Injury Mechanisms: The Hidden Forces Behind Tissue Breakdown and Motor Adaptation
Manage episode 503222346 series 3643436
Dive into the intricate world of injury mechanisms, understanding how initial tissue damage can spiral into chronic dysfunction if mismanaged. This article series highlights the crucial subacute phase (days to weeks post-injury), a period of high healing potential where pain and swelling emerge as the body ramps up fibroblast activity and collagen synthesis. However, mismanagement—like training through pain or delayed care—can tragically shift this healing trajectory towards degeneration.
Chronic soft-tissue injuries emerge when repair fails, leaving tissues fibrotic, disorganized, and trapped in cycles of inflammation. Classic examples include tendinopathies and chronic ligamentous injuries, often showing disrupted collagen and neovascularization. The article details how even microtrauma in overhead athletes can lead to significant issues like rotator cuff tears or UCL breakdown. Crucially, injury also alters motor control, with the Central Nervous System compensating by inhibiting injured tissues and recruiting others. The clinical takeaway is clear: early and proper care is paramount, as unchecked subacute injuries demand far more extensive rehabilitation. Preventing this progression is key to restoring performance.
75 episodes