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  • Ready to Get in Shape? Ease Into Exercise, Experts Say

    Source: US News

    Watching the Winter Olympics in Sochi may inspire some to get off the couch and begin working out or playing sports, but it’s important to ease into these activities, an expert suggests. “Just watching these events can serve as a tremendous inspiration to shape up, change or start a physical activity or sports regimen,” Jim Thornton, president of the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, said in a news release from the group.

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  • How to Prevent Winter Sports Injuries

    Source: US News

    Get out and enjoy winter but take steps to protect yourself from common ski- and snowboard-related injuries such as sprains, strains, dislocations and fractures, an orthopedist says.

    “No matter your skill level, everyone is susceptible to injury on the slopes,” said Dr. Allston Stubbs, an associate professor of orthopedics at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, said in a center news release. “Most of these injuries happen at the end of the day, so you may want to think twice before going for ‘one last run,’ especially when you’re tired.”

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  • High-demand patients returned to work quickly after arthroscopic treatment of a dislocated elbow

    Source: Healio

    Investigators found patients returned to work 2.7 weeks after acute arthroscopic repair of the radial ulnohumeral ligament for elbow dislocation.

    Michael J. O’Brien, MD, and colleagues retrospectively reviewed the results of surgeries they performed in 14 consecutive high-demand patients. The investigators defined high-demand patients as those who needed both hands to work or play a competitive sport. One patient in the series was a surgeon.

    Few guidelines exist about return to work after elbow dislocation, according to O’Brien, who presented the results at the American Academy of Orthopaedics Surgeons Annual Meeting, here.

    In this series, “All patients returned to their pre-injury level of function,” he said. The investigators followed the patients for an average of 30 months after either acute or subacute treatment of the radial ulnohumeral ligament (RUHL).

    O’Brien said all patients achieved a Mayo Elbow Performance Score that was excellent and ranged from 95 points to 100 points.

    According to the paper abstract, results using a goniometer showed a final range of motion from -3 º in full extension to full flexion that exceeded 130 º.

    O’Brien said the return to work was longer — at about 4.6 weeks — in the patients who underwent arthroscopic stabilization subacutely.

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