Tissue Response to Injury Flashcards
What is a grade 1 tissue injury?
Ache after activity, mild local tenderness and local inflammatory changes
What is a grade 2 tissue injury?
Ache or pain at onset of activity/after activity, local tenderness, some ROM limitation, weakness
What is a grade 3 tissue injury?
Constant ache exaggerated by activity, local tenderness, loss of ROM, weakness, possible atrophy
What are the 3 phases of the healing process?
Inflammatory response, fibroblastic repair, maturation/remodelling
What is the treatment for the inflammatory response phase?
RICER and no HARM
What are the indicators for referral during the inflammatory response phase?
- Unable to bear weight
- Unable to move injury through 50% ROM
- Joint swells majorly within 1-2 hours
What occurs during the fibroblastic repair phase?
Scar formation (fibroplasia)
What is cicatrisation?
Development of cicatrix scar tissue (avascular, contracted, firm) during the fibroblastic repair phase, characterised by discolouration
What is the treatment for the fibroblastic repair phase?
Anti-inflammatories, physiotherapy, stretching (passive then active)
What occurs during the maturation of cicatrisation?
Muscle wasting, weakness and loss of proprioception and skill
What occurs during the maturation/remodelling phase?
Realignment of collage and continued breakdown and synthesis of collagen (type 3 becomes type 1)
What are the aims of treatment for tissue injuries?
Assist healing, regain length and strength of tissues, regain function
During what phase of healing should activity be added?
Repair phase
What type of exercises should be incorporated into the maturation/remodelling phase?
Aggressive ROM and strength exercises
What are the four types of soft tissue?
- Epithelial tissue (skin, vessel & organ linings)
- Connective tissue (tendons, ligaments, cartilage, fat, blood, bone)
- Muscle tissue (skeletal, smooth & cardiac)
- Nerve tissue (brain, spinal cord & nerves)