Medicine and science in sports and exercise
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Med Sci Sports Exerc · Dec 1992
Case ReportsDelayed treatment of a malreduced distal femoral epiphyseal plate fracture.
Fractures of the epiphyseal plate are considered rare when compared with the more prevalent injuries found in competitive sports, but the complications associated with this type of trauma are a major concern. The factors affecting the success or failure of healing include the severity of injury, patient age, and the type and expedience of treatment. This case study examines the clinical presentation and treatment of a 15-yr-old high school football player who sustained a displaced, distal femoral epiphyseal Salter II fracture. ⋯ The fracture was treated 20 days post-injury via open reduction with internal fixation. On follow-up, the athlete demonstrated radiographic healing, normal physical exam, and no significant leg length discrepancy or deformity. The athlete successfully returned to full competitive sport activity.
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Med Sci Sports Exerc · Sep 1992
Review Case ReportsThigh compartment syndrome in a football athlete: a case report and review of the literature.
Although contusions of the thigh are common in all sports, a compartment syndrome from closed blunt trauma without a femur fracture is rare. Thigh compartment syndrome is unusual due to increased compliance of the thigh to accommodate increased expansion from hematoma or third space fluid. ⋯ Immediate thigh fasciotomy was performed. Early diagnosis with appropriate emergency treatment can avoid serious and permanent complications.
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Med Sci Sports Exerc · Sep 1992
Exercise capacity and breathing mechanics in patients with airflow limitation.
To investigate the impact of expiratory airflow limitation on ventilation during exercise, we studied six control subjects with normal lung function (FEV1/FVC = 79 +/- 6%) and eight patients with borderline-to-mild airflow limitation (FEV1/FVC = 68 +/- 4%) during cycle ergometry. VO2, HR, and VE/MVV were not different between the control subjects or patients during maximal or submaximal exercise. In contrast, five of the eight patients achieved maximal expiratory flow over a large portion (37%) of their tidal volume (VT) during submaximal exercise, whereas none of the control subjects achieved maximal expiratory flow. ⋯ The patients used a greater fraction of their VEmaxCal at each level of submaximal exercise (P less than 0.03). Despite the flow limitation during submaximal exercise, EELV was similar between the control subjects and patients. In conclusion, even patients with borderline-to-mild airflow limitation achieve maximal expiratory flow during submaximal exercise and these restrictions are not reflected by VE/MVV nor by EELV.
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Med Sci Sports Exerc · Mar 1991
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialExperimental pain thresholds and plasma beta-endorphin levels during exercise.
Experimental pain thresholds (electrical intracutaneous finger and dental pulp stimulation) and plasma hormone levels (beta-endorphin, cortisol, and catecholamines) were measured in ten healthy sportive men before, during, and after progressively more strenuous physical exercise. In a double-blind study conducted on two different days, 20 mg of the opioid-antagonist naloxone or placebo was administered prior to exercise. A significant pain threshold elevation was found during exercise for finger (ANOVA, P less than 0.004) and dental pulp stimulation (P less than 0.01). ⋯ Naloxone failed to affect pain thresholds, although beta-endorphin and cortisol increased significantly more (P less than 0.02) during exercise after naloxone. It is concluded that short-term, exhaustive physical exercise can evoke a transient elevation in pain thresholds. This exercise-induced elevation in pain threshold does not, however, appear to be directly related to plasma endorphin levels.
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Med Sci Sports Exerc · Apr 1989
A three-dimensional analysis of angular momentum in the hammer throw.
Eight hammer throwers were studied using three-dimensional cinematography. The local term of angular momentum of each thrower (HTL) followed a wide conical path, while the remote term (HTR) and the hammer angular momentum (HH) followed much narrower conical paths. HT, the sum of HTL and HTR, followed a conical path similar to that of HTL, although with smaller amplitude. ⋯ The paths of the angular momentum vectors, the trunk tilt, and the height of the hammer plane relative to the system center of mass were interrelated. Some throwers kept the hammer plane high and the trunk tilting back in all the turns; other throwers kept the hammer plane low and the trunk tilting forward in the early turns, but the hammer plane rose in their late turns and the trunk tilted back. Two theories were proposed to explain why the athletes who had forward trunk tilt in the early turns tilted backward in the final part of the throw.