Injury and Healing Within Sports Physiotherapy: Difference between revisions

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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==
Soft tissues provide support and protective function in the body.  These tissues are made of cells, fibres and non-cellular matrix material with collagen being the most abundant component.  When soft tissue has been injured, the cardinal signs of inflammation occurs: redness, swelling, pain, loss of motion and heat.<ref>Muire PJ, Mangum LH, Wenke JC. [https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01056/full Time course of immune response and immunomodulation during normal and delayed healing of musculoskeletal wounds.] Frontiers in immunology. 2020 Jun 4;11:1056.</ref>  Healing is a process of moving through stages of inflammation, repair and lastly to remodeling.  Each phase of healing overlaps and has no definitive time frame.<ref name=":2" />  
Soft tissues provide support and protective function in the body.  These tissues are made of cells, fibres and non-cellular matrix material with collagen being the most abundant component.  When soft tissue has been injured, the cardinal signs of inflammation occurs: redness, swelling, pain, loss of motion and heat.<ref>Muire PJ, Mangum LH, Wenke JC. [https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01056/full Time course of immune response and immunomodulation during normal and delayed healing of musculoskeletal wounds.] Frontiers in immunology. 2020 Jun 4;11:1056.</ref>  Healing is a process of moving through stages of inflammation, repair and lastly to remodeling.  Each phase of healing overlaps and has no definitive time frame.<ref name=":2">Horsley, I.  Injury and Healing in Sports Physiotherapy Course. Physioplus. 2022.
</ref>  


=== Inflammatory Phase ===
=== Inflammatory Phase ===
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==== Chronic Inflammation ====
==== Chronic Inflammation ====
Inflammation that continues on for several months to several years is referred to as chronic inflammation.<ref name=":1">Pahwa R, Goyal A, Bansal P, Jialal I. [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK493173/ Chronic Inflammation]. In: StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing, Treasure Island (FL); 2021. PMID: 29630225.</ref>  This phenomenon occurs when macrophages have been unable to clear the wounded area of foreign substances.  This area becomes surrounded with collagen/scar to isolate it from the body called a granuloma.<ref name=":0" /> <ref name=":1" />  
Inflammation that continues on for several months to several years is referred to as chronic inflammation.<ref name=":1">Pahwa R, Goyal A, Bansal P, Jialal I. [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK493173/ Chronic Inflammation]. In: StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing, Treasure Island (FL); 2021. PMID: 29630225.</ref>  This phenomenon occurs when [[macrophages]] have been unable to clear the wounded area of foreign substances.  This area becomes surrounded with [[collagen]]/scar to isolate it from the body called a granuloma.<ref name=":0" /> <ref name=":1" />  


=== Proliferation Phase ===
=== Proliferation Phase ===
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Loading Feedback
===== Loading Feedback =====
Patient feedback is critical during this stage to ensure [[collagen]] alignment and proper healing.  Asking the patient to monitor for swelling, stiffness and pain for 24 hours can help the therapist gauge the correct loading intensity.  In addition, therapists can monitor swelling using [[Girth Measurement|girth measurements]].<ref name=":2" /> 


Patient feedback is critical during this stage to ensure collagen alignment and proper healing.  Asking the patient to monitor for swelling, stiffness and pain for 24 hours can help the therapist guage the correct loading application.  In addition, therapists can monitor swelling using tape measures.  (speaker)
=== Summary Soft Tissue Injury ===


Summary Soft Tissue Injury
==== Traditional Acute Injury Management ====
Traditional treatment for soft tissue injury as been referred to as [[RICE|RICE,]] rest, ice, compression and elevation.  Unfortunately, rest or immobilisation of soft tissue injury can result in joint stiffness, weak ligaments and delayed healing.   Total immobilisation should be dedicated to bone injury or a complete rupture where movement could cause further damage.  Conversely, [[Exercise -Therapeutic|exercise]] and pain-free movement within a protected support can strengthen ligaments and increase [[collagen]] turnover.<ref name=":1" /> <ref>Vuurberg G, Hoorntje A, Wink LM, Van Der Doelen BF, Van Den Bekerom MP, Dekker R, Van Dijk CN, Krips R, Loogman MC, Ridderikhof ML, Smithuis FF. [https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/bjsports/52/15/956.full.pdf Diagnosis, treatment and prevention of ankle sprains: update of an evidence-based clinical guideline. British journal of sports medicine]. 2018 Aug 1;52(15):956-.</ref>


