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BRUKNER & KHAN'S CLINICAL SPORTS MEDICINE: INJURIES, VOL. 1

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Morton JP, Iqbal Z, Drust B, Burgess D, Close GL, Br ukner PD. Seasonal variation in vitamin D status in professional soccer players of the English Premier League.Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2012 Aug;37(4):798-802 Brukner P, Connell D. "Serious thigh muscle strains”: beware the intramuscular tendon which plays an important role in difficult hamstring and quadriceps muscle strains. British Journal of Sports Medicine 2016;50(4):205-8. Brukner PD, Bradshaw C, Bennell KL. Managing common stress fractures: Let risk level guide treatment. Physician and Sportsmedicine 26(8): 39-47, 1998 Sobhani S, Dekker R, Postema K, Dijkstra PU. Epidemiology of ankle and foot overuse injuries in sports: a systematic review. Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports. 2013 Dec;23(6):669-86.

Parker S, Brukner PD, Rosier M. Chronic fatigue syndrome and the athlete. Sports Medicine, Training and Rehabilitation 6(4): 269 – 278, 1996. DiFiori JP, Benjamin HJ, Brenner JS, Gregory A, Jayanthi N, Landry GL, Luke A. Overuse injuries and burnout in youth sports: a position statement from the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine. British journal of sports medicine. 2014 Feb 1;48(4):287-8. Brukner PD. Australian football injuries – a three year study. Proceedings, XXXIV FIMS World Congress. Sports, Medicine and Health. (G.P.H. Hermans Ed.) pp. 142 – 146, 1990Slimmon D, Brukner PD. Sports ankle injuuries – asessment and management Australian Family Physician 39(1-2): 18-22, 2010 Creaby MW, Brukner PD, Bennell KL. “Stress fracture/stress reaction of the lower leg and foot” in Management of Chronic Conditions in the Foot and Lower Leg, Rome K & McNair P (eds), Churchill Livingstone Elesevier, Edinburgh, 2015 Common types of overuse injuries in sports (adapted from Brukner and Khan's Clinical Sports Medicine [3]): This is an authoritative book of the highest caliber. It is incredibly useful for directly improving clinical care of patients and is applicable immediately to the daily work of caring for patients. This is a welcome update, with extensive additions that include new evidence-based medicine principles and new chapters, particularly on pain, core stability, training, and return to sport. Brukner PD, Inge K. Iron status of VFL footballers. Australian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sport, 20 (4): 8–10, 1988

Kannus P. Structure of the tendon connective tissue. Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports. 2000 Dec;10(6):312-20. Moderate - moderate swelling, pain and impact on function, reduced Proprioception, ROM (range of motion) and instability Stovitz SD, Johnson RJ. “Underuse” as a cause for musculoskeletal injuries: is it time that we started reframing our message?. British journal of sports medicine. 2006 Sep 1;40(9):738-9. A bone is a rigid organ that constitutes part of the vertebral skeleton. Bones support and protect the various organs of the body, produce red and white blood cells, store minerals and also enable mobility as well as support for the body. Bone tissue is a type of dense connective tissue. Zwerver J, Bredeweg SW, Van Den Akker-Scheek I. Prevalence of Jumper’s knee among nonelite athletes from different sports: a cross-sectional survey. The American journal of sports medicine. 2011 Sep;39(9):1984-8.

This fourth edition of Clinical Sports Medicine has evolved significantly from earlier versions and includes 13 new chapters covering such topics as physical activity promotion, challenging hip pain, hand and finger injuries, medical emergencies in the sporting context, and exercise to treat neurological diseases. Many chapters have undergone major updates, resulting in a clinically relevant and comprehensive book that continues to be a respected guide to the complete medical care of people participating in physical activity and sport. Khan KM, Brukner PD, Kearney C., Fuller P.J., Bradshaw C., and Z.S. Kiss.Tarsal navicular stress fractures in athletes. Sports Medicine 17(1): 65–76, 1994

Brukner PD. Exercise-related leg pain: overview. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 32(3):S1-3, 2000 According to Brukner & Kahn (2012) [3] this is one of the most common methods of classifying sports injuries and relies on the sports physiotherapist knowing and understanding both the mechanism of injury and the onset of the symptoms. Holzer K, Brukner PD, Douglass J. Evidence-based management of exercise-induced asthma. Current Sports Medicine Reports 1:86-92, 2002.

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Jowett A, Brukner PD. Stress fracture of the fifth metacarpal in a female softball pitcher. Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine 7:220-221, 1997. Lccn 2012418088 Ocr tesseract 5.3.0-1-gd3a4 Ocr_detected_lang en Ocr_detected_lang_conf 1.0000 Ocr_detected_script Latin Ocr_detected_script_conf 1.0000 Ocr_module_version 0.0.18 Ocr_parameters -l eng Old_pallet IA-NS-0001331 Openlibrary_edition Brukner PD, Matheson G.O., “Overuse Injuries” Textbook of Rheumatology. Ed:E. Harris, Churchill Livingstone 2000 Orchard JW, Leeder SR, Moorhead GE, Coates JJ, Brukner PD. Australia urgently needs a Federal government body dedicated to monitoring and preventing sports injuries. Medical Journal of Australia 187(9): 505-506, 2007 Tendons are situated between bone and muscles and are bright white in colour, their fibro-elastic composition gives them the strength required to transmit large mechanical forces. Normal tendons consist of tight parallel bundles of collagen fibres. [3] Each muscle has two tendons, one proximally and one distally. The point at which the tendon forms an attachment to the muscle is also known as the musculotendinous junction (MTJ) and the point at which it attaches to the bone is known as the osteotendinous junction (OTJ). The purpose of the tendon is to transmit forces generated from the muscle to the bone to elicit movement. The proximal attachment of the tendon is also known as the origin and the distal tendon is called the insertion [14].

Barbour TD, Briggs CA, Bell SN, Bradshaw CJ, Venter DJ, Brukner PD. Histology of the fascial-periosteal interface in lower limb chronic deep posterior compartment syndrome British Journal of Sports Medicine 38: 709-717, 2004 Clinical Sports Medicine Collection ( csm.mhmedical.com)comprises the world-leading Brukner & Khan’s Clinical Sports Medicine, the essential authoritative foundation for clinicians and students. Upload a form. Drag and drop the file from your device or import it from other services, like Google Drive, OneDrive, Dropbox, or an external link. Brukner PD, Fanton G, Bergman AG, Beaulieu C, Matheson GO. Bilateral stress fracture of the anterior part of the tibial cortex. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 82-A:213-218, 2000 Brukner PD, K Khan: Clinical Sports Medicine McGraw Hill, Sydney 1993. Reprinted 1993, 1993, 1994, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 (40,000 copies), Korean edition, 1994

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Deacon A, Bennell K, Kiss ZS, Crossley K, Brukner PD. Osteoarthritis of the knee in retired, elite Australian footballers. Medical Journal of Australia 166:187-190, 1997 Mitchell, B., McCrory, P., Brukner PD, O’Donnell, J., Colson, E., Gelber, N., Howells, R. Hip arthroscopy: Correlation between clinical, MR arthrography and arthroscopic findings In 25 consecutive cases. Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine 13(3): 152-156, 2003 Brukner PD, Bradshaw C, Khan KM, White S. Stress fractures: a review of 180 cases. Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine 6(2), 85–89, 1996 Brukner PD & K.Bennell. “Stress fractures: Their causes and principles of treatment” in The Foot and Ankle in Sport, 2nd ed, Baxter D, Porter D. Elesevier Science, Philadelphia 2007

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