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Sports Medicine & Therapy
Sports Medicine, both as a science and a philosophy of medical care, has made incredible strides over the past 50 years. Somewhat an offshoot of the running boom of the 1970’s, the idea that you could accelerate an athlete’s safe return to sport, has produced some of the most prolific research in medicine regarding orthopedic injuries. As Sport therapists, we routinely draw from the literature regarding such wide-ranging topics as predictive return to sports testing, optimal muscle load production, proper arm slot for maintaining shoulder mechanics in the throwing athlete, neurocognitive techniques in ACL rehab and the vital importance of core stability for extremity function.
The Application of Sports Medicine Principles to Every Day Physical Therapy
The Staff Therapists at Furnace Brook Physical Therapy pride themselves in applying these scientific principles daily to every athlete that comes for treatment. This ranges from the young female Irish step dancer with heel pain, to the high school soccer player with a history of concussions, to the recreational skier who has just torn their ACL and underwent a reconstruction, to the recreational softball player who has underwent a rotator cuff repair, and many, many more. The integration of scientific principles in rehabilitating athletes is paramount to their personal success. Further, these principles must be safely used with respect to the athlete’s age, competitive status, gender differences, and personal goals.
Physical Therapy Strategies in Sports Medicine
Among these treatment principles may simply be structured rest with time in the pool, timed immobilization, various types of loading for strength and tensile purposes, kinesiotaping, various types of stretching, core stability training, blood flow restriction training as in adjunct in early postop rehab and functional training. However, it doesn’t stop there. Furnace Brook Physical Therapy has the facility space to also simulate sports specific activities. Golfers need to swing; soccer players need to kick, basketball players need to rebound and hockey players need to shoot.
We also have a wealth of contacts if sports performance doesn’t stop with the discharge from physical therapy. Whether it be a referral to yoga, a Sports Medicine physician specialist, Cross-Fit, the Micheli Center in Waltham for Sports Injury Prevention, or the Dan Boothby Sports Training Center in Hingham, we know what to do. Call us today for an appointment at 617-770-4167. We serve Quincy, Massachusetts and surrounding areas.