Anterior Cruciate Ligament Acl
Mostrando 25-33 de 33 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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25. Prevention of anterior cruciate ligament injury in the female athlete
The relationships of gender, age and training to the incidence of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury are pivotal to developing a comprehensive neuromuscular and proprioceptive training programme to decrease ACL injuries in female athletes. A prophylactic neuromuscular and proprioceptive training programme may have direct benefit in decreasing the number
BMJ Group.
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26. The Menstrual Cycle, Sex Hormones, and Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury
Objective: To determine if anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in female athletes occur randomly or correlate with a specific phase of the menstrual cycle.
National Athletic Trainers Association.
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27. Strength, Functional Outcome, and Postural Stability After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
Objective: To compare postural stability, single-leg hop, and isokinetic strength measurements in subjects after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction with an age- and activity-matched control group.
attr.
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28. Rationale and Clinical Techniques for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Prevention Among Female Athletes
Objective: To present the rationale and detailed techniques for the application of exercises targeted to prevent anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury in high-risk female athletes.
National Athletic Trainers Association.
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29. The differential adhesion forces of anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligament fibroblasts: effects of tropomodulin, talin, vinculin, and alpha-actinin.
We have determined the effects of tropomodulin (Tmod), talin, vinculin, and alpha-actinin on ligament fibroblast adhesion. The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), which lacks a functional healing response, and the medial collateral ligament (MCL), a functionally healing ligament, were selected for this study. The micropipette aspiration technique was used to d
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30. Mechanisms of non‐contact ACL injuries
In soccer one of the most common knee injuries is the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear, which usually occurs through non‐contact mechanisms. Female soccer players are at higher risk of sustaining non‐contact ACL injuries than male soccer players. A good understanding of ACL loading mechanisms is the basis for a good understanding of the mechanisms o
BMJ Group.
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31. Ligament Tension in the ACL-deficient Knee: Assessment of Medial and Lateral Gaps
Obtaining symmetric and balanced gaps under equilateral loads is a common goal in posterior cruciate ligament (PCL)-retaining and -sacrificing TKAs. Owing to limitations in existing surgical tensors, however, tensing knee ligaments with standardized and symmetric loads has been possible only with the patella subluxated or everted. We therefore determined the
Springer-Verlag.
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32. Low temperature and conventional scanning electron microscopic observations of dog femoral condylar cartilage surface after anterior cruciate ligament division.
The left stifle joints of 16 beagle dogs were subjected to surgical division of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). The femoral condyles showed surface alterations and damage after 14 days when examined by low temperature (LTSEM) and conventional scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The first change was an increase in the fibrous texture of the articular ca
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33. Cartilage matrix glycoprotein is present in serum in experimental canine osteoarthritis.
We have described previously a disulfide-bonded 550,000-D cartilage matrix glycoprotein (CMGP), which is found in normal hyaline cartilage, fibrocartilage, and the vitreous of the eye, and consists of subunits with apparent molecular weights of 130,000 in 4% gels (116,000 in 9% gels). In osteoarthritic cartilage from dogs subjected to transection of the ante