1 / 22

Meniscal Injuries

Meniscal Injuries. Daniel S. Lamar M.D. Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon. Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:. Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:. Overview. Meniscal Injuries Treatment Rehabilitation Principles

msunday
Download Presentation

Meniscal Injuries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Meniscal Injuries • Daniel S. Lamar M.D. • Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  2. Overview • Meniscal Injuries • Treatment • Rehabilitation Principles • Emerging Concepts • Return to Play Criteria Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  3. Meniscal Anatomy • Medial- C shaped, firmly fixed • Lateral- circular, mobile • Function- absorb, nourish, distribute, stabilize • Blood supply- med and lat inferior geniculates • Age related changes Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 3

  4. Meniscal Injuries • Mechanism of injury • Symptoms • Signs • Pattern of tear Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  5. Treatment Options • Non-operative • aging athletes • incomplete tears • Operative • menisectomy • repair Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 5

  6. Repair • Principles • healthy tissue • good vasculature • stable enviroment • Repair techniques • all inside • inside out Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 6

  7. Surgical Treatment • Most repairs on longitudinal tears • positioning relative to periphery • 2mm 90% heal • 3mm- 75% • 4mm- 50% Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  8. Orientation of the sutures/repair critical to rehab strategy Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 8

  9. Orientation Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 9

  10. Soft Tissue Biology • Strategies to expedite • Biologics vs mechanical stress • PRP, stem cells, cytokines, periosteal grafts, US, shock wave treatment, laser • environmental and technical challenges • Good vs bad biologic remodeling • increasing cellularity and vascularity not necessarily beneficial Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  11. Rehabilitation Principles • Protect repair • Improve limb function • Apparent conflicting goals but not always at odds- some mechanical stress is necessary to facilitate healing Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  12. Rehab Protocol • Bucket handle or longitudinal tears • Axial load helpful • 0-4 weeks • 50-100%WB with leg braced in full extension • limit flexion to 90 degrees • emphasis on isometrics, quad activation edema control • Radial tears Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  13. Rehab Protocol • 4-8 weeks • increase ROM to full • WBAT without brace • avoid loading knee in flexion • bike vs treadmill Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 13

  14. Rehab Protocol • 8-12 weeks • road cycle in saddle • light agility with early lateral training • avoid loaded rotational stress • 12-16 weeks • add running • early sport specific challenges • increase loads Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 14

  15. Radial Tears • Important to understand difference • Strict NWB x 6weeks • Axial load problematic • much slower progression to loaded activity • 4-6 months before any substantial load Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: 15

  16. RTP criteria • Goal is to measure strength, limb control and performance • Minimal to no side to side differences • Quantitative and qualitative • Before and after fatigue challenge • Testing must be safe and reliable Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  17. RTP criteria • Drop down test- 5 reps • Single leg press one rep max • Single leg hop- stick landing • Triple single leg jump • Triple crossover jump • Fatigue proto x 5 min then repeat • 95%of opposite limb with good form Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  18. Blood Flow Restriction Training • Concept is to restrict arterial flow to 20% of normal and completely occlude venous outflow and perform low load resistance exercise at 20-40% of a 1RM. • The goal is to elevate the factors responsible for cell growth and hypertrophy by recreating the hypoxic stimulus the muscle/body would typically see at much higher loads and durations Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  19. Blood Flow Restriction Training • Identified effects appear both locally and systemically • increase muscle swelling • increase intra muscular anabolic and anti catabolic activity • proliferation of myogenic stem cells • increase IGF-1, growth hormone • results seem to show increase hypertrophy Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  20. Blood Flow Restriction Training • Increasing enthusiasm and incorporation in rehab protocols around the NFL • Particularly attractive in injury situations where large volume changes and strength loss ensues quickly following injury and surgery Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  21. Blood Flow Restriction Training • Tennessee Titans protocol • incorporate early in both pre and post-surgical treatment • inflate cuff, set of 30reps then 30sec rest with cuff inflated followed by 15 reps and 30sec rest with a total of 4 sets of 15, 3 x a week. Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

  22. Thank You Text Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to: Daniel S. Lamar, MD Consulting Physician to:

More Related