Tue, 9 December 2014
ACL injuries can be career ending, or they can be an opportunity to sort out movement efficiency, motor control and and technical skills, coming back from the rehabilitation process with more power, speed and efficiency than your patients had before they injured their ACL. In this podcast, Enda King from the Sports Surgery Clinic in Dublin currently completing his PhD in 3D biomechanical analysis after ACL reconstruction, with the aim to assist in RTP decision making and identifying fully rehabilitated athletes, and David Pope discuss ACL injuries, and the most important factors in pre-operative management and post-operative exercise programming to get your patients back to sport with improved sporting performance. Going deep on the details involved in ACL Rehabilitation, including: 01:20 Enda King and SSC, and working with ACL athletes PhD in 3D biomechanical analysis after ACL reconstruction, aim to assist in RTP decision making and what a fully rehabilitated athlete looks like
Podcast timeline 3:35 What does a fully rehabilitated athlete look like? 5:40 Incorporating performance goals into the rehab process 6:50 Can athletes achieve better performance post ACL rehab than they were pre-injury 8:20 Types of ACL grafts 11:10 Preoperative ACL Physiotherapy, helping your patient to prepare for the surgery - an opportunity to prepare your patients knee, ROM, strength and educate them on the rehabilitation process 14:20 Preoperative education 14:40 Restoring knee extension, balancing pain and improved range of movement, empowering your patient with 15:40 Guidelines for pain, swelling when restoring range of movement 16:15 Restoring quadriceps activation, normalising gait patterns 17:10 Clinical Edge 18:45 Clinical Edge’s free webinar program 19:30 Preoperative length of time 20:35 Post-op - initial management 23:20 To use or not use co-contraction exercises of quads and hamstrings 24:50 Should you use squatting style exercises Week 1 post op 25:25 Activating quadriceps - internal quadriceps cues or external exercise focus 26:30 How much pain should a patient experience during or after an exercise 27:30 Week 2 post-op 28:30 When can heavy gym training commence 29:30 Changing movement patterns throughout the kinetic chain 31:00 Advice for patients in the early stages of rehab 32:10 Frequency of exercise 32:55 Week 2 onwards - exercises incorporating balance and proprioception 34:10 Open vs closed chain exercises 35:40 Advice for patients in weeks 2–6 37:15 Nutrition and dietary advice for patients 37:45 Gym based rehabilitation 38:50 Choosing and modifying exercises for middle stages of the rehabilitation process 41:00 Various types of squatting movement, and progressing the types of squats 41:45 Goblet squats 42:30 Retraining ideal squat patterns 43:25 Progressing squats, deadlifts and lunges 44:00 Front squats 46:00 Front squats and trap bar deadlifts vs back squats during rehabilitation 47:25 When can an athlete start cycling 48:00 Disadvantages of using cycling as the main part of a rehabilitation program 48:30 Hamstring rehabilitation after semitendinosis/gracilis graft 49:45 Strength and power development 51:00 Strength testing - mid thigh pull, leg press 53:15 Should we use open chain strength tests 54:20 When to perform strength tests 55:00 Strength vs power and rate of force development 55:50 Running - incorporating into the program. When can your patient start running? 57:30 Preparation for running 58:35 Running drills 1:00:30 Ideal movement patterns in running Links: Clinical Edge Webinar program - register your interest
Tags: ACL, knee, injury, anterior cruciate ligament, surgery, rehabilitation, soccer, football, strengthening, movement, non-contact, physiotherapy, physio edge, podcast, enda king, SSC, sports surgery clinic, david pope, clinical edge, webinar
Direct download: PE_032_How_to_rehabilite_ACL_injuries_with_Enda_King.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 4:40pm AEST |