Acta Medica Port
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Ankle injuries are the most frequently encountered injuries in clinical practice. They are often managed by general practicians, and not only by orthopaedic or physiatric physicians. This injury is usually non-complicated, but some care should be taken to assure an adequate management and to exclude severe lesions. ⋯ Surgical reconstruction may be necessary, in cases that develop chronic functional instability, and especially in athletes with high demands on ankle joint stability. The purpose of this article is to review the biomechanics, clinical examination, diagnosis, management and secondary prevention of ankle sprains. We discuss the use and benefit of different modalities and outline a three-phase intervention program of rehabilitation based on recent guidelines.
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Although perioperative pain is multifactorial, there are two main factors on which we can act upon: the central sensitization - using opioid analgesics - and the peripheral nociceptive stimulus - by means of a peripheral nerve block. The use of these techniques for anesthesia and post-operative analgesia is increasingly frequent in orthopaedic surgery because they provide excellent sensitive and motor block and offer advantages over other types of analgesia concerning pain relief and early mobilization in the post-operative period. We present a clinical case in which we made a continuous sciatic block (popliteal approach) in a fourteen years old girl with a Hyperactivivity Syndrome and Mental Re-tardation proposed for a club foot corrective surgery, allowing an effective perioperative analgesia with minimum side effects and a quick return to her familiar environment.