chapter 1 - biomechanics of musculoskeletal injury knes 463

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Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

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Page 1: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury

KNES 463

Page 2: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Why study the biomechanics of injuries? National Safety Council: Annual cost >

$435 million and 40% of hospital admissions

Unintentional injuries are the 5th leading cause of death in the U.S.

Potential life span for injures related deaths 36 years

Page 3: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

What is the difference between an accident and injury? Accident: unexpected,

unavoidable and unintentional event

Some accidents involve injuries

Page 4: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

What is an injury?

Damage caused by physical trauma sustained by tissues of the body

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What is Biomechanics?

The applications of mechanical principles to biological problems.

Mechanism: Physical process responsible for a given action, reaction, or result.

Interdisciplinary approach (anatomy, physiology, mechanics, medicine, engineering, psychology)

Page 6: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Historical Perspective

Origins of mankind (prehistoric)

Treatment of injuries also as old as injuries

Surgical Instruments by Indian, Egyptians, Incas, and other cultures

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Famous Contributors to the study of Injuries Hippocrates: Establish

foundations for the study of injury and medicine. Father of medicine.

Described many Orthopaedic conditions

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Famous Contributors to the study of Injuries Galen: Roman

Physician (Gladiators) Basic anatomy,

treatment of spinal deformities, use of pressure bandages

Dark Ages after Roman Empire

Page 9: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Famous Contributors to the study of Injuries Andreas Vesalius:

Belgian Physician, provided detailed anatomical drawings of human dissections

Page 10: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Famous Contributors to the study of Injuries Leonardo DaVinci:

Role of joints, body senses (pain), trauma (impact), scientific drawings, similarities between man and machine.

Page 11: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Industrial Age and Technology

Technological advances Laser surgery Arthroscopy Artificial joints Microsurgery

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Epidemiology

Study of incidence, distribution, and control of disease (can predispose a person to injury) and injury in a given population

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Epidemiological Studies Descriptive: Analysis

of the frequency and distribution of an injury in a population

Categorization items:– Severity– Location (site)– Type of disability– Population subset– Activity

Analytical: Finds the cause and effect relationships in an injury

– More difficult, time consuming

– Must rule out all possible factors such as coincidence or mere correlation

Page 14: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Terminology

Incidence: Number of new injuries in fixed period of time by a group of people at risk.

Prevalence: Number of people with an injury/number of people at risk

Injury rate: Number of injury in population/reference measure (practice episodes, hours of exposure, innings played)

Relative risk: Likelihood of an injury happening to a group

Page 15: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Psychological Perspective

A person’s likelihood to injury depends on the task, environment, and the person’s psychological state

Page 16: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Psychological States

Psychological states predispose people to injuries– Stress

– Distraction

– Fatigue

Page 17: Chapter 1 - Biomechanics of Musculoskeletal Injury KNES 463

Human Error

Inappropriate or undesirable human decision or behavior that has the potential for reducing effectiveness safety or performance

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How can we reduce human error?

Selection of people with appropriate skills

Training Effective equipment,

procedures, and environment

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Why do people suffer accidents?

Accident-proneness Accident-liability (situations) Capability-demand (increase demands) Adjustment-stress (increase stress levels) Arousal-alertness (boredom/anxiety) Goals-freedom-alertness (workers set own

goals injuries) CFAC (comprehensive multi-factor model)

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Risk for Injury or death

Perception of risks– overestimation of

expertise or abilities

– overemphasizing situations

– It can’t happen to me! philosophy

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Psychological factors in InjuryPreceeding factors Associated factors Factor after

Medical/Psychologicalhistory

Emotional distress Culpability

Somatotype Injury site Rehabilatationcompliance/effectiveness

Life Stress/or change Pain Pain/medication

Sports stress Timeliness Psychological status

Overtraining Unexpectedness Social Support

Sport related risk factors Personality conflicts

Fans & media

Litigation

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How can we prevent injuries?

Injury Control programs– educate those at risk

– Legislation (seat belts)

– Automatic protection (airbags)

Automatic protection is the most effective

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How can we prevent injuries?

Health & safety Education Programs– Least effective program– Greater the effort to adopt a safer behavior the

less likely the adoption of that behavior

Fitness Programs– Fit individual a less likely to be injured and

recover faster

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Can injuries be eliminated?

No, but the severity and the incidence can be reduced