Acute Injury
==== New thoughts on Acute Injury Management ====
 
Contemporary acronyms for soft tissue injury management is referred to as [[Peace and Love Principle|PEACE and LOVE]]<ref name=":3">Dubois B, Esculier JF. [https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/bjsports/54/2/72.full.pdf Soft-tissue injuries simply need PEACE and LOVE]. British journal of sports medicine. 2020 Jan 1;54(2):72-3.</ref>. See below for a better understanding of the various steps:
Traditional treatment for soft tissue injury as been referred to as RICE, rest, ice, compression and elevation.  Unfortunately, rest or Immobilzation of soft tissue inuruy can result in joint stiffness, weaken ligaments and delay healing.   Total immobilization should be dedicated to bone injury or a complete rupture where movement could cause further damage.  Conversely, exercise and painfree movement within a protected support can strengthen ligaments and increase collagen turnover. (book, vuurberg)
 
Acute to continuum
 
Contemporary acronyms for soft tissue injury management is referrred to as PEACE and LOVE. See below for a better understanding of the various steps:


PEACE (day 1-3)
PEACE (day 1-3)
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C: compression
C: compression


E:  educate the patient on an active approch to therapy versus a passive one.
E:  educate the patient on an active approcah to therapy versus a passive one<ref name=":3" />


LOVE (after a few days)
LOVE (after a few days)
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L: optimal loading to repair and remodel tissue
L: optimal loading to repair and remodel tissue


O: optimistic expectations by patient coincide with better outcome
O: optimistic expectations by the patient coincide with better outcome


V: vascularization- painfree aerobic exercise to increase blood flow
V: vascularization- pain-free aerobic exercise to increase blood flow


E: exercise- painfree exercise (dubious)
E: exercise- pain-free exercise<ref name=":3" />


Initially following injury, the goal is to protect (P) the area, elevate (E), avoid anti-inflammatories medication (A) to allow for natural inflammatory process to occur, compression (C and educate (E) patient on an active approch to therapy versus a passive one.
=== Healing Times ===
 
With proper management, various tissues will take different amounts of time to heal fully. Understanding the specific tissue helps target the appropriate timing for incremental loading during the remodeling stage.<ref name=":2" />   Ian Horsley<ref name=":2" /> estimates the time expected to fully heal by tissue below:
Therefore, the new acronym for soft tissue healing is POLICE: protection (support), optimal loading (painfree movement), ice, compression, and elevation.
 
Healing Times
 
Healing times are dependent on the type of tissue involved.  Understanding the specific tissue injured helps target the appropriate timing for incremental loading during the remodelling stage.  With proper management, different tissues will take different amounts of time to heal fully.  Ian Horsley estimates below the time expected per tissue:(speaker)


Muscle: 6 months
Muscle: 6 months
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Articular cartilage: greater than 3 years
Articular cartilage: greater than 3 years


Good clinical decision involves understanding the tissue, the timing to add mechanical loading, the amount of mechanical loading, monitoring for symptoms and asking for patient feedback all help give the best chance of tissue recovery to pre-injury level of strength.(speaker)
Soft tissues need to go through the three stages of inflammatory, repair and remodel to fully healPhysiotherapists can assist with healing by not only understanding the timeline of the involved tissue, but when and how much intensity to apply during the remodeling phase. Good clinical decision will be necessary to fine tune interventions and to monitor symptoms. All of these factors will provide for optimal soft tissue recovery.<ref name=":2" />
 
Norris C. Sports and soft tissue injuries: A guide for students and therapists. Routledge; 2018 Sep 3.
 
