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Explore every episode of the podcast Physio Edge podcast with David Pope

Dive into the complete episode list for Physio Edge podcast with David Pope. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
164. Case study: Rotator cuff tear + arm symptoms. Physio Edge Shoulder Success podcast with Jo Gibson18 Jul 202400:14:51

Upper Limb Rehabilitation Specialist Jo Gibson explores an intriguing case of an 84-year-old man with a massive rotator cuff tear of the supraspinatus and partial subscapularis tear. Despite his long history of shoulder issues, he’s improving, but constant pain and intermittent numbness in his posterior arm and into his hand complicate the situation.

In this podcast, you’ll explore:

  • What a massive rotator cuff tear (MRCT) is
  • Common pain patterns with rotator cuff tears
  • Why the Suprascapular nerve can be affected in MRCT’s
  • How to set realistic expectations with patients about their recovery
  • Common causes of pain into the posterior arm, wrist and hand
  • How to differentially diagnose shoulder, arm and hand pain 
  • Assessment tests to identify and exclude cervical involvement
  • When nerve conduction tests or EMG should be performed 
  • Rehabilitation ideas for this patient

Listen to this podcast now to improve your rehabilitation of shoulder & arm pain and rotator cuff tears.

Free shoulder assessment infographic series

Click here to access the free shoulder infographic series and learn how to easily assess shoulder pain patients with this simple 6-step shoulder assessment from Jo Gibson

The handout for this podcast consists of a transcript and research articles referenced in this podcast.

Click here for the free webinar with Jo Gibson “Rotator cuff revealed! Rehab & reasoning”. 

Free video series “Frozen shoulder assessment & treatment” with Jo Gibson

Improve your frozen shoulder assessment and treatment now with Jo Gibson’s free video series at clinicaledge.co/shoulder

Shoulder: Steps to Success online course with Jo Gibson

Improve your assessment and treatment of shoulder pain with the Shoulder: Steps to Success online course with Jo Gibson, now available for enrolment at clinicaledge.co/shouldersuccess

Free trial Clinical Edge membership

Use a fresh approach to your musculoskeletal and sports injury treatment with a free trial Clinical Edge membership at clinicaledge.co/freetrial

Links associated with this episode:
163. ACL treatment options and cross-bracing with Clare Walsh17 Apr 202401:07:42

ACL injuries result in significant time away from sport and distress for patients. The variety of management options, from surgical intervention to non-surgical management and rehabilitation protocols, often makes us uncertain when educating and helping patients choose the most appropriate care for their needs and goals.

Recently, a new non-operative ACL injury management pathway called the “Cross bracing protocol” has been pioneered and developed by Dr Tom Cross and Tom’s father (the late Orthopaedic surgeon) Dr Merv Cross. This protocol offers a promising alternative for patients with ACL injuries who are suitable for non-surgical intervention, where the ACL injury may heal or repair itself.

Not all patients with an ACL injury are suitable for the Cross bracing protocol or non-surgical management, so how can you identify whether your patient is suitable, and which treatment options are best for each patient?

In this insightful podcast episode, we discuss the complex challenge of ACL injury management and Cross bracing with Clare Walsh (Specialist Sports & Exercise Physiotherapist, FACP).

Clare treats a lot of patients with ACL injuries with prehabilitation, post-op rehabilitation, or non-surgical management including Cross bracing. Clare works alongside Dr Tom Cross and other Sports Medicine Doctors, Orthopaedic surgeons (including the late Dr Merv Cross) and leading Sports Physiotherapists at Stadium Sports Physiotherapy and The Stadium Clinic.

Clare teaches on the Cross bracing course conducted in Australia for Physiotherapists and health professionals, and is a Senior Educator & Presenter here at Clinical Edge.

In this podcast we explore:

  • Cross bracing
    • What it is and how it developed.
    • What research has been performed to date, and what it shows about the chances of ACL healing with the Cross bracing protocol.
    • Assessment tests & specific imaging that are used to assess patient suitability.
    • Why patients might opt for Cross bracing rather than surgery.
    • Who isn’t suitable for Cross bracing.
    • Potential negative outcomes of Cross bracing.
    • Which patients are more likely to be suitable and successful with Cross bracing - eg. injury type, age, level of sport, goals, psychosocial factors.
    • Medical factors that impact suitability.
    • Psychosocial factors that impact whether a patient can undergo the protocol.
    • Which leg (right or left) is better suited to bracing and why.
    • Which type of braces are commonly used.
    • How soon the protocol needs to commence after injury to be successful.
    • Which concomitant injuries can still heal in a brace and which need surgery e.g. meniscus injuries, bucket handle tears of the meniscus, MCL tears.
    • How long patients remain in a brace.
    • Exercises and activities that can and should be performed throughout Cross bracing.
    • How patients can move or walk around throughout the Cross bracing period.
    • How Cross bracing has changed and evolved.
    • Whether the ACL is at increased risk of re-rupture following the protocol.
    • Essential medical management during the protocol.
    • Whether therapists can put a patient in a brace, or manage the protocol independently.
    • What to you do if you think a patient may be suitable for Cross bracing.
    • How to refer patients for Cross bracing
    • Followup imaging at the end of the protocol.
    • Functional assessment tests used at the end of the protocol.
    • Return to training (RTT) and return to play (RTP) following the protocol.
  • Which patients require surgery instead of conservative management.
  • Early surgery vs delayed surgery.
  • Spontaneous ACL healing - what the research says.
  • How to use patient-centred decision-making to guide patients into the most suitable recovery pathway - surgery, bracing or non-surgical management.
  • Case studies and comparisons of patients that underwent either Cross bracing or ACL reconstruction.

This podcast is packed full of great information on this emerging ACL injury treatment. You’ll finish this podcast with a deeper understanding of ACL injury management and Cross bracing plus practical knowledge, solutions and insights you can apply into your practice.

Links
154. Hip dysplasia key signs and symptoms. Physio Edge Track record: Running repairs podcast with Tom Goom19 May 202300:15:40

Hip dysplasia is a commonly missed cause of hip and groin pain, catching, clicking, locking or popping, resulting from lack of coverage of the femoral head by the acetabulum.

How can you identify hip dysplasia in your hip or groin pain patients, and avoid misdiagnosing it as iliopsoas or adductor related groin pain? What signs and symptoms will your patients reveal in their subjective history that’ll help you identify this condition?

Find out the key signs and symptoms of hip dysplasia in this podcast with Tom Goom (Running Physio).

Improve running injury assessment & treatment now with the Running Repairs Online course with Tom Goom at clinicaledge.co/runningrepairs

  Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

Links associated with this episode: Articles associated with this episode:

Chapters:

  • 03:43 - Who develops hip dysplasia?
  • 06:35 - Objective tests
  • 09:11 - Hip dysplasia vs gluteal tendinopathy
  • 10:45 - Hip dysplasia vs femoral neck stress structure 
  • 14:13 - Key takeaways

 

064. What is causing calf pain in runners and how can you assess it with Tom Goom09 Jun 201700:28:56

One of the most popular blogposts of all time on Tom Goom's website running-physio.com is on how to manage calf tears in runners. Is this because it is a really common problem, or because Tom wrote such a great blogpost? It's a bit hard to tell, and most likely it's a bit of both, but it begs the question "Why is calf pain one of the issues so many runners face? "

In episode 64 of the Physio Edge podcast, David Pope and Tom Goom discuss the latest research around calf pain in runners and what is actually going on. We want to give you all the tools you need to assess runners that present with calf pain, so we have included this in the episode as well.

If you would like to up your game on calf pain, here are some of the highlights from the podcast:

  • What is responsible for calf pain in runners?
  • What are the common symptoms?
  • What will imaging show (or not show)?
  • What happened to chronic exertional compartment syndrome (CECS)? Does it still exist?
  • What is biomechanical overload syndrome, and how is it different to CECS?
  • Who are the most likely culprits to experience calf pain?
  • How can you assess runners with calf pain?
  • What tests should you perform?
  • How can you perform a calf capacity test?

 

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

Links of Interest

Related posts

Research associated with this episode

063. How to assess and treat posterior hip and gluteal pain with Benoy Mathew31 May 201700:46:28

Posterior hip pain can have a number of causes, with referral from the lumbar spine, SIJ and hip, along with local structures such as the hip joint, gluteals, glute tendons, proximal hamstring tendons. How can you identify the structures involved in your patient's posterior hip pain? What tests can you perform in your objective assessment to assist your treatment? What is the best way to treat the glutes if they are the involved in your patient's pain?

In episode 63 of the Physio Edge podcast, Benoy Mathew and David Pope explore how you can improve your diagnosis and results with posterior hip pain.

You will discover:

  • What are some of the common causes of posterior hip pain?
  • Gluteal tendinopathy (GT)
    • What area of symptoms will patients with GT report?
    • What are the pattern of symptoms for GT?
    • What tests can we perform to make GT more or less likely
    • How can we treat GT?
  • Deep gluteal syndrome (DGS)
    • What is deep gluteal syndrome?
    • What muscles can be involved in DGS?
    • How can we differentiate it from Gluteal tendinopathy?
    • What tests can you perform to confirm or exclude DGS?
    • How does the treatment for DGS differ to GT?

