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2 Concepts of Healing Healing ______________________: ___________________________ Bridge of cells binds ends of wound together _________________________ ______________________: Separation is large-2nd ° Sprains Tissue must fill space-starting at bottom and sides of wound ______________________________ Tissue Healing Phases Inflammation Phase Necessary phase ________________________ Complex cellular and chemical interactions take place Neutrophils/PMN’s abound Macrohages replace PMNs in 24-48 h to debride area Signs of Inflammation ______________ Temperature increase _____________ Pain ________________ Causes of Inflammation The signs of inflammation occur because of the increased metabolic activity and fluid in the region and the tissue damage that has occurred. Loss of function is produced by the primary signs of inflammation. Immediate Injury Response Proliferation Phase _______________ Angiogenesis and granulation tissue formation Increased fibroblasts by day 3-5 following injury; reduced PMNs ___________________ _____________________________ ____________________________ Signs of Proliferation Redness Swelling Pain Local temperature Remodeling Phase ______________ Myofibroblasts cause wound contraction to minimize scar _____________________________ ____________________________ _____________________________ Tensile strength increases Signs of Remodeling Reduced redness Reduced edema Reduced pain No local temperature Growth Factors Proteins Specific growth factors impact specific cells Named for target cells, source, behavior Perform important roles in healing process Roles of Growth Factors in Healing - p. 42-43 Control migration and proliferation of cells Affect fibrin-plug formation Control phagocytization Assist capillary endothelial production Stimulate type III collagen removal, type I formation Ligament Healing _______________________________ ___________________ Monocytes and macrophages infiltrate. Fibroblasts appear, increase, produce extracellular matrix. Cellular and matrix structures replace the blood clot. Macrophages, fibroblasts diminish; type I collagen replaces type III. ____________________________ _________________________ Tendon Healing Wound gap filled by phagocytes Collagen synthesis Revascularization; synovial sheath rebuilt Fibroblasts revert to tenocytes; type III collagen replaced with type I ____________________________ __________________________ Tensile strength -maximal amount of stress or force that a structure is able to withstand before tissue failure occurs—in this case, the amount of outside force that can be applied to a muscle, tendon, ligament, or bone before it tears or breaks Muscle Healing Fragmentation of muscle fibers; macrophages appear __________________________ _______________________________ Day 7: scar tissue; near-normal muscle tension can be produced Day 7-11: near-normal tensile strength Regenerating myotubes; crossstriated muscle fibers _____________________________ _____________________________ Articular Cartilage Healing Fibrin clot is formed Fibroblasts combine with collagen fibers to replace clot 1 month- fibroblasts separate; condrocytes appear 2 months—defect resembles cartilage, but collagen is type I 6 months—type I and II calcified cartilage with normal appearance Bone Healing ___________________________ _____________________ Hematoma forms; fractured edges become necrotic Osteoclasts/Osteoblast proliferate; soft turns hard callus develops External blood supply dominates; then inner bone circulation reestablished ____________________________ ____________________________ _______________________ Tensile strength -maximal amount of stress or force that a structure is able to withstand before tissue failure occurs—in this case, the amount of outside force that can be applied to a muscle, tendon, ligament, or bone before it tears or breaks Tensile Strength During Healing Phases Inflammation ___________________________ _______________________________ Proliferation Increase in tensile strength Source of tensile strength: collagen, granulation tissue (continued) Tensile Strength During Healing Phases Remodeling ____________________________ Ligament and tendon near normal in 17-50 weeks ____________________________ Healing and Tensile Strength For a therapeutic exercise program to be successful, one must have respect for the healing process and a knowledge of tensile strength factors. Factors That Affect Healing Modalities Medications/Drugs Other modifying factors (age, disease, etc.) Treatment Modalities Ice Electrical stimulation Superficial heat Deep heat Influence of Modalities on Healing Relieve pain, spasm, edema Enhance protein synthesis Retard atrophy, facilitate muscle activity Improve circulation Enhance collagen and neovascular production Promote fibroblast production Factors in Medication Effectiveness – p.55 half-life: definition and examples steady state of a drug: definition and examples Effects of NSAIDs on Healing Inhibit prostaglandin production Increase blood clotting time Decrease the effectiveness of other drugs Absorption rate decreased when NSAIDs used with antacids Drugs That Can Delay Healing Antibiotics Nicotine Corticosteroids Other Modifying Factors That Can Affect Healing Surgical technique Age Disease Wound size Infection Nutrition Muscle spasm Edema Role of Therapeutic Exercise in Inflammation Phase Control edema and pain ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ Role of Therapeutic Exercise in Proliferation Phase Tissue is weak but improving in strength with collagen production. Patient can start range-of-motion and limited strengthening activities. Exception is in tendon repairs. Role of Therapeutic Exercise in Remodeling Phase _____________________________ _____________________________ _________________________ Stress application must coincide with increase in tensile strength. Considerations for Appropriate Course Usual healing sequence and timing Individual’s unique response to the injury and treatment Signs of an Overly Aggressive Program Increased pain, especially postexercise Increased edema, especially if lasts more than 1 day postexercise Diminished function from the previous day’s treatment