Illinois Physical Therapy Hybrid Ebook

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Return to Sport: Running Injuries in Student-Athletes: Summary

Common Running-Related Injuries (continued) Anatomy Incidence/Symptoms Risk Factors

Intervention

Return to Sport • 30% recover in 1 month

Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome

• “Shin splints” • Diffuse pain at posteromedial tibia with activity • Tenderness along posteromedial tibia • Weakness in tibialis posterior, soleus, flexor digitorum longus • Progressive Achilles pain/stiffness • Swelling/thickening at Achilles • Excessive pronation • Reduced dorsiflexion

• Training errors • Contralateral pelvic drop

• Hip strengthening • Foot strengthening (control eversion) • Footwear • Stretching gastrocnemius • Gait retraining** (increase cadence) • Hip strengthening • Intrinsic foot strengthening • Cross training • Footwear— heel lift (limited evidence, avoid minimalist shoes • Gait retraining** (reduce forefoot strike, increase cadence) • Relative rest— avoid stairs, cycling • Hip/core strengthening • Stretching ITB • Gait retraining**- reduce transverse plane movement

• Increased ground contact time (slow cadence) • Prolonged rearfoot eversion • Hip abduction weakness/evertor dominance • Increased BMI

Achilles Tendinopathy

• Training errors • Contralateral pelvic drop

• Increased ground contact time (slow cadence) • Rapid or excessive pronation • Increased BMI

• Weak/painful plantarflexion

• + arc sign or + Royal London Hospital test

Iliotibial Band Syndrome (ITB)

• Due to friction of the ITB shifting over lateral femoral condyle • Lateral knee pain • + Noble compression test • Poor flexibility in ITB and hip flexors

• Crossover running • Contralateral pelvic drop • Reduced knee flexion at initial contact • Excessive eversion

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