Benoy is presenting a free webinar with Clinical Edge on "How to assess & diagnose posterior hip and gluteal pain", that complements this podcast, and takes you through the common sources of hip pain, how to identify hip and lumbar spine red flags, and demonstrates exactly how you can perform an assessment to test and differentially diagnose the structures involved in your patients pain.

CLICK HERE to enrol on this free webinar with Benoy Mathew

Ben also presented a webinar with Clinical Edge on how to rehabilitate adductor and psoas related groin pain. The webinar helps you discover:

  • Rehabilitation of adductor and psoas related groin pain
  • Practical tips
  • Common presentations
  • Osteitis pubis, sports hernia, hip impingement
  • Rehabilitation from initial stages to plyometrics

CLICK HERE to watch the webinar "Rehab of adductor and iliopsoas related groin pain" with Benoy Mathew with a free trial Clinical Edge membership

Links of Interest

Articles related to this episode:

  1. Franklyn-Miller et al (2009)- The Gluteal Triangle: a clinical patho-anatomical approach to the diagnosis of gluteal pain in athletes , BJSM. Open Access Link
  2. Grimaldi & Fearon (2015)- Gluteal Tendinopathy: Integrating Pathomechanics and Clinical Features in Management, JOSPT. Open Access Link
  3. Hernando et al (2016)- Evaluation and management of ischio-femoral impingement: a pathophysiologc, radiolgic and therapeutic approach to a complex diagnosis, Skeletal Radiol
  4. Martin et al (2016)- Deep Gluteal Syndrome, JHPS, Open Access Link
  5. Martin et al (2016)- Ishiofemoral Impingement and Hamstrings Syndrome, Distal Causes of Deep Gluteal Syndrome. Where do we go next? Clin Sports Med. Open Access Link
  6. Michel et al (2013)- Piriformis muscle syndrome: Diagnostic criteria and treatment of a mono centricseries of 250 patients, Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine
  7. The Copenhagen Hip and Groin Outcome Score (HAGOS): development and validation according to the COSMIN checklist
  8. Physical Examination of the Hip by Dr. Hal D. Martin
062. How to treat plantar fasciopathy in runners with Tom Goom24 May 201700:41:29

How can you treat plantar fasciopathy? How can you return your plantar fasciopathy patients to activity and running? When can they run without aggravating their pain?

In episode 62 of the Physio Edge podcast, Tom Goom and David Pope help you discover exactly how you can get great treatment outcomes with plantar fasciopathy.

You will discover:

  • How can you treat plantar fasciopathy (PF)?
  • How can you help reduce plantar fascia pain during the "pain-dominant" phase?
  • How can you improve load capacity during the "load-dominant" phase?
  • When do your patients need relative rest?
  • What cross training options are suitable for runners with PF?
  • When and how can you incorporate strengthening into your treatment?
  • What other impairments should you address in your treatment?
  • How do you adapt strengthening if your patients pain is irritable vs non-irritable
  • Is stretching helpful?
  • Should you include other treatment, eg taping, orthotics, gel heel cup
  • When can your patients return to running?
  • How long is the average recovery from PF?
  • A PF case study with exercise progressions and return to running.

This podcast follows on from Physio Edge 060 Plantar fasciopathy in runners with Tom Goom and Physio Edge 061 How to assess & diagnose plantar fasciopathy in runners with Tom Goom

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

Links of Interest

Related posts

Research associated with this episode

061. How to assess & diagnose plantar fasciopathy in runners with Tom Goom17 May 201700:41:12

Assessment and diagnosis is vital in planning your plantar fasciopathy treatment program, and successfully returning your patients to activity and running. Structures in the vicinity of the plantar fascia insertion may contribute to plantar heel pain, but require a very different treatment approach. How can you identify other structures that are involved? What questions do you need to ask in the history? How can you perform an examination, and what tests should you perform on patients with plantar fasciopathy?

In episode 61 of the Physio Edge podcast, Tom Goom and David Pope help you discover exactly how you can assess and differentially diagnose plantar fasciopathy.

You will discover:

  • Plantar fasciopathy clinical presentation
  • How to identify fat pad irritation
  • Patterns of calcaneal and navicular bony stress injuries
  • How you can identify nerve entrapment and radiculopathy
  • Red flags such as spondyloarthropathy
  • Questions to ask in your subjective that will guide your diagnosis and treatment
  • How to perform an objective assessment
  • Tests you need to perform
  • Identifying impairments to address during rehabilitation
  • When you should perform a running assessment

This podcast follows on from Physio Edge 060 Plantar fasciopathy in runners with Tom Goom

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

 

Links of Interest

Research associated with this episode

060. Plantar fasciopathy in runners with Tom Goom09 May 201700:34:59

Plantar fasciopathy is one of the most common causes of foot pain in runners and non-athletes alike. Our understanding of plantar fasciopathy (PF) pathology and treatment has progressed significantly over recent years. In episode 60 of the Physio Edge podcast, Tom Goom and David Pope explore PF, what we know about it, and how you can explain the condition, treatment and recovery process to your patients.

You will discover:

  • What we know about plantar fasciopathy
  • What pathology is present
  • When is imaging indicated, and what information does it provide
  • Which forms of imaging are the most useful
  • What are the risk factors for developing PF
  • Which aspects of running may be related or contribute to developing PF?
  • How can you explain PF the condition, treatment and recovery process to your patients

 

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

Links of Interest

Research associated with this episode

059. Running Injuries - What are the most important factors? A group discussion with Tom Goom, Greg Lehman & Dr Christian Barton06 May 201701:41:42

How can you identify the most important factors involved in your patients running injuries? During your rehabilitation of runners, which is most important to address - load, gait pattern, strength, foot strike, pelvic position, footwear, range of movement or other factors?

I wanted to discuss and debate these issues with a number of Physiotherapists that treat and research running injuries, so I have a very different format for you on this episode of the Physio Edge podcast - a group podcast.

On this podcast, we have Tom GoomGreg Lehman and Dr Christian Barton all in one virtual room discussing and debating the merits of the various approaches to running injuries.

In this episode of the Physio Edge podcast David Pope and the group discuss:

  • When is it ok for your runners to continue running, and when do they need to stop
  • Common myths around running retraining
  • When is it important to change your patients foot strike?
  • Which patient presentations and pathologies will be assisted with running retraining?
  • How can you identify a suitable running load during rehab
  • How can you incorporate running retraining into your rehab
  • Which areas are important to running assessment
  • How can you manage training load strength and conditioning
  • When are plyometrics appropriate during rehabilitation
  • Other factors that impact injury prognosis and duration
  • What advice can you give new runners
  • Which footwear should runners wear?

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

Links of Interest

Tom Goom

Greg Lehman 

Dr Christian Barton 

Papers mentioned in this episode

058. How to monitor your athletes workload with Tom Goom26 Apr 201700:28:19

Your athletes workload consists of the amount of running, training and matches performed. Their current workload can be compared to previous workload to identify periods where they may be at risk of injury or setting back their rehabilitation (Gabbett 2016). Balancing your athletes workload during rehabilitation and afterwards is vital to allow recovery from injury, improved performance while avoiding further injury.

What do you need to monitor, and how can you monitor workload in an easy and efficient manner? Find out in this episode of the Physio Edge podcast with Tom Goom and David Pope.

You will also discover:

  • What is athlete monitoring?
  • What is the aim?
  • What do we want to monitor?
  • What are external training loads?
  • What are internal training loads?
  • How might we monitor athletes?
  • What do we do with the data we get?

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

Links of Interest

Reference: Gabbett, TJ. The training—injury prevention paradox: should athletes be training smarter and harder? Br J Sports Med 2016;50:273-280

057. Advanced Running Tests & Optimising Performance with Tom Goom21 Apr 201700:30:13

Helping our running patients recover and return to running following injury is our primary rehab priority, however we may also have the opportunity to help improve their running performance. Runners are often motivated by improving their speed, performance and times, and incorporating these goals into their rehab can increase motivation and exercise compliance. How then can we help our patients to improve their performance when returning from an injury? Find out in this episode of the Physio Edge podcast with Tom Goom

You will also discover:

  • Why consider performance?
  • How might we assess performance in a more scientific way?
  • What are the benefits of performance tests?
  • How can we link it to other aspects e.g. gait analysis?
  • How does performance influence training structure and progression?
  • How do we optimise performance in injured athletes?

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

 

Links of Interest

056. How to assess your patient's running capacity and performance with Tom Goom15 Apr 201700:33:52

Identifying how much running each of your patients can perform (their load capacity) during their rehabilitation is a skill. This podcast will help you develop your load management skills, and know how much running your individual patients should perform at each stage of their rehabilitation.

In this podcast with Tom Goom, you will discover:

  • What is load capacity?
  • How do we identify your patient’s running capacity?
  • How are your patient’s progressing in their rehabilitation, relative to where they want to be?
  • How can you identify what your patients goals are, so that you can help tie this into a rehab program?
  • What questions can you ask your patients to assess load capacity and identify the right amount of load?
  • What objective tests can you use to help identify your patient’s load capacity?
  • How should you adapt your testing with different pathology?
  • What tests can you perform to identify your patient’s load capacity if your patient has an Achilles Tendinopathy?
  • What measures can we use to identify your patient’s running performance?

