient with headache
  • Vascular headaches
  • Cervical headache
  • Exercise-related causes of headache
  • Chapter 12. Facial injuries
  • Functional anatomy
  • Soft tissue injuries
  • Nose
  • Ear
  • Eye
  • Teeth
  • Fractures of facial bones
  • Prevention of facial injuries
  • Chapter 13. Neck pain
  • Clinical perspective
  • Treatment of the athlete with neck pain
  • Neck pain syndromes
  • Chapter 14. Shoulder pain
  • Functional anatomy
  • Clinical perspective
  • Impingement
  • Rotator cuff injuries
  • Glenoid labrum injuries
  • Dislocation of the glenohumeral joint
  • Shoulder instability
  • Fracture of the clavicle
  • Acromioclavicular joint injuries
  • Referred pain
  • Less common causes of shoulder pain
  • Guidelines for shoulder rehabilitation
  • Putting it all together: specific rehabilitation protocols
  • Chapter 15. Elbow and forearm pain
  • Lateral elbow pain
  • Medial elbow pain
  • Posterior elbow pain
  • Acute elbow injuries
  • Forearm pain
  • Chapter 16. Wrist and hand pain
  • Acute injuries to the wrist
  • Wrist pain of gradual onset
  • Hand and finger injuries
  • Chapter 17. Thoracic and chest pain
  • Thoracic pain
  • Chest pain
  • Chapter 18. Low back pain
  • Clinical perspective
  • Severe low back pain
  • Mild to moderate low back pain
  • Acute nerve root compression
  • Stress fracture of the pars interarticularis
  • Spondylolisthesis
  • Lumbar hypermobility
  • Sacroiliac inflammation
  • Rehabilitation following low back pain
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 19. Buttock pain
  • Clinical approach
  • Referred pain from the lumbar spine
  • Sacroiliac joint disorders
  • Hamstring origin tendinopathy
  • Ischiogluteal bursitis
  • Myofascial pain
  • Less common causes
  • Conditions not to be missed
  • Chapter 20. Hip and groin pain
  • Clinical approach
  • Adductor muscle strains
  • Osteitis pubis
  • Adductor tendinopathy
  • Obturator neuropathy
  • Trochanteric bursitis
  • Less common causes
  • Chapter 21. Anterior thigh pain
  • Clinical approach
  • Quadriceps contusion
  • Myositis ossificans
  • Quadriceps muscle strain
  • Differentiating between a mild quadriceps strain and a quadriceps contusion
  • Less common causes
  • Chapter 22. Posterior thigh pain
  • Clinical perspective
  • Hamstring muscle strains
  • Referred pain to posterior thigh
  • Less common causes
  • Chapter 23. Acute knee injuries
  • Functional anatomy
  • Clinical perspective
  • Meniscal injuries
  • Medial collateral ligament injury
  • Anterior cruciate ligament tears
  • Posterior cruciate ligament tear
  • Lateral collateral ligament tears
  • Articular cartilage damage
  • Acute patellar trauma
  • Less common causes
  • Chronic instability
  • Chapter 24. Anterior knee pain
  • Clinical approach
  • Patellofemoral syndrome
  • Patellofemoral instability
  • Fat pad irritation/impingement
  • Patellar tendinopathy
  • Partial tears: acute versus chronic
  • Less common causes
  • Chapter 25. Lateral, medial and posterior knee pain
  • Lateral knee pain
  • Medial knee pain
  • Posterior knee pain
  • Chapter 26. Shin pain
  • Clinical perspective
  • Stress fracture of the tibia
  • Inflammatory shin pain
  • Compartment syndromes
  • Stress fracture of the fibula
  • Less common causes
  • Acute bony injuries
  • Chapter 27. Calf pain
  • Clinical perspective
  • Gastrocnemius muscle strains
  • Soleus muscle strains
  • Claudicant-type calf pain
  • Conditions not to be missed
  • Chapter 28. Pain in the Achilles region
  • Clinical perspective
  • Achilles tendinopathy
  • Early treatment and long-term rehabilitation
  • Achilles tendon rupture (complete)
  • Retrocalcaneal bursitis
  • Less common causes
  • Other causes of pain in the Achilles region
  • Chapter 29. Acute ankle injuries
  • Functional anatomy
  • Clinical perspective
  • Lateral ligament injuries
  • Treatment and rehabilitation of lateral ligament injuries
  • Less common causes
  • Persistent pain after ankle sprain--'the difficult ankle'
  • Chapter 30. Ankle pain
  • Medial ankle pain
  • Lateral ankle pain
  • Anterior ankle pain
  • Chapter 31. Foot pain
  • Rear foot pain
  • Midfoot pain
  • Forefoot pain
  • Chapter 32. The patient with longstanding symptoms
  • What is the diagnosis?
  • Treatment
  • Summary
  • Part C. Enhancing sport performance
  • Chapter 33. Maximizing performance: nutrition
  • Maximizing energy stores
  • Maintaining adequate hydration
  • Achieving ideal body weight for performance
  • Bulking up
  • Ensuring sufficient intake of vitamins and minerals
  • Optimizing the pre-competition meal
  • Supplements
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 34. Maximizing performance: psychology
  • Fundamental psychological skills
  • Psychological techniques to aid relaxation
  • Psychological skills can aid physical preparation for sport
  • The roles of a sports psychologist in a team
  • Part D. Special groups of participants
  • Chapter 35. The younger athlete
  • Management of musculoskeletal conditions
  • Children with chronic illness
  • How much is too much?
