Principle of anatomical movement of football players in treatment of anterior cruciate ligament injury Palastanga (2006). The anterior cruciate ligament is two bands and the anterior medial side is located in front of the intercondylar bulge of the medial plateau. The anterolateral side is attached to the medial side of the femur and the center is distorted. The vessel supply is the middle knee artery. Ekbolm (1994). In football, cut, players will perform hip joint extension and abduction, flexion of the knee and flexion of the sole. Flexor muscle
In the case of anterior cruciate ligament or posterior cruciate ligament (ACL / PCL) and meniscus (knee cartilage) in particular, knee injury in football is the most common. These knee injuries have a negative impact on the long-term involvement of players in sports. Football players also have higher chances of ankle sprains due to surface movements and cutting acts. Shoulder injuries are also common, especially when attacking and defending the back, the lips (cartilage bumper around the shoulder) are particularly vulnerable. In addition, football players can see shoulder joint (ACJ) or shoulder damage
If you are concerned about football injuries and football injury prevention strategies, please consult a sports medicine expert or sports leader.
As more attention is paid to today's physical activity, the incidence of anterior cruciate ligament injury has also increased. In epidemiological studies, the prevalence of anterior cruciate ligament injury is estimated to be about 1 to 3,000 Americans. Management of these injuries has evolved from non-surgical treatment, extracapsular reinforcement and primary ligament repair to reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament. Through application of knowledge gained from basic science and clinical research, the treatment of these injuries has been significantly improved over the past several decades. This article is in two parts. The first part outlines the science underlying the biology and biomechanics of the anterior cruciate ligament and the reconstruction. In the second part, review the current concept of reconstructive surgery and clinical relevance, and publish later.
Current trends in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction Part 1: Biological and biomechanical reconstruction
Surgical treatment of the anterior ligament defect knee has evolved to reinforcement of EX mitral valve using living tissue transplant from primary restoration to anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. In the past few decades, anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction has been improved with knowledge gained from basic science and clinical research. In the first part of this article I analyzed biology and biomechanics of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. The second part discusses the current operational concept and clinical relevance of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. The latest information on prenatal anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction presents a demonstration of clinical outcome measures that help to improve the correlation between application of basic scientific knowledge and goals
Part 2 of the current trend of reconstruction of anterior cruciate ligament Surgical treatment and clinical significance