This podcast is the first in a series of podcasts over the next few months with Tom Goom, where we will help to develop your assessment and treatment skills, while improving your results with runners.

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

 

Links of Interest

Related articles

Cook J, Docking S. “Rehabilitation will increase the ‘capacity’ of your …insert musculoskeletal tissue here….” Defining ‘tissue capacity’: a core concept for clinicians. BJSM 2015

055. Patellofemoral pain in runners with Brad Neal08 Mar 201701:08:59

Runners regularly present for treatment of anterior knee pain. Accurate diagnosis is vital in guiding your treatment, and helping your patients return to painfree running.

In episode 55 of the Physio Edge podcast Brad Neal and David Pope discuss the different patient presentations with anterior knee pain, along with the subjective clues and objective tests that will help guide successful treatment.

We also explore:

  • Sources of anterior knee pain
  • Patellofemoral pain
  • Acute synovitis
  • Fat pad irritation
  • Osteochondral defects
  • The role of imaging
  • How to perform an objective assessment in patients with anterior knee pain, including key special tests
  • Red flags
  • Saphenous nerve involvement
  • How to assess if the patient will benefit from an orthotic intervention
  • Treatment of patellofemoral pain, synovitis, and fat pad irritation
  • Taping techniques

Links of Interest

Articles related to this episode:

Related resources

Physio Edge podcasts related to running injuries

153. Posterior shoulder instability assessment, surgery & rehab. Physio Edge Shoulder Success podcast with Jo Gibson20 Apr 202300:24:38

Posterior shoulder instability can occur after a fall onto an outstretched arm, or diving and hitting the ground with your arm (like diving to score a try in rugby), injuring the posterior labrum and/or the glenohumeral joint. Unlike anterior shoulder instability, patients with posterior shoulder instability may not have a feeling of instability, but may just experience pain, fatigue and weakness.

How can you identify posterior shoulder instability in your shoulder pain patients? What does your rehab for posterior shoulder instability need to include?

Find out in this podcast with Jo Gibson (Upper Limb Rehabilitation Specialist Physio).

The handout for this podcast consists of a transcript, a summary and articles referenced in the podcast.

Click here for the free webinar with Jo Gibson “Rotator cuff revealed! Rehab & reasoning”. 

Free trial Clinical Edge membership

Use a fresh approach to your musculoskeletal and sports injury treatment with a free trial Clinical Edge membership at clinicaledge.co/freetrial

Links associated with this episode: Articles associated with this episode:

Chapters:

  • 03:17 - Case study
  • 06:57 - Assessment tests
  • 13:17 - Rehab
  • 15:32 - Other treatment options
  • 16:10 - Recovery
  • 17:43 - Scapular dyskinesis
  • 21:59 - Barriers to recovery
054. Hip and groin part 2 - assessment and treatment with Benoy Mathew02 Feb 201700:55:55

In this second podcast on hip and groin pain with Physiotherapist and Extended Scope Practitioner Benoy Mathew, we explore:

  • How you can assess the hip and groin
  • How to assess the lumbar spine, SIJ and the lower limb for factors contributing to your patient’s groin pain
  • Tests you can perform to identify the source of your patient’s hip and groin pain
  • Identifying hip joint involvement
  • How to start your patient’s hip and groin exercises
  • When to incorporate exercises for local hip stabilising muscles
  • When you need to utilise and progress hip strengthening exercises
  • Exercise progressions you can use
  • How to strengthen while you lengthen the hip flexors
  • When and which plyometric exercises your patients can perform
  • When speed and agility work can be incorporated

In the first podcast with Ben Mathew “Hip and groin pain part 1 - diagnosis, pathology and red flags” with Benoy Mathew", we explored pathology around the hip and groin and when pathology relates to symptoms, knowledge of potential red flags, along with patterns and symptoms associated with each diagnosis is vital in guiding your treatment of hip and groin pain.

As mentioned in this episode Benoy presented a webinar with Clinical Edge. The webinar helps you discover:
• Rehabilitation of adductor and iliopsoas related groin pain
• Practical tips
• Common presentations
• Osteitis pubis, sports hernia, hip impingement
• Rehabilitation from initial stages to plyometrics

CLICK HERE to watch the webinar “Rehab of adductor and iliopsoas related groin pain” with Benoy Mathew with a free trial Clinical Edge membership

Links of Interest

Articles related to this episode:

053. Hip & groin pain - diagnosis, pathology and red flags with Benoy Mathew25 Nov 201600:55:58

Acute and chronic groin pain is common in sports, however diagnosis can be challenging. A thorough understanding of pathology around the hip and groin and when pathology relates to symptoms, knowledge of potential red flags, along with patterns and symptoms associated with each diagnosis is vital in guiding your treatment of hip and groin pain.

In the first of two podcasts on hip and groin pain with Physiotherapist and Extended Scope Practitioner Benoy Mathew, we explore:

  • How you can use the patient history to help your diagnosis and treatment
  • Important questions you NEED to ask all of your hip and groin pain patients
  • Sources of hip and groin pain - intra and extra-articular
  • How you can identify referred pain from the lumbar spine and SIJ
  • How you can identify important red flags around the hip and groin
  • When you should refer your patients for further investigations, medical assessment and surgical opinion
  • How you can identify osteoarthritis in younger patients
  • Differentiating hip impingement, labral pathology and hip dysplasia
  • When to request X-ray or MRI
  • Identifying and understanding iliopsoas pain and pathology

This is a vital podcast for anyone that treats hip and groin pain, and is highly recommended listening before Hip & groin pain part 2 - Assessment & Treatment with Benoy Mathew coming soon.

As mentioned in this episode Benoy is presenting a webinar with Clinical Edge. The webinar will discuss:
• Rehabilitation of adductor and iliopsoas related groin pain
• Practical tips
• Common presentations
• Osteitis pubis, sports hernia, hip impingement
• Rehabilitation from initial stages to plyometrics

CLICK HERE to enrol on the free webinar “Rehab of adductor and iliopsoas related groin pain” with Benoy Mathew

Links of Interest

Articles related to this episode:

052. Conservative or surgical management for ACL injuries with Enda King23 Oct 201601:04:41

ACL injuries commonly occur during pivoting and change of direction sports. What is the best way to manage these injuries? Are your patients suitable for conservative managment or will they require surgery?

In Physio Edge podcast 052, David Pope and Enda King discuss acute management of ACL injuries, and how you can help your patient decide whether to have conservative or surgical management.

We also explore:

  • What is the latest research around ACL injury
  • What leads to an ACL injury, and how is this important in your rehab?
  • What are the outcomes following ACL injury
  • How can you make clear decisions on when your patient is ready for return to training and return to sport
  • What biomechanics lead to ACL injury
  • What role does trunk control have in ACL injury
  • A patient example with an ACL injury
  • Conservative vs surgical management
  • Post injury management
  • Timeframe for surgery
  • Who is suitable for conservative management
  • How to prepare your patient for the extended rehab process following ACL injury
  • Strength and power training in ACL rehab
  • Youth and adolescent ACL injury management
  • How to manage concomitant chondral and meniscal injury
  • When can your patient return to running

You can download the free podcast handout that will take you through lateral knee and LCL injury assessment and rehabilitation by clicking here

Enda King will also be presenting at the Sports Injury Virtual Conference hosted by Clinical Edge along with the world leaders in sports injury management.

How can you manage ACL injuries conservatively? What are the important components of ACL rehab to help your players return to sport? Enda’s presentation will take you through ACL rehab to address common strength and biomechanical issues found in athletes with ACL injuries. Discover exactly how to progress your conservative management of ACL injuries, and when your players can return to running and sport.

Get your free access to videos on sports injury assessment and treatment.

Links mentioned in this episode

Enda King

Free sports injury assessment and treatment videos

Sports Injuries virtual conference

Free podcast handout on ACL and lateral knee injuries

Download or subscribe to the podcast on iTunes

Enda King on Twitter @enda_king

Sports Surgery Clinic Dublin

Free trial of clinical edge membership

David Pope on Twitter

051. Lateral knee and LCL injuries with Matt Konopinski10 Oct 201601:09:04

Lateral knee injuries are common in football with landing from a jump or header, or during tackles when the tibia is forced into external rotation. This mechanism of injury often affects the Lateral/Fibular collateral ligament (LCL), however LCL injury is not always obvious from the patient’s history, and can be misdiagnosed.

In this podcast with Liverpool FC Physiotherapist Matt Konopinski, we discuss LCL and lateral knee injuries, and how you can identify and treat these. LCL injuries can often respond extremely well to an accelerated rehabilitation approach, and in this podcast you will discover:

  • Sources of lateral knee pain
      - Lateral meniscus
      - Osteochondral defects
      - Lateral/Fibular collateral ligament
      - ACL
      - Postero lateral corner

  • Mechanism of injury

  • What your patients will report with LCL injury

  • Questions you need to ask your patients with lateral knee pain

  • Red flags

  • Objective assessment

  • Assessment tests you can use with lateral knee pain

  • When imaging is useful and when it should be avoided

  • Risk factors for injury

  • Management of LCL injury

  • When to commence strengthening

  • How to maintain strength and cardiovascular fitness during rehabilitation

  • How to explain the injury and rehabilitation to your patients

You can download the free podcast handout that will take you through lateral knee and LCL injury assessment and rehabilitation by clicking here

Links mentioned in this episode

Matt Konopinski

Free sports injury assessment and treatment videos

Free podcast handout on LCL and lateral knee injuries

Matt Konopinski on Twitter @Matt_Kono

LFC Liverpool football club

Article Impact of exercise selection on hamstring muscle activation

Free trial of clinical edge membership

David Pope on Twitter

Get your free access to videos on sports injury assessment and treatment.

