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Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine

Exercise : An effective prescription for joint pain

Joint pain can take away life’s simple pleasures—you may no longer look forward to walking your dog, gardening, or chasing a tennis ball across the court. Even the basics of getting through your day, like getting into the car or carrying laundry to the basement, can become sharp reminders of your limitations.

Common causes of joint pain include arthritis, previous injuries, the strain of repetitive movements, posture problems, aging, or inactivity. It is tempting to avoid the motions that cause you pain. But limiting your movements can weaken muscles and make joint pain worse.

The right exercises performed properly can be a long-lasting way to improve ankle, knee, hip, or shoulder pain. For some people, the right exercise routine can even help delay surgery or improve outcome after surgical intervention.

Your goal should be to pair gentle, targeted joint workouts with a simple walking routine. You should consult your doctor before you begin a new exercise program, but these simple stretching tips are important to any workout:

  1. Warm up first. Muscles stretch more easily when warm. Doing the warm-ups before any workout, or taking a warm shower or bath, will do the trick.
  2. Feel no pain. Stretch only to the point of mild tension, never to the point of pain. If a stretch hurts, stop doing it. Reset your position carefully and try again. With time and practice, your flexibility will improve.
  3. Breathe. Breathe comfortably when stretching.
  4. Practice often. You’ll see the best gains if you do gentle stretching frequently—several times a day on as many days of the week as possible.

Categories
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine

Lifestyle Medicine

Lifestyle Medicine uses lifestyle adjustments as therapeutic interventions. These adjustments include a healthy eating plan, based on wholesome food and fresh produce, regular and customized physical activity, adequate sleep, stress management, avoidance of unhealthy substances (such as heavy drinking or smoking) and positive interpersonal relationships. All these interventions are used to prevent, treat or reverse the effects of chronic diseases, including cancer, heart disease, obesity, osteoporosis, arthritis and diabetes. 

-Chronic diseases are the leading cause of death and disability worldwide.

-It is estimated that 6 out of 10 adults suffer from a chronic disease and four in ten suffer from more than two 

Categories
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine

Tennis Elbow Surgical Treatment

Tennis elbow or lateral epicondylitis is a painful condition of the elbow, due to overloading by repetitive motions of the wrist or arm.

The most common symptom is pain on the outside of the elbow.

Treatment starts with anti-inflammatory medication, physiotherapy, bracing and injections.

If all conservative treatment fails, then surgery is indicated -either open or arthroscopic.

During surgery, we identify the damaged tissue and we repair the tendons/ remove scar tissue and in some cases even remove a tiny part of the bone too. This is a minor surgery, often done under local anesthesia and it is a day care procedure, which means the patient can go home the same day.

Recovery is fast and return to play is usually after 4 weeks of proper rehabilitation.

Exercises to improve strength and flexibility, to prevent or treat tennis elbow:

Categories
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine

Sports Medicine

Sports medicine is a branch of medicine that focuses on preventing, diagnose and treat sports related injuries.

Sports medicine focuses on helping people improve their athletic performance, recover from injury and prevent future injuries. It is a fast-growing health care field, because health workers who specialize in sports medicine help all kinds of people, not just athletes.

As  Orthopedic surgeons with special interest in exercise and sports medicine, we focus on sports-related medical services. These include exercise prescriptions together with injury prevention and conditioning for recreational or professional athletes. We also treat sports related disorders with various conservative or surgical interventions

Categories
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine

Anti- inflammatory food

Anti-inflammatory foods

• tomatoes

• olive oil

• green leafy vegetables, such as spinach and kale

• nuts like almonds and walnuts

• fatty fish like salmon, mackerel, tuna, and sardines

• fruits such as strawberries, blueberries, cherries and oranges

Why anti-inflammatory foods?

They significantly lower your chances of developing chronic diseases, such as arthritis, cancer, cardiovascular disease or diabetes. But even if you already suffer from a chronic disease, following an anti-inflammatory diet will help you better control the disease and prevent further damage.

Coffee, which contains polyphenols and other anti-inflammatory compounds, may protect against inflammation too!

Anti-inflammatory diet

To reduce levels of inflammation, aim for an overall healthy diet such as the Mediterranean diet, which is high in fruits, vegetables, nuts, whole grains, fish, and healthy oils.

In addition to lowering inflammation, a less processed diet can have noticeable effects on your physical and emotional health.

food diet
Categories
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine

Is walking a good exercise?

Sometimes overlooked as a form of exercise, walking briskly can help you build stamina, burn excess calories and make your heart healthier.

You do not have to walk for hours. A brisk 10-minute daily walk has lots of health benefits and counts towards your recommended 150 minutes of weekly exercise