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Sports Medicine, Physiotheraphy & Rehabilitation

Sports Medicine Rehabilitation are practical management skills to the diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of musculoskeletal injuries arising from sport and physical activity. It includes all the necessary skills to diagnose and treat musculoskeletal injuries in the physically active person.

In sports or player, the sprain in ankle are very common and sports injuries, particularly for stop-and-start running sports, field sports or outdoor adventure sports. Athletes often attempt to erupt the pain of a sprain, or revisit into sports quickly after a sprain which may increase the danger of re-injury. But knowing when to rest and how to rehab your sprain can help you recover more completely and prevent future problems. If you’ve got an ankle sprain it’s important to act quickly.

Cardiac rehabilitation is a medically supervised program by which a person with cardiac problems regains his active physical life. This condition is associated with many athlete and sportspersons. As peoples from sports background normally have a very active life, especially in runners, swimmers and cyclists and sport activity consist of process of high blood flow and pressure and that is why always be on risk of heart related complication.

Sport Rehabilitators help people affected by pain, injury or illness involving the system. They help people of all ages to take care of their health and fitness, get over and stop injury and reduce pain using exercise, movement and manual based therapeutic interventions.

This aims to strengthen the functional ability and quality of life to those with physical impairments or disabilities affecting the brain, medulla spinalis, nerves, bones, joints, ligaments, muscles, and tendons. A physician having completed training during this field is mentioned as a physiatrist.

Physiatrists design comprehensive, patient treatment plans, and they are integral members of the care team. They utilize cutting-edge also as time-tested treatments to maximize function and quality of life for his or her patients, who can home in age from infants to octogenarians.

Practice Settings

PM&R physicians practice during a sort of clinical settings, including inpatient and outpatient facilities. They include neurological, musculoskeletal, rheumatologically and cardiovascular systems.

Some of the common diagnoses and populations seen by inpatient physiatrists include spinal cord injury, brain injury (traumatic and non-traumatic), stroke, multiple sclerosis, polio, burn care, and musculoskeletal and pediatric rehabilitation. Inpatient physiatrists are those who trained to manage these issues using collaborative team skills and work with social workers and other allied health therapists like physical, occupational and speech.

Outpatient physiatrists treat conditions like orthopaedic injuries, spine-related pain and dysfunction, occupational injuries and overuse syndromes, neurogenic bowel/bladder, bedsore management, spasticity management, and chronic pain.

Conditions & Treatments

PM&R physicians/physiatrists help to treat patients suffering from short/long term physical and/or cognitive impairments, neurological conditions (stroke, brain injury or medulla spinalis injury) and disabilities that result from musculoskeletal conditions like back/neck pain, or sports or work injuries, or medical other conditions. The goal of these psychiatrist is to decrease pain and enhance performance without surgery.

Below are a number of the foremost common PM&R-related conditions; all are grouped by clinical area.

Medical Rehabilitation

Back and Neck Pain

Age-Associated Changes and Biology of Aging

Breast Cancer

Cardiac Rehabilitation

Exercise in the Elderly

Fall Prevention in the Elderly

Functional Outcomes After Cancer Rehabilitation

Geriatric Frailty

Hip Fracture

Lower Limb Prosthetics

Lymphedema

Obesity

Orthostasis

Pressure Ulcers and Wounds

Pulmonary Rehabilitation in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases

Venous Insufficiency

Pain-Neuromuscular Medicine Rehabilitation

Adult Geriatric Muscle Disease

Central Poststroke Pain

Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

Degenerative Joint Disease

Fibromyalgia

Myofascial Pain

Opioid Management for Chronic Pain

Peripheral Neuropathy Pain

Phantom Pain

Poliomyelitis/Post-Polio Syndrome

Shoulder Pain in the Throwing Athlete

Musculoskeletal Medicine

ACL Injury and Rehabilitation

Adhesive Capsulitis

Adult-Onset Torticollis

Ankle Sprain

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Cervical Radiculopathy

Cervical Stenosis

Vertebral Compression Fractures

Core Strengthening

De Quervain Tenosynovitis

Elbow Pain in Little League Pitchers

Epicondylosis With and Without Nerve Entrapment

Functional Rehabilitation

Iliotibial Band Syndrome

Impingement Syndromes of the Shoulder

Inflammatory Arthritides

Knee Osteoarthritis

Lumbar Disk Disorders

Lumbar Radiculopathy

Lumbar Spondylolisthesis

Lumbar Stenosis

Medial and Lateral Collateral Ligament Injuries

Osteoporosis in Rehabilitation

Patellofemoral Syndrome

Plantar Fasciitis

Pregnant Athlete

Proximal and Mid-Hamstring Strain/Tendon Tear

Shoulder Tendon and Muscle Injuries

Shoulder Tendon and Muscle Injuries

Sports Concussion

Tendinopathy

Rehabilitation of Central systema nervosum Disorders

Rehabilitation of Central systema nervosum Disorders

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)

Autonomic Dysreflexia in medulla spinalis Injury

Autonomic Dysreflexia in medulla spinalis Injury

Cerebrovascular Disorders

Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy

Cranial Nerve and Hearing Dysfunction in the CNS

Disorders of Consciousness

Disorders of Language, Speech and Swallowing

Fertility, Sexuality and Reproduction After medulla spinalis Injury

Hypoxic Brain Injury

Idiopathic paralysis agitans

Infectious Encephalopathies and Leukoencephalopathies

Metabolic Encephalopathies

Mild Traumatic Brain Injury

Multiple Sclerosis

Multiple Sclerosis

Neurogenic Bladder

Seizures and Epilepsy

Sexuality/Sexual Dysfunction in Acquired Brain Injury

Sleep Disorders in Diseases of the Central systema nervosum

Spasticity

Spinal Cord Injury

Stroke

Traumatic medulla spinalis Injury: Disorder and Assessment

Venous Thromboembolism

Pediatric Rehabilitation

Cerebral Palsy

Congenital (Infant) Torticollis

Duchenne and Becker dystrophy

Neonatal plexus brachialis Injury

Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury (Moderate to Severe)

Pediatric Stroke

Scoliosis

Spina Bifida