Vuurberg G, Hoorntje A, Wink LM, Van Der Doelen BF, Van Den Bekerom MP, Dekker R, Van Dijk CN, Krips R, Loogman MC, Ridderikhof ML, Smithuis FF. Diagnosis, treatment and prevention of ankle sprains: update of an evidence-based clinical guideline. British journal of sports medicine. 2018 Aug 1;52(15):956-.
 
Dubois B, Esculier JF. Soft-tissue injuries simply need PEACE and LOVE. British journal of sports medicine. 2020 Jan 1;54(2):72-3.
 
Pahwa R, Goyal A, Bansal P, Jialal I. Chronic Inflammation. In: StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing, Treasure Island (FL); 2021. PMID: 29630225.
 
Muire PJ, Mangum LH, Wenke JC. Time course of immune response and immunomodulation during normal and delayed healing of musculoskeletal wounds. Frontiers in immunology. 2020 Jun 4;11:1056.
 
[[File:Inflammationchart.jpg|thumb|500x500px|inflammatory chart]]
 
 
 
 
 
 
== POLICE ==
During the acute phase discussed above, the [[RICE]]-method:  Rest, Ice, Compression and Elevation was suggested.  Most people are familiar with the acronym [[RICE]] when dealing with musculoskeletal injury, however, current thoughts have expanded the RICE acronym to the POLICE method: Protection, Optimal Loading, Ice, Compression, ElevationOptimal loading or mechanical loading is the time where physiotherapists need to use good clinical decision making to assist with recovery and prevent chronic conditions from forming.<ref name=":2">Horsley, I.  Injury and Healing in Sports Physiotherapy Course. Physioplus. 2022.
</ref>
 
=== Mechanical Loading ===
Understanding the specific injured tissue helps target the appropriate timing for incremental loading.  During this remodelling stage collagen transitions from immature type three to type one [[collagen]].<ref name=":2" />Injured tissues need to learn how to adapt to [[Mechanical Loading of Bone|mechanical loads]] to in order to return to pre-injury level.  A load can be very light like a tickle, to a very high load like a manipulation.  If the load is applied is too little or too much, it can result in inappropriate repair of the tissues and create a chronic condition.   As physiotherapists, we can use many different techniques to apply loads such as massage and [[Ultrasound therapy|ultrasound]].  As tissues get stronger, the applied load can increase being careful not to go overboard.  Too much tension can cause the collagen fibres to misalign causing adhesions leading to chronic conditions.<ref name=":2" />
 
=== Loading Feedback ===
Patient feedback is critical during this stage to ensure collagen alignment and proper healing.  Asking the patient to monitor for swelling, stiffness and pain for 24 hours can help the therapist gauge the correct loading application.  In addition, therapists can monitor swelling using tape measures.<ref name=":2" />
 
== Healing Times ==
[[Healing]] times are dependent on the type of tissue involved.With proper management, different tissues will take different amounts of time to heal fully.  Ian Horsley<ref name=":2" /> estimates below the time expected per tissue:
 
[[Ligament]]: 1 year
 
[[Tendon Load and Capacity|Tendon]]: 2-3 years
 
Articular [[cartilage]]: greater than 3 years
 
Good clinical decision involves understanding the tissue, the timing to add mechanical loading, the amount of mechanical loading, monitoring for symptoms and asking for patient feedback all help give the best chance of tissue recovery to pre-injury level of strength.


== Resources ==
== Resources ==
* [[Soft Tissue Healing]]
* [[Figure of Eight Measurement of the Hand|Figure Eight Measurement of the Hand]]
* [[Figure of Eight Measurement of the Hand|Figure Eight Measurement of the Hand]]
* [[Figure of Eight Method of Measuring Ankle Joint Swelling]]
* [[Figure of Eight Method of Measuring Ankle Joint Swelling]]
* [[Peace and Love Principle]]


== Reference  ==
== Reference  ==

Revision as of 15:45, 22 February 2022


Introduction[edit | edit source]

