Filtered By:
Countries: UK Health

This page shows you your search results in order of relevance. This is page number 16.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 24962 results found since Jan 2013.

Sports physiotherapists' contribution to the sports and exercise medicine team: moving forward, together
Br J Sports Med. 2022 Nov 7:bjsports-2022-106404. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2022-106404. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:36344213 | DOI:10.1136/bjsports-2022-106404
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - November 7, 2022 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Joanne Kemp Luciana De Michelis Mendon ça Andrea Britt Mosler Mario Bizzini Kristian Thorborg Fiona Wilson Nicole Surdyka Osman Hassan Ahmed Nonhlanhla Sharon Mkumbuzi Source Type: research

London International Consensus and Delphi study on hamstring injuries part 1: classification
Br J Sports Med. 2023 Jan 17:bjsports-2021-105371. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2021-105371. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTMuscle injury classification systems for hamstring injuries have evolved to use anatomy and imaging information to aid management and prognosis. However, classification systems lack reliability and validity data and are not specific to individual hamstring muscles, potentially missing parameters vital for sport-specific and activity-specific decision making. A narrative evidence review was conducted followed by a modified Delphi study to build an international consensus on best-practice decision-making for th...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - January 17, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Bruce M Paton Nick Court Michael Giakoumis Paul Head Babar Kayani Sam Kelly Gino M M J Kerkhoffs James Moore Peter Moriarty Simon Murphy Ricci Plastow Noel Pollock Paul Read Ben Stirling Laura Tulloch Nicol van Dyk Mathew G Wilson David Wood Fares Haddad Source Type: research

London International Consensus and Delphi study on hamstring injuries part 3: rehabilitation, running and return to sport
This study aimed to develop an international expert consensus for the management of HSI. A modified Delphi methodology and consensus process was used with an international expert panel, involving two rounds of online questionnaires and an intermediate round involving a consensus meeting. The initial information gathering round questionnaire was sent to 46 international experts, which comprised open-ended questions covering decision-making domains in HSI. Thematic analysis of responses outlined key domains, which were evaluated by a smaller international subgroup (n=15), comprising clinical academic sports medicine physicia...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - January 17, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Bruce M Paton Paul Read Nicol van Dyk Mathew G Wilson Noel Pollock Nick Court Michael Giakoumis Paul Head Babar Kayani Sam Kelly Gino M M J Kerkhoffs James Moore Peter Moriarty Simon Murphy Ricci Plastow Ben Stirling Laura Tulloch David Wood Fares Haddad Source Type: research

London International Consensus and Delphi study on hamstring injuries part 1: classification
Br J Sports Med. 2023 Jan 17:bjsports-2021-105371. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2021-105371. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTMuscle injury classification systems for hamstring injuries have evolved to use anatomy and imaging information to aid management and prognosis. However, classification systems lack reliability and validity data and are not specific to individual hamstring muscles, potentially missing parameters vital for sport-specific and activity-specific decision making. A narrative evidence review was conducted followed by a modified Delphi study to build an international consensus on best-practice decision-making for th...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - January 17, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Bruce M Paton Nick Court Michael Giakoumis Paul Head Babar Kayani Sam Kelly Gino M M J Kerkhoffs James Moore Peter Moriarty Simon Murphy Ricci Plastow Noel Pollock Paul Read Ben Stirling Laura Tulloch Nicol van Dyk Mathew G Wilson David Wood Fares Haddad Source Type: research

London International Consensus and Delphi study on hamstring injuries part 3: rehabilitation, running and return to sport
This study aimed to develop an international expert consensus for the management of HSI. A modified Delphi methodology and consensus process was used with an international expert panel, involving two rounds of online questionnaires and an intermediate round involving a consensus meeting. The initial information gathering round questionnaire was sent to 46 international experts, which comprised open-ended questions covering decision-making domains in HSI. Thematic analysis of responses outlined key domains, which were evaluated by a smaller international subgroup (n=15), comprising clinical academic sports medicine physicia...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - January 17, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Bruce M Paton Paul Read Nicol van Dyk Mathew G Wilson Noel Pollock Nick Court Michael Giakoumis Paul Head Babar Kayani Sam Kelly Gino M M J Kerkhoffs James Moore Peter Moriarty Simon Murphy Ricci Plastow Ben Stirling Laura Tulloch David Wood Fares Haddad Source Type: research