050. Treating the TMJ and jaw pain with Dr Stephen Shaffer20 Sep 201601:08:30

Temporomandibular joint pain and dysfunction can significantly impact your patients life, limiting their ability to enjoy eating and talking. Temporomandibular dysfunction (TMD) has a lot of musculoskeletal contributors that physiotherapists are perfectly positioned to treat and help improve patient’s lives.

In episode 50 of the Physio Edge podcast, Dr Stephen Shaffer and David Pope discuss TMD, structures that can be affected, and how you can assess and get great results treating TMD patients. We also explore:

  • Structures involved in TMD
  • Involvement of the cervical spine
  • Common presentations of TMD
  • Questions to ask in your subjective assessment
  • Red flags
  • How to perform an objective assessment
  • Normal TMJ movement
  • How you can treat TMD
  • Manual therapy
  • Education
  • Exercise therapy
  • Are the Rocabado 6x6 the best exercises to provide your patients

Dr Stephen Shaffer is presenting a webinar on TMD, hosted by Clinical Edge, and you can enrol free on this webinar by CLICKING HERE

Links mentioned in this episode

049. Running from injury part 2 with Dr Rich Willy09 Sep 201600:52:59

In Running from Injury part 2, Dr Rich Willy will help you assess and retrain running in your patients with achilles tendinopathy, patellofemoral joint pain, ITB Syndrome and stress fractures. We explore the latest evidence and how it will help you address pain and injuries related to running.

You will discover:

  • Treadmill or overground running assessments?
  • Gait retraining for particular musculoskeletal conditions
  • How to provide your patients with the individual running cue they need
  • What cadence should we be aiming at for runners (hint: it may not be what you expect!)
  • Is heel strike important to assess
  • Running assessment from the side
  • Important factors when treating runners with PFJP
  • Running assessment & retraining for achilles tendinopathy
  • Factors involved in ITB Syndrome
  • When are orthotics useful

You can download the handout to go along with this podcast to help you perform a running assessment, retrain runners and address achilles tendinopathy, knee pain and tibial stress injuries. 

Links mentioned in this episode

Other Physio Edge podcasts related to running injuries

048. Running from injury part 1 with Dr Rich Willy03 Aug 201600:56:12

Are you looking to improve your assessment & treatment of runners? Would you like to know exactly what to look for in a running assessment? What are the most important factors to treat when your running patients have achilles tendinopathy? How is that different when they have patellofemoral joint pain (PFJP)? The research around running is evolving quickly, and in this podcast with Dr Rich Willy we explore the latest evidence and how it will help you address the most important factors with different musculoskeletal issues.

You will also discover:

  • How to perform a running gait analysis
  • Key communication points with runners
  • How to explain your gait analysis & running injuries to your patients
  • Important questions to ask runners
  • Intensity runners should train at to avoid illness and injury
  • Technology you can incorporate in your running assessment and retraining
  • Important factors when treating runners with PFJP and achilles tendinopathy
  • Does pronation & foot mechanics matter?

I have an awesome freebie for you with this podcast

You can download free the podcast handout that will take you through the 8 essential areas to analyse when performing a running assessment, communication tips, advice to give your running patients during their recovery and much more.

Links mentioned in this episode

Dr Rich Willy on Twitter

Dr Rich Willy at East Carolina University

Dr Rich Willy on ResearchGate

University of Delaware

Irene Davis - Harvard

Garmin 620

RunCadence app for iOS and Android

Run Scribe

Purchase a RunScribe

Article on polarised training approach

Bone stress injuries in runners webinar with Tom Goom

Achilles tendinopathy in runners online course

Free trial of Clinical Edge membership

David Pope on Twitter

Some papers of interest:

i. Patellofemoral Joint and Achilles Tendon Loads During Overground and Treadmill Running

ii. In-field gait retraining and mobile monitoring to address running biomechanics associated with tibial stress fracture: In-field gait retraining and monitoring

iii. Mirror gait retraining for the treatment of patellofemoral pain

Other Physio Edge podcasts related to running injuries

Physio Edge 046 Proximal hamstring tendinopathy with Tom Goom

Physio Edge 042 Treatment of Plantaris & Achilles Tendinopathy with Seth O’Neill

Physio Edge 039 Patellofemoral pain in adolescents with Dr Michael Rathleff

Physio Edge 038 Plantar fasciopathy loading programs with Michael Rathleff

Physio Edge 023 Lower limb tendinopathies with Dr Peter Malliaras

Physio Edge 012 Plantar fascia, achilles tendinopathy & nerve entrapments with Russell Wright

Physio Edge 010 Biomechanics Of Running With Blaise Dubois

Physio Edge 005 Tendons And Tendinopathy with Dr Jill Cook

047. Rotator cuff tendinopathy with Dr Chris Littlewood23 Jun 201601:17:49

The rotator cuff and rotator cuff tendons are often involved in shoulder pain, and targeted with our treatment. Dr Chris Littlewood is a Physio and senior research fellow at the University of Sheffield, and spends a large portion of his time studying and treating shoulder pain, including rotator cuff tendinopathy. In this episode, Chris and I discuss how to identify rotator cuff tendinopathy and other types of shoulder pain, and how you can direct your treatment for rotator cuff tendinopathy. We also explore:

  • Other sources of shoulder pain
  • Clues that the cervical spine could be referring pain to the shoulder
  • Unstable shoulder
  • Red flags
  • When to image the shoulder
  • When bursal thickness or effusion is or isn’t a problem
  • Shoulder assessment
  • Stiff painful shoulders
  • Treatment for rotator cuff tendinopathy
  • Improving exercise adherence
  • When to perform special orthopaedic tests
  • Injections
  • Surgery
  • Is there really a rotator cuff exercise, compared to a scapular muscle exercise?
  • Do exercises isolate the rotator cuff?

Links of interest

Enrol on the free webinar with Dr Chris Littlewood

Download the handout from this podcast

Subscribe to the podcast free on iTunes

Dr Chris Littlewood on Twitter

Dr Chris Littlewood

Webinar with Tom Goom on Bone stress injuries

Cervical spine assessment & treatment online course

Clinical Edge

Clinical Edge free trial

David Pope on Twitter

046. Proximal hamstring tendinopathy with Tom Goom04 May 201601:33:27

Proximal hamstring tendinopathy (PHT) occurs in athletes, runners, weightlifters, and other athletes, as well as more sedentary patients, causing pain at the hamstring origin and limiting your patients ability to sit, run and continue to be active.

There are a number of structures that can contribute to pain in this area, and in this podcast, Tom Goom and David Pope discuss how to clearly identify PHT and differentiate it from lumbar spine referred pain, hip pain, sciatic nerve pain and other conditions.

Tom recently released an article in JOSPT on Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy: clinical aspects of assessment and management with Peter MalliarasMike Reiman and Craig Purdam. We explore this article, and the research around PHT, and cover in detail:

  • Subjective clues to guide you towards diagnosis
  • Aggravating factors and 24 hour pain patterns
  • Differential diagnosis
  • Lumbar spine pain
  • How the lumbar spine could contribute to development of PHT
  • Hip pain
  • SIJ pain
  • Sciatic nerve pain
  • Development of PHT
  • Central sensitisation
  • Diagnostic tests for PHT
  • Hamstring tests
  • Other assessment tests
  • Functional tests
  • The value of palpation
  • Tests for involvement of the rest of the kinetic chain
  • Running assessment/gait analysis
  • Testing load tolerance
  • Biopsychosocial aspects of tendon recovery
  • Other advice for patients
  • Whether stretching is helpful
  • When your patient can return to running
  • Cross training
  • Does manual therapy have a role in the treatment of PHT?
  • Starting treatment (Stage 1)
  • When and how to progress rehabilitation (Stage 2)
  • Further rehabilitation progressions (Stage 3)
  • Advanced exercise progressions for high load sports
  • Exercises you can incorporate during the various stages
  • How long recovery will take

 

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

 

Links

Tags: running, hamstring, tendinopathy, tom goom, podcast, proximal, peter malliaras, craig purdam, mike reiman, treatment, assessment

045. Treatment of Lateral Elbow Pain Part 2 With Dr Leanne Bisset14 Apr 201601:13:15

How can you treat your patient’s lateral elbow pain (lateral epicondylalgia (LE)/tennis elbow)? How and when should you progress your patient’s exercise program? Is pain during their exercise program ok?

In this episode, which is Part 2 of Lateral Elbow pain with Dr Leanne Bisset, we explore in detail how you can differentially diagnose LE from other causes of lateral elbow pain, and treat it successfully.