Soft tissues provide support and protective function in the body.  These tissues are made of cells, fibres and non-cellular matrix material with collagen being the most abundant component.  When soft tissue has been injured, the cardinal signs of inflammation occurs: redness, swelling, pain, loss of motion and heat.[1]  Healing is a process of moving through stages of inflammation, repair and lastly to remodeling.  Each phase of healing overlaps and has no definitive time frame.[2]

Inflammatory Phase[edit | edit source]

The first stage injured soft tissue undergoes is inflammation. This phase, which generally peaks between day 1-3  is marked by redness, swelling, pain, heat and disruption of function of the affected tissue.  The aim during this time period is to prevent excessive inflammation and move through the next stages of healing to full recovery.[3]

Physiologically the inflammatory process consists of the following events:

  1. Histamine is released from damaged capillaries causing increased permeability and vessel dilation
  2. Prostaglandins maintain vasodilation
  3. Amines cause contraction of smooth muscle
  4. Phagocytes clear debris
  5. Mediators are released to stimulate proliferative phase[3]

Inflammation can be seen as unwelcome, it is the first step to healing.  When it becomes excessive there are treatments designed to limit the above chemical process. There are two drug classes used to inhibit the inflammatory process; non-steroidal (NSAIDs) and corticosteroids.  NSAIDs not only have anti-inflammatory properties but are pain-relieving as well.   Corticosteroids are usually injected to the site of pathology and can reduce inflammation and pain, but can cause inhibition of collagen synthesis affecting healing. [3]

inflammation chart

Chronic Inflammation[edit | edit source]

Inflammation that continues on for several months to several years is referred to as chronic inflammation.[4] This phenomenon occurs when macrophages have been unable to clear the wounded area of foreign substances.  This area becomes surrounded with collagen/scar to isolate it from the body called a granuloma.[3] [4]

Proliferation Phase[edit | edit source]

Once the inflammatory process is complete, tissue repair can occur.  This phase consists of two actions, fibroplasia (fibrous material production) and angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation).[3]

Physiologically during this phase, the following occurs:

  1. Capillary buds form and grow towards the injured area
  2. Granulation tissue is created by capillary loops initiating blood flow
  3. Phagocytosis by specialized white blood cells
  4. Lymphatic vessels create a new drainage system
  5. Fibroblasts contract wound pulling edges towards each other[4]

Remodeling[edit | edit source]

The remodeling stage may last anywhere from 3 weeks to 12 months and overlaps the repair stage. The aim of remodeling is to decrease wound size, increase the scar strength and alter the direction of collagen fibres.  Refining and altering collagen during this time facilitates increased fibre strength.[3]  Physiologically the following occurs during this phase:

  1. Contraction of granulation tissue
  2. Fibroblasts form intercellular bonds
  3. Crossbonds between cells form increasing collagen strength
  4. Continuous turnover of collagen[4]
  5. Type three collagen is replaced by type one collagen[2]

The final collagen fibre tissue arrangement should match the function of the tissue.  The alignment is dependent on stress imposed on the tissue during healing.[4] 

Healing[edit | edit source]

Healing begins immediately, however collagen is generally not laid down until the 5th day post-injury. This period of time is referred to as the “lag phase”.   During lag time,  physiotherapy goals are directed toward oedema control and resolving pain.  Tissue mobilisation focused on realigning collagen fibres can begin once collagen synthesis has been initiated.  Mild stress during this stage of rehabilitation is referred to as mechanical loading and is necessary to stimulate collagen fibre alignment.[4]  

Mechanical Loading[edit | edit source]

The goal of mechanical loading is to improve injured tissue tensile strength through compression, tension or shear force. [4] A load can be very light like a tickle, to a very high load like a manipulation.[2] If the load is applied is too little or too much, it can result in substandard repair and potentially lead to a chronic condition.   As the tissue strengthens, the applied load can be enhanced being cautious not to go overload.[4]  Too much tension can cause the collagen fibres to misalign developing adhesions leading to a regression of the inflammatory process.[2] [4]