  • Nutrition for the younger athlete
  • The 'ugly parent' syndrome
  • Coaches' role
  • Chapter 36. The female athlete
  • Historical perspective
  • Similarities and differences between the sexes
  • Effect of the menstrual cycle on performance
  • Menstrual irregularities associated with exercise
  • Complications of exercise-associated menstrual cycle irregularities
  • Treatment of exercise-associated menstrual cycle irregularities
  • Contraception for the athlete
  • Exercise and pregnancy
  • Menopause
  • Menstrual hygiene
  • Breast
  • Environmental factors
  • Nutrition
  • Injuries
  • Chapter 37. The older athlete
  • Tissue changes with aging
  • The benefits of exercise in the elderly
  • Risks of exercise in the elderly
  • Drugs and the older athlete
  • Chapter 38. The disabled athlete
  • Classification
  • Injuries in disabled athletes
  • Doping
  • Part E. Management of medical problems
  • Chapter 39. Sporting emergencies
  • Preparation
  • Treatment of the collapsed athlete
  • Severe head injury
  • The athlete with possible spinal injury
  • Dental trauma
  • Laryngeal and tracheal injuries
  • Chest injuries
  • Abdominal injuries
  • Injuries to the extremities
  • Other causes of collapse
  • Chapter 40. Cardiovascular symptoms during exercise
  • Cardiovascular changes with exercise
  • Palpitation
  • Syncope
  • Heart murmur
  • Chest pain
  • Sudden death
  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
  • Marfan's syndrome
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Other significant cardiac conditions in sports medicine
  • Special cardiac investigations
  • Prevention of sudden death
  • Chapter 41. Respiratory symptoms during exercise
  • Common respiratory symptoms
  • Asthma
  • Exercise-induced bronchospasm
  • Sinus-related symptoms
  • Other exercise-related conditions
  • Chapter 42. Gastrointestinal symptoms during exercise
  • Upper gastrointestinal symptoms
  • Gastrointestinal bleeding
  • Abdominal pain
  • Diarrhea
  • Exercise and gastrointestinal diseases
  • Prevention of gastrointestinal symptoms that occur with exercise
  • Chapter 43. Diabetes mellitus
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Exercise and diabetes
  • Dietary management
  • Complications of exercise in the diabetic athlete
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 44. The athlete with epilepsy
  • Epidemiology and nomenclature
  • Pathology
  • Generalized tonic-clonic seizure
  • Diagnosis of epilepsy
  • Treatment
  • Exercise prescription
  • Management of a seizure
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 45. Joint-related symptoms without acute injury
  • The patient with a single swollen joint
  • The patient with low back pain and stiffness
  • The patient presenting with multiple painful joints
  • The patient with joint pain who 'hurts all over'
  • Ordering and interpreting rheumatological tests
  • Chapter 46. Common sports-related infections
  • Hepatitis A
  • Hepatitis B
  • Hepatitis C
  • Other forms of hepatitis
  • Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
  • Infectious mononucleosis
  • Skin infections
  • Viral respiratory infections
  • Travelers' diarrhea
  • Are athletes at an increased risk of infection?
  • Infection and athletic performance
  • Chapter 47. The tired athlete
  • History
  • Examination
  • Investigations
  • Overtraining syndrome
  • Viral illness
  • Nutritional deficiencies
  • Chronic fatigue syndrome
  • Other causes of tiredness
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 48. Exercise in the heat
  • Mechanisms of heat gain and loss
  • Clinical perspective
  • Heatstroke--a temperature above 41[degree]C
  • Exercise-associated collapse
  • Cramps
  • Fluid overload: hyponatremia
  • Other causes of exercise-related collapse in hot weather
  • Heat acclimatization
  • Guidelines for the prevention of heat illness
  • Chapter 49. Exercise in the cold
  • Generation of body heat
  • Heat loss
  • How the body perceives cold
  • Measurement of body temperature
  • Effects of hypothermia
  • Clinical features
  • General principles of managing hypothermia
  • Methods to achieve rewarming
  • Treatment of hypothermia in sport
  • Frostbite
  • Prevention of cold injuries
  • Chapter 50. Exercise prescription for health
  • Pre-exercise evaluation
  • Components of exercise prescription
  • Exercise prescription for the older individual
  • Exercise prescription for the patient with hypertension
  • Resistance training for the cardiac patient
  • Exercise prescription in patients with osteoarthritis
  • Exercise prescription in patients with osteoporosis
  • Exercise prescription in practice: a case study
  • Part F. Practical sports medicine
  • Chapter 51. Participation screening
  • The aims of screening
  • Benefits of screening
  • The history
  • The examination
  • Additional tests
  • Chapter 52. Medical care of the sporting team
  • The off-field team
  • Pre-season assessment
  • Educate team members
  • Other essentials
  • Chapter 53. Traveling with a team
  • Preparation
  • Air travel and jet lag
  • The medical room
  • Illness
  • Traveler's diarrhea
  • Upper respiratory tract infections
  • Injury
  • Drug testing
  • Local contacts
  • Psychological skills
  • Personal coping skills
  • Chapter 54. Medical coverage of endurance events
  • Race organization
  • The medical team
  • First-aid stations
  • Medical facility at the race finish
  • Summary
  • Chapter 55. Drugs and the athlete
  • Historical perspective
  • Why athletes take drugs
  • Prohibited substances
  • Stimulants
  • Narcotics
  • Anabolic agents
  • Diuretics
  • Peptide hormones, mimetics and analogs
  • Prohibited methods
  • Classes of drugs subject to certain restrictions
  • Permitted drugs
  • Therapeutic use of a prohibited substance
  • Supplements and other ergogenic aids permitted in sport
  • Food supplements
  • Drug testing
  • Ethical dilemmas
  • The battle against drugs
  • Chapter 56. Ethics and sports medicine
  • Conflict of interest
  • Confidentiality
  • Performance-enhancing drugs
  • Infection and ethics
  • Ethics in sport