Discover:

  • Diagnosis and differential diagnosis of LE
  • How to get the best outcomes for your patients when treating LE
  • Do isometrics work?
  • How can you commence strengthening?
  • Should your patient experience any pain during their exercise program?
  • When and how can you incorporate Mobilisation with Movement into your treatment program?
  • How to perform MWM’s for LE
  • How to progress your treatment
  • Identifying and treating radial nerve involvement
  • Incorporating strengthening for the upper limb
  • High level athletes and weightlifters with lateral elbow pain - is this likely to be LE or another condition?
  • Identifying nerve root irritation with pain over the lateral elbow
  • Taping methods to deload the lateral elbow when there is nerve involvement
  • Clinical reasoning of your treatment
  • Predictors of poor treatment prognosis
  • When to order imaging
  • Evidence for and against other treatment strategies including the Cyriax approach, massage, laser, ESWT, corticosteroids and PRP
  • Validated screening tools for LE, including the PRTEE

In this episode, Leanne answers a lot of your questions on LE, asked via Twitter and the Clinical Edge newsletter. 

Dr Leanne Bisset is a Physiotherapist, Physiotherapy lecturer and researcher at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia who has extensively researched and published on lateral elbow pain, and spends a large proportion of her clinical time treating the upper limb and lateral elbow.

This is a two part podcast, followup up Lateral Elbow Pain Part 1, episode 44 of the Physio Edge podcast, David Pope and Dr Leanne Bisset.

Links of Interest

Dr Leanne Bisset

Dr Leanne Bisset on ResearchGate

Dr Leanne Bisset on Twitter

Download the Patient-Rated Tennis Elbow Evaluation (PRTEE)

Download the free podcast handout

Lateral Elbow Pain Part 1 with Dr Leanne Bisset

Review the podcast in iTunes

David Pope

Clinical Edge

Get your free trial of Clinical Edge online education

152. When should patients permanently stop running? Physio Edge Track record: Running repairs podcast with Tom Goom13 Mar 202300:18:44

 After injury or surgery, a lot of runners are told to stop running for different reasons. How can you answer patients that ask if they need to give up running for good? When should patients consider permanently stopping running? Find out in this podcast with Tom Goom (Running Physio).

 

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

 

Links associated with this episode:

Chapters: 

  • 03:25 - Stop running permanently
  • 8:15 - Safe to continue running?
  • 10:05 - Post ACL surgery
  • 11:22 - Knee OA
  • 13:27 - Running rehab plan 
  • 16:44 - Key takeaways
044. Lateral Elbow Pain Part 1 with Dr Leanne Bisset07 Mar 201600:42:45

Lateral elbow pain (lateral epicondylalgia/tennis elbow) affects a lot of athletes, manual workers and office workers, and can respond fantastically to Physiotherapy treatment, or in other patients with a similar presentation, not at all. 

Dr Leanne Bisset is a Physiotherapist, Physiotherapy lecturer and researcher at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia that has extensively researched and published on lateral elbow pain, and spends the majority of her clinical time treating the upper limb and lateral elbow.

This is a two part podcast, and in Part 1, episode 44 of the Physio Edge podcast, David Pope and Dr Leanne Bisset discuss:

  • Why is Lateral Epicondylalgia (LE) difficult to treat?
  • What tissue pathology exists in LE
  • Pain pattern for LE
  • Patient reports that will help your diagnosis of LE
  • Important aspects to communicate with your patients regarding their LE
  • Objective tests that you can perform
  • Patient advice
  • Should you rest your patients or provide exercises?
  • How is tendinopathy in the Upper Limb different to the Lower Limb?
  • Commencing treatment
  • How to incorporate manual therapy into your treatment
  • Exercises you can start your treatment with
  • Should you include isometric exercises for lateral elbow pain
  • How often should your patients perform their exercises
  • Exercise into pain, or avoid pain?

Links of Interest

Dr Leanne Bisset

Dr Leanne Bisset on ResearchGate

Dr Leanne Bisset on Twitter

Review the podcast in iTunes

David Pope

Clinical Edge

Get your free trial of Clinical Edge online education

043. Sporting Shoulder with Jo Gibson15 Feb 201601:29:11

Shoulder pain and injury in overhead athletes is very common and has a high recurrence rate. In this podcast with Jo Gibson we discuss sporting shoulder injuries and rehabilitation, including:

  • The role of the Rotator Cuff
  • Train strength or efficiency in the Rotator Cuff?
  • Rotator Cuff muscle balance
  • When is (and when isn’t) surgery necessary for Rotator Cuff or SLAP tears
  • Assessment of shoulder stiffness
  • Bursal involvement
  • Imaging of the shoulder
  • How you can help improve Rotator Cuff activation
  • What role does manual therapy have in shoulder treatment?
  • The importance of the postero-superior cuff
  • What stretches can you perform for the postero-superior Rotator Cuff
  • Treating pain in loaded and overhead activities
  • Exercises you can use in shoulder treatment with your athletes
  • Incorporating the kinetic chain in shoulder rehabilitation
  • Managing shoulder load
  • Central sensitisation
  • Treating throwing athletes
  • The role of the thoracic spine in shoulder pain
  • Communication tips with your shoulder pain patients
Podcast handout

Free video series “Frozen shoulder assessment & treatment” with Jo Gibson

Shoulder: Steps to Success online course with Jo Gibson

Improve your assessment and treatment of shoulder pain with the Shoulder: Steps to Success online course with Jo Gibson, now available for enrolment at clinicaledge.co/shouldersuccess

Links associated with this episode:
042. Treatment of Plantaris & Achilles Tendinopathy with Seth O’Neill23 Nov 201500:28:08

In Episode 41 of the Physio Edge podcast, Dr Christoph Spang and I discussed how Plantaris may play a role in Achilles tendinopathy. In this episode of the Physio Edge podcast, I discuss with Seth O’Neill how you can identify Plantaris involvement in your patients, and adjust and progress your conservative treatment of Achilles pain and tendinopathy with Plantaris involvement. 

Seth O'Neill and I discuss: 

  • What indicates Plantaris involvement and helps you differentiate from mid portion Achilles Tendinopathy
  • Where do patients have pain with Plantaris tendinopathy
  • What history do patients with Plantaris involvement or tendinopathy present with
  • Objective tests and findings for Plantaris tendinopathy and involvement
  • Biomechanics contributing to Plantaris tendinopathy
  • Is treatment successful for Plantaris
  • How to treat Plantaris tendinopathy and involvement in midportion Achilles
  • How to perform a loading program
  • Running adjustments
  • aping
  • Manual therapy

Links of Interest  Hide    
041. The role of Plantaris in mid portion Achilles Tendinopathy with Dr Christoph Spang20 Nov 201500:32:09

Plantaris tendinopathy and compression of Plantaris on the Achilles has been shown to play a role in some cases of Achilles Tendinopathy, slowing down their rate of rehabilitation progress.

Dr Christoph Spang is a Biologist and Sports Scientist, and completed a PhD on “The plantaris tendon in relation to the Achilles tendon in midportion Achilles tendinopathy”. In this podcast we discuss the interaction of Plantaris in patients with midportion Achilles Tendinopathy, including:

  • Why consider Plantaris in Achilles Tendinopathy patients?
  • How can Plantaris cause or be involved in Achilles pain?
  • Anatomy, function and role of Plantaris
  • What interaction does Plantaris have with the Achilles and calf?
  • Do patients with Plantaris involvement respond to a loading program?
  • What is the clinical presentation of a patient with Plantaris involvement?
  • How can Ultrasound or Ultrasound Tissue Characterisation (UTC) be utilised to identify Plantaris?
  • The role of injection therapy
  • Surgical treatment

Links of Interest

Get your free access to videos on Lower Limb Tendinopathy

Dr Christoph Spang at UMU

Dr Christoph Spang’s PhD Thesis

Dr Christoph Spang on Research Gate

David Pope on Twitter

Out very soon…. Conservative management of Plantaris involvement in Achilles Tendinopathy with Seth O’Neill

040. Shoulder Simplified with Adam Meakins12 Sep 201501:19:32

How complex does your shoulder assessment need to be? How can you can simplify your shoulder assessment and treatment?

Find out in episode 40 of the Physio Edge podcast with Adam Meakins, where Adam and I discuss:

  • Common mistakes Physio’s make in assessment and treatment of the shoulder
  • Adam’s classification of shoulder pain
  • Subjective clues to guide your objective and treatment
  • How to identify weak and painful shoulders
  • Red flags with shoulder pain
  • Frozen shoulders
  • Objective assessment
  • Subacromial impingement
  • GIRD (Glenohumeral Internal Rotation Deficit)
  • The use of US in shoulder pain
  • Surgical treatment for shoulder pain
  • Treatment for weak and painful shoulders
  • Loading the rotator cuff for pain relief and strength
  • Gym junkie shoulder pain and how to adapt their weight training programs

Links of Interest

Download your free handout on The Shoulder Simplified

Follow Adam Meakins on Twitter

Adam’s website

Adam’s Shoulder courses

Adam’s presentation on “When is a GIRD not a GIRD”

Shoulder Pain Virtual Conference

Follow David on Twitter

Access practical Online Courses for Physiotherapists with a Free Membership Trial of Clinical Edge

Download your free handout on the Shoulder Simplified

   
039. Patellofemoral pain in adolescents with Dr Michael Rathleff22 Aug 201501:25:35

Patellofemoral joint pain (PFJP) is very common in adolescents, and in the Physio Edge podcast episode 39, I discuss causes, assessment and treatment with the author of numerous studies on PFJP in AdolescentsDr Michael Rathleff.