Physio loading[edit | edit source]

Physiotherapists can apply mechanical loads to injured tissues with different techniques such as massage, ultrasound and exercise.[4] [2] These interventions promote repair and remodeling of injured tissues.[4] An indicator that the tissue is being stimulated and remodeled is the patient will feel mild discomfort.  One example of mechanical loading is deep transverse friction massage which may improve adhesions and increase the tensile strength of the healing scar.[4]  Please see the below video for an example of deep transverse friction massage:(book)

EmbedVideo received the bad id "YezCxFFGJXQ&t=6s" for the service "youtube".
Loading Feedback[edit | edit source]

Patient feedback is critical during this stage to ensure collagen alignment and proper healing.  Asking the patient to monitor for swelling, stiffness and pain for 24 hours can help the therapist gauge the correct loading intensity.  In addition, therapists can monitor swelling using girth measurements.[2] 

Summary Soft Tissue Injury[edit | edit source]

Traditional Acute Injury Management[edit | edit source]

Traditional treatment for soft tissue injury as been referred to as RICE, rest, ice, compression and elevation.  Unfortunately, rest or immobilisation of soft tissue injury can result in joint stiffness, weak ligaments and delayed healing.   Total immobilisation should be dedicated to bone injury or a complete rupture where movement could cause further damage.  Conversely, exercise and pain-free movement within a protected support can strengthen ligaments and increase collagen turnover.[4] [5]

New thoughts on Acute Injury Management[edit | edit source]

Contemporary acronyms for soft tissue injury management is referred to as PEACE and LOVE[6]. See below for a better understanding of the various steps:

PEACE (day 1-3)

P: protect the area

E: elevate

A: avoid anti-inflammatories medication to allow for natural inflammatory process to occur

C: compression

E:  educate the patient on an active approcah to therapy versus a passive one[6]

LOVE (after a few days)

L: optimal loading to repair and remodel tissue

O: optimistic expectations by the patient coincide with better outcome

V: vascularization- pain-free aerobic exercise to increase blood flow

E: exercise- pain-free exercise[6]

Healing Times[edit | edit source]

With proper management, various tissues will take different amounts of time to heal fully. Understanding the specific tissue helps target the appropriate timing for incremental loading during the remodeling stage.[2]   Ian Horsley[2] estimates the time expected to fully heal by tissue below:

Muscle: 6 months

Ligament: 1 year

Tendon: 2-3 years

Articular cartilage: greater than 3 years

Soft tissues need to go through the three stages of inflammatory, repair and remodel to fully heal. Physiotherapists can assist with healing by not only understanding the timeline of the involved tissue, but when and how much intensity to apply during the remodeling phase. Good clinical decision will be necessary to fine tune interventions and to monitor symptoms. All of these factors will provide for optimal soft tissue recovery.[2]

Resources[edit | edit source]

Reference[edit | edit source]

  1. Muire PJ, Mangum LH, Wenke JC. Time course of immune response and immunomodulation during normal and delayed healing of musculoskeletal wounds. Frontiers in immunology. 2020 Jun 4;11:1056.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Horsley, I. Injury and Healing in Sports Physiotherapy Course. Physioplus. 2022.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Norris C. Sports and soft tissue injuries: A guide for students and therapists. Routledge; 2018 Sep 3.
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 Pahwa R, Goyal A, Bansal P, Jialal I. Chronic Inflammation. In: StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing, Treasure Island (FL); 2021. PMID: 29630225.
  5. Vuurberg G, Hoorntje A, Wink LM, Van Der Doelen BF, Van Den Bekerom MP, Dekker R, Van Dijk CN, Krips R, Loogman MC, Ridderikhof ML, Smithuis FF. Diagnosis, treatment and prevention of ankle sprains: update of an evidence-based clinical guideline. British journal of sports medicine. 2018 Aug 1;52(15):956-.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Dubois B, Esculier JF. Soft-tissue injuries simply need PEACE and LOVE. British journal of sports medicine. 2020 Jan 1;54(2):72-3.