2001
DOI: 10.1097/00132585-200110000-00008
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Therapeutic Implications of a Tissue Homeostasis Approach to Patellofemoral Pain

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Cited by 20 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Emergent acute:chronic workload ratio and injury research has repeatedly revealed that high chronic external workloads may not necessarily be the culprit, rather how loads are accumulated over time is a more powerful predictor (Gabbett, 2016;Hulin, Gabbett, Lawson, Captui, & Sampson, 2015). Regarding Dye (2001Dye ( , 2005 tissue homeostasis model, large acute stimuli may stress the tissue beyond its adaptive ability, perhaps substantiating the sigmoidal relationship in the present model. Table 1 reports, in numerical order, the normalized mutual information between each variable and 'Injury'.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 64%
“…Emergent acute:chronic workload ratio and injury research has repeatedly revealed that high chronic external workloads may not necessarily be the culprit, rather how loads are accumulated over time is a more powerful predictor (Gabbett, 2016;Hulin, Gabbett, Lawson, Captui, & Sampson, 2015). Regarding Dye (2001Dye ( , 2005 tissue homeostasis model, large acute stimuli may stress the tissue beyond its adaptive ability, perhaps substantiating the sigmoidal relationship in the present model. Table 1 reports, in numerical order, the normalized mutual information between each variable and 'Injury'.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 64%
“…The excessive loading may be a consequence of a single event or may be chronic in nature. 62 In the majority of PFPS patients, no abnormal anatomical or biomechanical reasons for the symptoms exist. 20 Both a static and dynamic evaluation of the entire leg should be performed.…”
Section: Etiologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patellar maltracking -the dynamic patellofemoral malalignment during knee motion [21] is also regarded as a common component of PFPS. It has been suggested that both malalignment and maltracking are not as common a cause of PFPS as once thought [20,43] and that some PFPS patients do not have patella malalignment [47,48] nor patellar maltracking. It is important to differentiate, then, between those with and those without patellofemoral malalignment so that treatment and rehabilitation can be correctly administered according to the bio mechanical faults.…”
Section: Patellar Malalignmentmentioning
confidence: 99%