You will explore: 

  • Different types/groups of Adolescents that suffer with PFJP
  • Common reasons for failure of Physiotherapy
  • Diagnosis and DDx of PFJP
  • Examination of the knee
  • Treatment of PFJP
  • How to tailor and progress your exercise programs
  • The use of orthotics
  • Taping
  • The usefulness of stretching
  • Prognosis & predictors of recovery
  • Biomechanics
  • and more.

I have also created a free handout to supplement and help you get the most from this podcast, which you can download here

Dr Michael Rathleff also provided great insights into Loading Programs for Plantar Fasciopathy on the Physio Edge podcast episode 38, also well worth a listen if you haven’t already. 

 

Links of interest

Download your free handout on Patellofemoral Pain in Adolescents to go along with this podcast

Dr Michael Rathleff’s publications on PFJP in Adolescents

Dr Michael Rathleff on Twitter

Free Shoulder Assessment & Treatment videos with leading international presenters

2015 Patellofemoral research retreat

David Pope on Twitter

Other related Physio Edge podcasts:

Download your free handout on Patellofemoral Pain in Adolescents

 
038. Plantar fasciopathy loading programs with Michael Rathleff09 Jul 201501:03:05

Plantar Fasciopathy (Plantar heel pain) can be a stubborn condition to treat, or you can learn to love treating it like Dr Michael Rathleff, incorporate the right loading program and activity modification and get some great results.

In episode 38 of the Physio Edge podcast, I talk to Dr Michael Rathleff, author of the RCT “High-load strength training improves outcome in patients with plantar fasciitis: A randomized controlled trial with 12-month follow-up: HL strength training and plantar fasciitis”.

We discuss:

  • Common mistakes in the treatment of plantar fasciopathy (PF)
  • How we can improve our treatment of PF
  • Why call it plantar fasciopathy instead of plantar fasciitis?
  • Research on PF
  • Loading programs for PF
  • Patient advice
  • Activity modification
  • Running load modification
  • Short and long term results from loading the plantar fascia
  • Considerations when treating PF
  • Who is not suitable for a loading program
  • Who respond the best to this program, and who responds the least
  • How to modify the loading program
  • Development of PF
  • Running technique
  • Treatment or strengthening of other areas
  • Stretching
  • Orthotics
  • Cortisone
  • Plantar fascia tears

Links of interest

037. Pilates beyond low back pain with Lana Johnson10 Jun 201501:26:05

Pilates is commonly known and used for rehabilitation of persistent low back pain, however Pilates principles and equipment can also be used for assessment and treatment of pain beyond the pelvis and lumbar spine.

In episode 37 of the Physio Edge podcast, Lana Johnson, a former dancer and a Physiotherapist from BPS Tensegrity in Sydney and I discuss how you can use Pilates for knee and shoulder pain, as well as:

  • Common misconceptions about Pilates
  • Functional vs non-functional exercises
  • Common errors made in Pilates training and rehabilitation
  • Pilates for hip and knee pain
  • Case studies using Pilates with shoulder and knee pain patients
  • Patient progression
  • Cues you can use with your patients for hip and shoulder retraining
  • Exercise progressions
  • Exercises to stay away from

Links of Interest

     
036. How to help patients with persistent pain - part 2 with Mike Stewart29 Apr 201501:23:11

Mike Stewart and further explore persistent pain, helpful language you can use with your persistent pain patients, how you can use group sessions, as well as:

  • How the bio fits into biopsychosocial
  • How you can develop an educational toolkit
  • Case study of a patient with persistent peripheral pain
  • Language & communication recommendations
  • Misconceptions about persistent pain education and much more

Links of Interest

Clinical Edge discounts for Undergraduate Physio students available by emailing verification of your student status to info@clinicaledge.co

     
035. Know Pain with Mike Stewart26 Mar 201501:26:53

Persistent pain can be a challenge, but also enjoyable to treat. In this episode of the Physio Edge podcast, Mike Stewart and I focus on specific examples and case studies of patients with complex or persistent pain, how you may approach persistent pain patients, explain their pain, use metaphors and explanations so they understand it, and help guide them through the recovery process.

Mike and I get into the details on:

  • Why Physios need a deep understanding of pain science
  • How does the “bio” part come into bio-pscyho-social
  • How can we identify if the patient needs pain education, further investigations, a biological approach eg specific exercise
  • How can you incorporate pain science into the treatment of patients with acute pain
  • Mike’s top tips when working with persistent pain
  • Specific case studies of patients with persistent and complex back pain, and how Mike has worked with these patients, including their presentation, beliefs, Mike’s language used in their session, activity modification and results achieved with these patients
  • How to develop our teaching skills to achieve the best results with our patients

Links of Interest

Clinical Edge discounts for Undergraduate Physio students available by emailing verification of your student status to info@clinicaledge.co

151. Does strength training reduce running injury risk? Physio Edge Track record: Running repairs podcast with Tom Goom03 Mar 202300:12:11

Will strength training help your patients reduce their risk of running injury and improve their running performance? Find out what the latest research reveals in this Physio Edge Track record: Running repairs podcast with Tom Goom (Running Physio), as you discover:

  • The latest research on whether strength training reduces running injury risk.
  • Which runners are more likely to develop a running injury, and which runners more successfully avoid running injury.
  • How to get runners to “buy in” and perform a strength program, when they’re short on time and motivation.
  • 3 key exercises your runners can do to improve their performance and reduce their running injury risk.

Improve running injury assessment & treatment now with the Running Repairs Online course with Tom Goom at clinicaledge.co/runningrepairs

 

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

 

Links associated with this episode: Article associated with this episode:

Chapters:

  • 02:22 - Research study
  • 04:39 - Results
  • 07:47 - Training program
034. Advanced ACL rehab with Enda King19 Feb 201501:26:09

The advanced stages of ACL rehabilitation are enjoyable to progress your patients through, and at the same time challenging to find the right exercises, and optimise the rate of progression through to return to training (RTT) and return to play (RTP). In this episode, Enda King from the Sports Surgery Clinic Dublin and David Pope discuss these later stages of rehabilitating your patients following an ACL Reconstruction.

We discussed the prehabilitation and early stage ACL Rehab in the Physio Edge podcast episode 32, and episode 34 Enda and I cover in detail:

  • Return to straight line running and change of direction
  • Advanced Exercise Programming
  • What exercises to choose
  • Proprioception and motor control training
  • Strength and power programming
  • Periodisation
  • Sports specific conditioning
  • Plyometrics – readiness, what to use and timing of these in the training schedule
  • Multi-directional performance
  • Strength testing – what Enda uses, indicators of strength
  • Decisions on return to training
  • Return to contact
  • Decision making on Return to play
  • Bridging the gap between the gym and the field
  • Advice for Physios rehabilitating athletes recovering from an ACL reconstruction
  • When to discharge an ACL athlete and much more

Links of interest

033. How to treat anterior knee pain with Kurt Lisle23 Jan 201501:16:10

Anterior knee pain can occur in your elite sports patients right through to office workers and weekend warriors. In this podcast with Kurt Lisle, we discuss anterior knee pain, the causes, how to diagnose the source of the pain, and the best ways to treat and rehabilitate these patients.

Kurt Lisle is the Australian Socceroos Physio and co-owner of The Knee Joint Physio in Queensland. Kurt and I discussed acute knee injuries on the Physio Edge podcast in episode 29, and I really wanted to get Kurt back on the podcast to discuss the anterior knee.

In this fantastic, detailed episode of the Physio Edge podcast, Kurt and I explore:

  • Subjective clues that give you ideas about differential diagnosis
  • Fat pad - location of pain, activities that irritate
  • Patellofemoral joint - aggravating activities and DDx
  • Patellar tendon - subjective clues, location of pain
  • Objective examination of the anterior knee
  • Tests for PFJ
  • Functional tests first or examination on the treatment table?
  • Palpation of the anterior knee
  • Fat pad palpation and tests
  • Is the fat pad tender medial and laterally, or can it be tender only on one aspect
  • Neuromuscular patterning
  • Squat and one leg squat examination
  • What causes “catching” pain on movement
  • Chondral defects - identifying
  • Is there value in the grind test
  • When to refer for MRI and other imaging
  • Important factors that may contribute to AKP
  • Gait contributors to AKP
  • Treatment of PFJ pain
  • Modifying PFJ aggravating activities
  • Using EMG
  • Quadricep rehabilitation and strengthening
  • When to incorporate squats into your rehabilitation program
  • The role of taping for PFJ or fat pad irritation
  • Red flags causing knee pain

Links of Interest

032. How to rehabilitate ACL injuries with Enda King09 Dec 201401:08:39

ACL injuries can be career ending, or they can be an opportunity to sort out movement efficiency, motor control and and technical skills, coming back from the rehabilitation process with more power, speed and efficiency than they had before they injured their ACL.

In this podcast, Enda King from the Sports Surgery Clinic in Dublin currently completing his PhD in 3D biomechanical analysis after ACL reconstruction, with the aim to assist in RTP decision making and identifying fully rehabilitated athletes, and David Pope discuss ACL injuries, and the most important factors in pre-operative management and post-operative exercise programming to get your patients back to sport with improved sporting performance.

