Posts Tagged ‘Tendinitis’
Biomechanical analysis of the femoro-patellar joint during deep fencing
Biomechanical analysis of the femoro-patellar joint of the right limb during the sporting gesture of fencing the bottom
1. INTRODUCTION
High performance athletes are individuals whose lifestyles given by your sport are likely to have certain musculoskeletal injuries, such as patellar tendinitis. This study is done then seeks to compare how this injury caused by the overuse of femoro-patellar joint, affects the sporting gesture called fund of fencing. To carry out this study, we perform a comparison between two high-performance athletes doing the sports fencing sporting gesture, where an athlete is completely healthy and the other is an athlete who has the injury.
2. GENERAL PURPOSE
Comparative analysis of the alterations and kinematic differences of the knee joint in the sporting gesture “Fund” in fencing, watching two elite athletes where you are without any pathology and the other has a patellar tendinitis.
3. SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES
• Determine the difference in the speed change between healthy and injured athlete athlete because of tendinitis in the patellar femoral joint during application of the sporting gesture “Fund” in fencing.
• Determine the difference in the change of acceleration between healthy and injured athlete athlete because of tendinitis in the patellar femoral joint during application of the sporting gesture “Fund” in fencing.
• Observe changes in the execution of sports movements, comparing performance on the activity to make the bottom of fencing with a healthy elite athlete elite athlete versus suffering patella tendinitis in the patellar femoral joint.
The Treatment for Tendinitis of the Elbow Include
Tendinitis of the elbow is known as tennis elbow if the pain is located on the outer side or golfer’s elbow if the inner side.
Occurs frequently in sports activities that require repetitive motions of the forearm (racquet sports, golf, baseball), but also can be an occupational disease.
The pain may be constant or occur only with / or after performing repetitive movements of the forearm.
Localized pain on the outside of the elbow that is exacerbated by resisted supination or resisted extension of the wrist or fingers is indicative of tennis elbow (lateral epicondylitis is the medical term).
The pain is located on the inside of the elbow and is exacerbated by resisted forearm pronation or resisted flexion of the wrist is indicative gofista elbow (medial epicondylitis). Read the rest of this entry »
