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Sports Medicine I

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Sports Medicine I Mr. Ryan Fibrous (Synarthrodial) Joints Held by connective tissue Immovable E.g. Bones of the skull. Between tibia and fibula Cartilaginous ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sports Medicine I


1
Sports Medicine I
  • Mr. Ryan

2
What Will I Learn?
  • Human biology
  • Anatomy
  • Exercise Physiology
  • Kinesiology
  • Biomechanics
  • Muscles, bones, ligaments, organs
  • Mechanics and treatment of sports injury

3
Course Expectations
  • See Handout
  • Warm Up
  • Write what you think these words mean
  • Anatomy
  • Physiology
  • Kinesiology
  • Biomechanics
  • Anatomical Position

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Answers
  • Anatomy - The scientific study of how the body is
    organized concentrating on bones, joints,
    muscles, and organs, their kinds and their
    arrangements. (ana- separate, -otomy
    incision/cut)
  • Physiology - is the study of how cells and organ
    systems function. (-ology study of)
  • Kinesiology the study of human movement.
  • Biomechanics - The study of motion and the
    effects of forces relative to the body. (bio-
    life)
  • Take Pre-Quiz

6
Warm Up
  • Name the anatomical names of the following
    muscles and bones
  • Collar bone
  • Chest muscle
  • Thigh bone
  • Shoulder blade
  • Stomach muscles
  • Breast plate
  • Calf muscle

7
Anatomical Terms
  • How do I dorsiflex my toes?
  • Do my hamstrings help in flexion or extension of
    the knee joint?
  • In which anatomical plane do I do a jumping
    jack?
  • Which is more medial? Elbow or wrist?
  • Is my belly button on the anterior or posterior
    side of my body?

8
Introduction to Anatomy
  • The anatomical position

9
Anatomical Terms
  • In relation to the frontal plane
  • Anterior refers to the front of the body
  • Posterior refers to the back of the body
  • In relation to the sagittal plane
  • Medial closer to the midline
  • Lateral farther from the midline
  • Other directional terms
  • Superior - toward the head end of the body
  • Inferior - away from the head
  • Proximal towards an attachment
  • Distal away from an attachment
  • Dorsal toward the back/posterior
  • Plantar toward/on the sole of the foot
  • Ventral toward the front/anterior

10
Movement
  • Flexion - where there is a reduction in the angle
    between bones or parts of the body
  • Extension is the opposite of flexion, and there
    is an increase in the angle

11
Cont
  • Adduction - where there is a reduction in the
    angle between bones or parts of the body.
  • Abduction - the exact opposite, with an increase
    in the angle.

12
Cont
  • Rotation is rotation of an entire limb
    clockwise (laterally) or anticlockwise
    (medially).
  • Circumduction -is a special case of movement
    involving adduction, flexion, extension and
    abduction. The resulting movement creates a
    circular path of movement. (Ball and socket
    joints)

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Cont
  • Pronation this is the rotation of the hand so
    that the palm faces posteriorly.
  • Supination - roation of the hand so that the palm
    faces anteriorly.

15
Cont
  • Inversion - the movement of the sole towards the
    median plane. (same as when an ankle is twisted).
  • Eversion - the movement of the sole of the foot
    away from the median plane.

16
Cont
  • Dorsi flexion toes pointing up
  • Plantar flexion toes pointing down

17
Cont
  • Retraction gliding a segment backward ( e.g.
    scapulae squeeze together)
  • Protraction when a segment glides forward (e.g.
    mandible/jaw)

18
Skeletal System

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Bones
  • Protect organs
  • Support/Framework
  • Provide Movement (work with muscles)
  • Store minerals
  • Produce blood cells
  • 2 skeletons
  • Axial (spine, thorax, and skull
  • Appendicular (bones of the extremities)

21
Anatomical Characteristics of Bone
  • Dense connective tissue consisting of bone cells
    (osteocytes) that are filled in a matrix, which
    consists of an intercellular material.
  • Compact (hard) tissue outer surface, tunneled
    by a marrow cavity
  • Cancellous (spongy) bone inner aspect composed
    of a more porous tissue
  • Contains a network of blood and lymphatic vessels
  • Periosteum tissue that covers a bone and
    contains the blood supply to the bone

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Cont
  • Epiphysis growth plate located at the ends of a
    long bone
  • Bone types
  • Long (femur)
  • Short (metacarpal)
  • Flat (scapula)
  • Irregular (vertebra)
  • Osteoblasts bone-producing cells (new)
  • Osteoclasts cells that resorb bone (break up
    old bone)

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Marrow
  • Red Marrow RBCs, WBCs and platelets
  • Yellow Marrow WBCs

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GROWTH PLATE
30
Cartilage
  • Covers the ends of long bones and can be found
    between bones
  • Functions
  • Join structures (ribs and sternum)
  • Absorb shock
  • Permit smooth bone movement
  • 3 types
  • Hyaline or articular (nasal septum, articular
    ends of bones of synovial joints)
  • Fibrous (vertebral discs, menisci)
  • Elastic (external ear)

31
Joints
  • Three classifications of joints
  • Synovial, Fibrous, and Cartilaginous
  • Ligaments connective tissue joining bone to
    bone
  • Synovial (Diarthrodial)
  • Have fantastic mobility and consist of a joint
    capsule
  • Consists of
  • Joint capsule lined with a synovial membrane
  • Hyaline cartilage
  • Ligaments

32
Types of Synovial Joints
  • Ball and Socket allow all possible movement
  • Shoulder and hip joints
  • Hinge allow only flexion and extension
  • Elbow and knee
  • Pivot permits rotation around an axis
  • Cervical atlas and axis, proximal ends of radius
    and ulna
  • Ellipsoidal have an elliptical convex head and
    a concave socket
  • wrist

33
Cont
  • Saddle reciprocally concavo-convex
  • Carpometacarpal joint of the thumb
  • Gliding allow a small amount of gliding back
    and forth and sideways
  • Joints between the carpal and tarsal bones,
    joints between vertebrae

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35
Fibrous (Synarthrodial) Joints
  • Held by connective tissue
  • Immovable
  • E.g.
  • Bones of the skull.
  • Between tibia and fibula

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37
Cartilaginous (Ampiarthrodial) Joints
  • Cartilage attaching two bones together
  • E.g. Where the ribs meet the sternum

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39
Muscles (mm)
  • Three types
  • Smooth internal organs
  • Cardiac heart
  • Skeletal attached to skeleton responsible for
    movement
  • TYPE I Slow Twitch
  • TYPE II Fast Twitch

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MUSCLE CONTRACTIONS
  • AGONIST - Muscles that carry out a given action.
  • ANTAGONISTS mm that carry out the opposing
    action.
  • ISOTONIC mm contraction, tension remains
    unchanged and the muscle's length changes.
  • CONCENTRIC mm shortens.
  • ECCENTRIC mm lengthens.
  • ISOMETRIC mm stays the same length.

42
Structure of a Skeletal Muscle

43
Muscles
  • Composed of contractile cells or fibers
  • Myofibrils are surrounded by the endomysium
  • Fiber bundles are surrounded by the perimysium
  • The entire muscle is surrounded by the epimysium
  • Tendon attaches muscle to bone
  • Aponeurosis - connective tissue that attaches to
    other muscles

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45
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