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Chapter 9: Mechanisms and Characteristics of Sports Trauma

Chapter 9: Mechanisms and Characteristics of Sports Trauma. What is trauma? A physical injury or wound sustained in sport and produced by external or internal force. Tissues have relative abilities to resist a particular load. If the tissue is stronger, what will happen?

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Chapter 9: Mechanisms and Characteristics of Sports Trauma

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  1. Chapter 9:Mechanisms and Characteristicsof Sports Trauma

  2. What is trauma? A physical injury or wound sustained in sport and produced by external or internal force.

  3. Tissues have relative abilities to resist a particular load. If the tissue is stronger, what will happen? The greater magnitude of load it can withstand.

  4. List and define the five type of tissue stresses: • Tension • force that pulls or stretches tissue • Stretching • stretching beyond the yield point leads to rupturing of soft tissue or fracturing of a bone • Compression • a force that, with enough energy, crushes tissue • Shearing • a force that moves across the parallel organization of the tissue • Bending • force on a horizontal beam or bone that places stresses within the structure, causing it to bend or strain

  5. What are the two categories of soft (non-bony) tissue and give examples • non-contractile • skin, joint capsules, ligaments, fascia, cartilage, dura mater, nerve roots nerve roots • contractile • muscle, tendons, bony insertions

  6. What is the skin (integument)? External covering of the body

  7. What does the skin represent? The body’s largest organ

  8. The skin consist of what two layers? Epidermis and dermis

  9. List the numerous mechanical forces that can adversely affect the skin’s integrity: • friction or rubbing • scraping • compression or pressure • tearing • cutting • Penetrating

  10. How are skin wounds classified? According to the mechanical force that causes them

  11. List and define the different types of wound classifications:

  12. a. friction blister continuous rubbing over the surface of the skin causes a collection of fluid below or within the epidermal layer called a blister

  13. b. abrasion common conditions in which the skin is scraped against a rough surface. The epidermis and dermis are worn away, exposing numerous blood capillaries

  14. c. skin bruise when a blow compresses or crushes the skin surface and produces bleeding under the skin, the condition is defined as a bruise, or contusion

  15. d. laceration a wound in which the flesh has been irregularly torn

  16. e. skin avulsion skin that is torn by the same mechanism as a laceration to the extent that the tissue is completely ripped from its source is an avulsion injury

  17. f. incision a wound in which the skin has been sharply cut

  18. g. puncture penetrations of the skin by a sharp object

  19. What are the three types of muscles within the body? • Smooth • Cardiac • Striated (skeletal)

  20. Which muscle is of major concern in sports medicine? Striated (skeletal) muscle

  21. What are the two categories of acute muscle injuries? • Contusions • Strains

  22. How does one receive a contusion? Sudden traumatic blow to the body

  23. What is the range of intensity of a contusion? Deep to superficial

  24. What is typical in cases of severe contusions? • the athlete reports being struck by a hard blow • the blow causes pain and a transitory paralysis caused by pressure on and shock to the motor and sensory nerves • palpation often reveals a hard area, indurated because of internal hemorrhage • ecchymosis, or tissue discoloration, may take place

  25. What is a strain? A stretch, tear, or rip in the muscle or adjacent tissue such as the fascia or muscle tendon

  26. How are strains most often produced? Abnormal muscular contraction

  27. What is the cause of abnormal muscular contraction? It is fault in the reciprocal coordination of the agonist and antagonist muscles take place. The cause of this fault or uncoordination is a mystery. However, possible explanations are that it may be related to: • a mineral imbalance caused by profuse sweating • to fatigue metabolites collected in the muscle itself • to a strength imbalance between agonist and antagonist muscles.

  28. What is a grade 1 (or 1st degree or 1°) strain? Slight over-stretching to mild tearing (20%) of the muscle fibers. It is accompanied by local pain, which is increased by tension in the muscle, and a minor loss of strength. There is mild swelling, ecchymosis, and local tenderness.

  29. What is a grade 2 (or 2nd degree or 2°) strain? Moderate tearing (20% - 70%) of the muscle fibers. It is similar to a grade 1, but has moderate signs and symptoms (moderate loss of strength, moderate swelling, ecchymosis, and local tenderness).

  30. What is a grade 3 (or 3rd degree or 3°) strain? Has signs and symptoms that are severe (severe swelling, ecchymosis, and local tenderness) with a loss of muscle function and, commonly, a palpable defect in the muscle.

  31. What does a tendon attach? Muscle to bone

  32. Because a tendon is usually double the strength of the muscle it serves, where do tears commonly occur? At the muscle belly, musculotendinous junction, or bony attachment

  33. What is a cramp? A painful involuntary contraction of a skeletal muscle or muscle group.

  34. Cramps have been attributed to what? A lack of water or other electrolytes in relation to muscle fatigue.

  35. What is a spasm? A reflexive reaction caused by trauma of the musculoskeletal system

  36. List and define the two types of spasms or cramps: • clonic – alternating involuntary muscular contraction and relaxation in quick succession • tonic – rigid muscle contraction that lasts a period of time.

  37. Muscle cramps or spasms may lead to what? Muscle strain

  38. What is one constant problem in physical conditioning and training? Overexertion

  39. How is exercise over-dosage reflected? • Muscle soreness • Decreased joint flexibility • General fatigue 24 hours after activity.

  40. What are the four specific indicators of possible overexertion? • acute muscle soreness • delayed muscle soreness • muscle stiffness • muscle cramping

  41. List and define the two types of muscle soreness: • Acute-onset muscle soreness – which accompanies fatigue. This muscle pain is transient and occurs during and immediately after exercise. • Delayed-onset muscle soreness (DOMS) – becomes most intense after 24 to 48 hours and then gradually subsides so that the muscle becomes symptom-free after 3 or 4 days. (This second type of pain is described as a syndrome of delayed muscle pain leading to increased muscle tension, swelling, stiffness, and resistance to stretch).

  42. What are the possible causes for delayed-onset muscle soreness? • It may occur from very small tears in the muscle tissue, which seems to be more likely with eccentric or isometric contractions. • It may also occur because of disruption of the connective tissue that hold muscle tendon fibers together.

  43. What is muscle stiffness? Muscle stiffness does not produce pain. It occurs when a group of muscles have been worked for a long period of time. The fluids that collect in the muscles during and after exercise are absorbed into the bloodstream at a slow rate. As a result, the muscle becomes swollen, shorter, and thicker and therefore resists stretch.

  44. What can be done to assist in reducing muscle stiffness? • Light exercise • Massage • Passive mobilization

  45. What is muscle guarding? Following injury, the muscle that surrounds the injured area contract, in effect, splint that area, thus minimizing pain by limiting movement. (Quite often this splinting is incorrectly referred to as a muscle spasm)

  46. How do chronic injuries usually progress? Slowly, over a long period of time.

  47. Often, what leads to a chronic condition? Repeated acute injuries

  48. How does an acute injury cause a chronic injury? If the acute injury is managed improperly or that allows an athlete to return to activity before healing has completely occurred.

  49. What is myositis/fasciitis? Inflammation of the muscle tissue

  50. What is tendonitis? Inflammation of tendon-muscle attachments, tendons, or both

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