From da Vinci to definitive diagnosis: how training in sports ultrasound harnesses sound, science and skill
Viennese neurologist Dr Karl Dussik’s 1942 paper Über die Möglichkeit hochfrequente mechanische schwingingen als diagnosticsches hilfsmittel zu verwerten (On the possibility of using ultrasound waves as a diagnostic aid)1 could be considered the precursor of modern ultrasound curricula, building on scientific findings that began with Leonardo da Vinci, who first recorded experiments listening to sound transmitted through water by placing a tube into the sea to evaluate what he could hear as early as 1490. The beginning of musculoskeletal ultrasound Medical use of ultrasound was popularised in gynaecol...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - January 18, 2022 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Patricios, J., Rossiter, M., Cunningham, C., Fitzpatrick, J., Hirschmueller, A., Mweli, T., Roos, B., Thornton, J. S. Tags: BJSM Editorial Source Type: research

Tiered approach to considering orthobiologics for patients with musculoskeletal conditions
Orthobiologics is a subset of regenerative therapies consisting of biologic substances intended to treat or cure musculoskeletal conditions. They have grown in use and popularity, in part due to a growing evidence-base, but also a result of overexuberance related to a novel field. Numerous devices exist that make the minimal manipulation of autologous concentrated blood, bone marrow and fat derived ‘products’ accessible for clinical and surgical use in a manner compliant with many national regulatory frameworks. Except for limited surgical cartilage restoration products, however, the absence of formal regulator...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - January 19, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Shapiro, S. A., Master, Z., Arthurs, J. R., Mautner, K. Tags: Open access, BJSM Discussion Source Type: research

Inequalities across the physical activity landscape: the need for 'structural humility to optimise sports and exercise medicine
The ongoing issue of health inequity Health inequalities are worsening across the UK and the wider world due to socioeconomic factors such as levels of education, income and poverty. These further disadvantage already marginalised demographics and communities, especially in low-income and middle-income countries.1 These social determinants of health are avoidable inequalities that exist due to systemic oppression such as sexism, racism, homophobia and transphobia that manifest as legacies of European colonialism2 embedded within capitalism. Sports and exercise medicine (SEM) is not devoid of these injustices; practitioners...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - July 6, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Cole, M., Holland, C. J., Cassius, T. Tags: BJSM Editorial Source Type: research

Epidemiology of imaging-detected bone stress injuries in athletes participating in the Rio de Janeiro 2016 Summer Olympics.
CONCLUSIONS: Twenty-five bone stress injuries were reported, more commonly in women, mostly in the lower extremities and most commonly in track and field athletes. Our study demonstrates the importance of early imaging with MRI to detect stress reactions before they can progress to stress fractures. PMID: 29074476 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - October 26, 2017 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Hayashi D, Jarraya M, Engebretsen L, D Crema M, W Roemer F, Skaf A, Guermazi A Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research

National Football League Head, Neck and Spine Committee's Concussion Diagnosis and Management Protocol: 2017-18 season.
Abstract One of the National Football League's (NFL) Head, Neck and Spine Committee's principal goals is to create a 'best practice' protocol for concussion diagnosis and management for its players. The science related to concussion diagnosis and management continues to evolve, thus the protocol has evolved contemporaneously. The Fifth International Conference on Concussion in Sport was held in Berlin in 2016, and guidelines for sports concussion diagnosis and management were revised and refined. The NFL Head, Neck and Spine Committee has synthesised the most recent empirical evidence for sports concussion diagnos...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - March 16, 2018 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Ellenbogen RG, Batjer H, Cardenas J, Berger M, Bailes J, Pieroth E, Heyer R, Theodore N, Hsu W, Nabel E, Maroon J, Cantu R, Barnes R, Collins J, Putukian M, Lonser R, Solomon G, Sills A Tags: Br J Sports Med Source Type: research