Going deep on the details involved in ACL Rehabilitation, including:

  • 01:20 Enda King and SSC, and working with ACL athletes PhD in 3D biomechanical analysis after ACL reconstruction, aim to assist in RTP decision making and what a fully rehabilitated athlete looks like

  • What does a fully rehabilitated athlete look like?

  • Incorporating performance goals into the rehab process

  • Can athletes achieve better performance post ACL rehab than they were pre-injury

  • Types of ACL grafts

  • Preoperative ACL Physiotherapy, helping your patient to prepare for the surgery

  • Preoperative education

  • Restoring knee extension, balancing pain and improved range of movement, empowering your patient

  • Guidelines for pain, swelling when restoring range of movement

  • Restoring quadriceps activation, normalising gait patterns

  • Clinical Edge

  • Clinical Edge’s free webinar program

  • Preoperative length of time

  • Post-op - initial management

  • To use or not use co-contraction exercises of quads and hamstrings

  • Should you use squatting style exercises Week 1 post op

  • Activating quadriceps - internal quadriceps cues or external exercise focus

  • How much pain should a patient experience during or after an exercise

  • Week 2 post-op

  • When can heavy gym training commence

  • Changing movement patterns throughout the kinetic chain

  • Advice for patients in the early stages of rehab

  • Frequency of exercise

  • Week 2 onwards - exercises incorporating balance and proprioception

  • Open vs closed chain exercises

  • Advice for patients in weeks 2–6

  • Nutrition and dietary advice for patients

  • Gym based rehabilitation

  • Choosing and modifying exercises for middle stages of the rehabilitation process

  • Various types of squatting movement, and progressing the types of squats

  • Goblet squats

  • Retraining ideal squat patterns

  • Progressing squats, deadlifts and lunges

  • Front squats

  • Front squats and trap bar deadlifts vs back squats during rehabilitation

  • When can an athlete start cycling

  • Disadvantages of using cycling as the main part of a rehabilitation program

  • Hamstring rehabilitation after semitendinosis/gracilis graft

  • Strength and power development

  • Strength testing - mid thigh pull, leg press

  • Should we use open chain strength tests

  • When to perform strength tests

  • Strength vs power and rate of force development

  • Running - incorporating into the program. When can your patient start running?

  • Preparation for running

  • Running drills

  • Ideal movement patterns in running

  • Enda King and SSC, and working with ACL athletes

Podcast timeline

  • 3:35 What does a fully rehabilitated athlete look like?

  • 5:40 Incorporating performance goals into the rehab process

  • 6:50 Can athletes achieve better performance post ACL rehab than they were pre-injury

  • 8:20 Types of ACL grafts

  • 11:10 Preoperative ACL Physiotherapy, helping your patient to prepare for the surgery - an opportunity to prepare your patients knee, ROM, strength and educate them on the rehabilitation process

  • 14:20 Preoperative education

  • 14:40 Restoring knee extension, balancing pain and improved range of movement, empowering your patient with

  • 15:40 Guidelines for pain, swelling when restoring range of movement

  • 16:15 Restoring quadriceps activation, normalising gait patterns

  • 17:10 Clinical Edge

  • 18:45 Clinical Edge’s free webinar program

  • 19:30 Preoperative length of time

  • 20:35 Post-op - initial management

  • 23:20 To use or not use co-contraction exercises of quads and hamstrings

  • 24:50 Should you use squatting style exercises Week 1 post op

  • 25:25 Activating quadriceps - internal quadriceps cues or external exercise focus

  • 26:30 How much pain should a patient experience during or after an exercise

  • 27:30 Week 2 post-op

  • 28:30 When can heavy gym training commence

  • 29:30 Changing movement patterns throughout the kinetic chain

  • 31:00 Advice for patients in the early stages of rehab

  • 32:10 Frequency of exercise

  • 32:55 Week 2 onwards - exercises incorporating balance and proprioception

  • 34:10 Open vs closed chain exercises

  • 35:40 Advice for patients in weeks 2–6

  • 37:15 Nutrition and dietary advice for patients

  • 37:45 Gym based rehabilitation

  • 38:50 Choosing and modifying exercises for middle stages of the rehabilitation process

  • 41:00 Various types of squatting movement, and progressing the types of squats

  • 41:45 Goblet squats

  • 42:30 Retraining ideal squat patterns

  • 43:25 Progressing squats, deadlifts and lunges

  • 44:00 Front squats

  • 46:00 Front squats and trap bar deadlifts vs back squats during rehabilitation

  • 47:25 When can an athlete start cycling

  • 48:00 Disadvantages of using cycling as the main part of a rehabilitation program

  • 48:30 Hamstring rehabilitation after semitendinosis/gracilis graft

  • 49:45 Strength and power development

  • 51:00 Strength testing - mid thigh pull, leg press

  • 53:15 Should we use open chain strength tests

  • 54:20 When to perform strength tests

  • 55:00 Strength vs power and rate of force development

  • 55:50 Running - incorporating into the program. When can your patient start running?

  • 57:30 Preparation for running

  • 58:35 Running drills

  • 1:00:30 Ideal movement patterns in running

Links:

030. CrossFit injuries with Antony Lo20 Oct 201401:15:40

CrossFit is a very popular form of improving strength and fitness, and CrossFit athletes have a variety of common injuries. Training errors and the athlete’s biomechanics often contribute to these injuries, and identifying incorrect biomechanics and other contributing elements in their training is often the key to helping your patients recover from injury, train pain free and importantly for your patients, ultimately get stronger and fitter.

In episode 30 of the Physio Edge podcast, David Pope discusses CrossFit injuries, training, biomechanics and injury recovery with Antony Lo. Antony is a Musculoskeletal Physiotherapist with a number of clinics within CrossFit gyms across Sydney, and a large proportion of his patient population are CrossFit athletes.

In this podcast Antony and David explore:

  • The most common injuries in CrossFit
  • Factors that contribute to injuries in the Shoulders, Neck, Back, Knees, and lower limb
  • Specific exercises performed in CrossFit
  • Squats
  • Pullups/Chinups
  • Pushups
  • Overhead exercises
  • Double unders
  • Overhead squats
  • Snatch
  • Running
  • Ideal biomechanics for each of these movement
  • Common movement errors and ways to assess each movement
  • Rest from training vs continue training
  • Manual therapy on cross fit athletes
  • Modifying training loads
  • Rhabdomyolisis
  • Urinary continence while training
  • Advice for Physios treating CrossFit athletes

Links of Interest

 Hide    
031. Scapula assessment in shoulder pain with Ann Cools10 Oct 201401:35:25

Shoulder pain patients often have poor scapula control. Is their shoulder pain caused by poor scapula control, or is their scapula dysfunction caused by shoulder pain?  

When your patients present with shoulder pain, should your focus be on scapula control, glenohumeral control, or treatment of the neck and thorax?

In this podcast, David Pope talks to Ann Cools, a Physiotherapist and Head of Education for Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy at Ghent University in Belgium, and is also the founding member and president (2010–2012) of EUSSER - European Society of Shoulder and Elbow Rehabilitation. We discuss in detail assessment of the scapula, the role of the scapula in shoulder pain and how to retrain unruly scapulae.

Other topics covered in this podcast include:

  • Research by Ann Cools
  • What we currently know from the research about the role, movement and control of
  • the scapula
  • Scapula dyskinesis - what is it
  • Static vs dynamic assessment of the scapula
  • Altering muscle balance and timing with specific exercises
  • How altering scapula mechanics effects muscle balance around the shoulder
  • Important parts of the subjective history
  • Scapula vs glenohumeral joint
  • How subjective will guide your objective assessment and treatment
  • Red flags around the shoulder, nerve pathology and frozen shoulder
  • Frozen shoulder imaging
  • Nerve injuries - symptoms, objective examination and treatment
  • Assessment of the scapula, Type 1 scapula dyskinesis
  • Differentiating contributors to Type 1 scapula dyskinesis (anteriorly rotated scapula)
  • Testing GHJ IR
  • Clinical Edge and online education on the shoulder
  • Stretching and shoulder joint mobilisation
  • Palpation, stretching and manual therapy for pec minor
  • Type 2 scapula dysfunction
  • Handheld dynamometry - serratus
  • Handheld dynamometry - middle and lower traps
  • Pain when strength testing
  • Type 3 scapula dysfunction
  • Dynamic assessment of the scapula
  • To retract and depress the scapula or not?
  • Shoulder Symptom Modification Procedure (SSMP) by Jeremy Lewis
  • Special tests around the shoulder
  • Laxity tests for the GH joint
  • Posterior GHJ laxity
  • Anterior GHJ laxity
  • Explanations of scapula dysfunction to your patients

Links of Interest

029. Acute knee injuries with Kurt Lisle09 Jul 201401:26:31

On Episode 29 of the Physio Edge podcast, David Pope is joined by the Australian Socceroos Physio Kurt Lisle, a Specialist Sports Physiotherapist to discuss assessment and management of Acute knee injuries.

On this podcast, David and Kurt discuss:

  • Acute Ligament Injuries - Initial management
  • When to refer for Orthopaedic consult
  • Bracing/not bracing
  • Adolescent knee injuries - when to refer for XR to check for an avulsion injury
  • Swelling during and after treatment
  • ACL injury - when to trial conservative management and when to refer for surgery
  • Timeframes for surgery following ACL injury
  • Different types of ACL grafts - pros and cons
  • LARS
  • Hamstring vs ITB tendon vs Patella tendon
  • Open chain X’s eg leg extensions to restore quads and patellar tendon load capacity?
  • Important aspects of post op rehab
  • Return to training/change of direction criteria
  • RTP criteria
  • PLC
  • Details of PLC injuries
  • Mechanism
  • Structures normally injured
  • Symptoms
  • Testing for PLC injuries
  • Conservative vs surgical
  • Rehab guidelines
  • RTP timeframes

Links of Interest

028. Groin injuries, screening and rehabilitation with Dr Kristian Thorborg19 Jun 201401:09:49

David Pope and Dr Kristian Thorborg (Physiotherapist, PhD) discuss screening and rehabilitation of groin injuries.

Find out in this podcast:

  • Which tests to use when screening for potential groin injuries
  • Prevention tactics
  • Acute groin injuries - initial management and exercise progressions
  • Rehabilitation of adductor related groin pain
  • Rehabilitation of hip flexor related groin pain
  • Rehabilitation of long standing groin pain
  • Conservative management of hip related groin pain and FAI
  • Pubic symphysis
  • Management of acute compared to long standing groin pain
  • Role of manual therapy in the treatment of groin pain
  • Stretching
  • Adductor tendinopathy
  • Load management for groin pain and much more!

This episode follows on from Episode 25 of the Physio Edge podcast on Groin Assessment with Dr Kristian Thororg. I hope you enjoy Kristian sharing his experience, research and knowledge of the evidence with us on the treatment of groin pain.

Links of Interest

027. Managing sports injuries with Dr Nathan Gibbs27 May 201400:49:24

In this week's podcast,  Dr Nathan Gibbs and I discuss managing sports injuries in a team setting. Dr Nathan Gibbs has worked with many professional sports teams, including the Sydney Swans for 15 years, 10 years with South Sydney Rugby League Football club and is one of the owners of South Sydney Sports Medicine, and in episode 27 of the Physio Edge podcast, we discuss:

  • Ideal working relationships between Physiotherapists and Sports Physicians
  • The role of a Sports Physician
  • Hamstring injury - common factors involved, imaging and return to play
  • Injections - cortisone, PRP
  • Use of PRP in ligament injury, with chondroplasty and OA

Links of Interest

026. Gymnastics injuries with Kingsley Gibson09 May 201401:22:44

Gymnastics places some fairly unique demands on fairly young bodies. In episode 26 of the Physio Edge podcast, I discuss these demands with Kingsley Gibson, a Sports Titled Physiotherapist that has worked with Australian Diving, Synchronised Swimming, Shooting and Hockey teams at a number of Commonwealth and Olympic games, and works with elite gymnasts on a daily basis. For his services to gymnastics, in 2000 the Commonwealth awarded Kingsley with a Sports Services Medal. So Kingsley has a lot of experience to draw on, and we got into detail on a number of topics.

In this podcast we discuss:

  • Common injury patterns in the various gymnastic disciplines

  • Important factors to consider when returning gymnasts to training and competition

  • Factors that can influence your gymnasts treatment outcome

  • Communication with parents and coaches

  • How to best implement load management strategies

  • Various motor control patterns in gymnasts that contribute to injuries

  • Screening gymnasts

  • Designing specific upper limb rehab programs

  • Lower limb and lumbar spine rehab programs

  • Management of acute vs chronic injuries

  • Stress reactions in the Lumbar spine

  • Apophyseal injuries – hip flexors, hamstrings, calcaneus (Sever’s) and Osgood-Schlatter’s

  • Management of apophyseal injuries compared to tendinopathy

  • Motor control/“stability” patterns in gymnasts

  • When to order imaging

  • Growth plate injury management – particularly in the wrist

  • The effect of other factors such as training surfaces and equipment on injury

Links of Interest

   
025. Groin assessment with Dr Kristian Thorborg04 Mar 201401:00:16

How can you identify the reason your patient has groin pain and the structures that may be causing it?

Groin pain is one of the most common issues in a lot of sports, particularly the football codes, and in episode 25 of the Physio Edge podcast, David Pope talks to Dr Kristian Thorborg about assessment of the groin.

Some of the topics we discuss on this podcast include:

  • Types of groin injuries
  • Identifying and diagnosing groin pain and injury
  • Groin vs hip pain
  • Tests you can perform to identify the irritated or painful structures
  • The relevance of diagnostic imaging, and when to refer for this
  • Hip and Groin Outcome Score (HAGOS)
  • Using the HAGOS in your clinic
  • Adductor related groin pain
  • Hip flexor related groin pain
  • Abdominal related groin pain
  • The hip joint
  • Pubic symphysis
  • Sports Hernias
  • Testing hip strength
  • Assessment of function and much more!

Links of interest

     
150. Top tips for treating marathon runners. Physio Edge Track record: Running repairs podcast with Tom Goom24 Feb 202300:20:47

Marathon runners often come to us with pain, but also they need to build up their mileage in preparation for one of the most challenging events in endurance sport. They're trying to do more when their body may be telling them they need to be doing less.

How do we manage their symptoms, and guide them up to the marathon itself?

Find out in this podcast with Tom Goom (Running Physio).

Improve running injury assessment & treatment now with the Running Repairs Online course with Tom Goom at clinicaledge.co/runningrepairs

 

Free running injury assessment & treatment video series available now

 

Links associated with this episode:

Chapters:

  • 02:40 - Marathon training phases
  • 09:08 - Training priority
  • 11:41 - Manageable goals
  • 12:27 - Discussing risks
  • 13:59 - Short and simple rehab
  • 15:23 - Hands-on treatment
  • 17:17 - Case study
024. Thoracic ring approach with Dr Linda-Joy (LJ) Lee19 Dec 201301:20:23

The thorax is often considered stiff and stable by Physiotherapists and manual therapists, and precious little of our undergrad or postgrad training incorporates motor control of this area. Is it really important?

In episode 24 of the Physio Edge podcast, Dr LJ Lee and David Pope explore the function of the thorax, the impact the thorax can have, not only on thoracic pain, but also on other parts of the body. We discuss the  Thoracic Ring Approach™ created by LJ, which incorporates manual techniques to assess and treat the thoracic rings, and integrates motor control training for this area. In this podcast you will learn:

  • What bones and joints make up a “Thoracic ring”
  • What is the Thoracic Ring Approach™  
  • Is the thorax inherently stiff?
  • What is ideal motor control of the thorax?
  • How can listeners identify non-optimal control of the thorax in their patients
  • How can motor control of the thorax be trained?
  • Identifying articular/joint restriction vs neuromuscular factors interfering with normal thorax movement
  • How can the thorax impact on other areas of the body eg the hip
  • When is manipulation of the thorax ideal?
  • What are some guidelines for manipulation of the thorax?

Links of Interest

Have an awesome holiday, and review the Physio Edge podcast on iTunes

Physio Edge podcast episode 2 – “Analysing movement, and clinical expertise or research” with LJ

Physio Edge Podcast episode 6 – TA, “Core Stability”, Drivers and going beyond the pain experience” with LJ Lee

     
023. Lower limb tendinopathies with Dr Peter Malliaras19 Sep 201301:34:49

Tendinopathies are a hot topic, and there are lots of new developments in research and treatment. Dr Peter Malliaras, a Physiotherapist with a PhD studying tendinopathy, has a special interest in the treatment of tendinopathy, and treats elite basketball and volleyball, EPL football, rugby, and cricket players, the Royal Ballet and track and field athletes. Peter has also published numerous studies on tendinopathy.

In this episode of the Physio Edge podcast, Peter and David Pope discuss

  • The latest research on tendinopathy
  • Different types of loading programs for tendinopathy
  • Outcomes for various types of loading
  • Tendinopathy on Doppler Ultrasound or other imaging, and what changes with a loading program
  • The tendon pathology continuum by Dr Jill Cook and Craig Purdham
  • Mid portion Achilles tendinopathy
  • Insertional Achilles treatment
  • Patellar tendinopathy treatment, and a loading program for this that may challenge your preconceptions!
  • Tenosynovitis
  • Biomechanics contributing to tendinopathy
  • Return to sport following tendinopathy
  • Injury reduction/prevention
  • Injections

Links of Interest

022. Chronic low back pain with Dr Kieran O'Sullivan13 Sep 201301:18:05

Dr Kieran O’Sullivan is back on the Physio Edge podcast after talking previously about hamstring injuries, this time discussing his other big area of interest and expertise – chronic low back pain (CLBP).

In this episode, Kieran and David Pope discuss

  • Recent research on chronic low back pain
  • Central vs peripheral contributions to CLBP
  • Sitting postures and behaviours, and the relationship of this to pain
  • Is there an ideal sitting posture, and does changing sitting behaviour change CLBP?
  • Manual therapy in CLBP
  • Lumbar kyhposis/lordosis
  • Physical and psychological interventions for CLBP
  • The effect of exercise on CLBP
  • Movement patterns and retraining in chronic pain states
  • The challenges of talking to patients about chronic pain states

Links of Interest

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