Paper
8 January 2024 Advances in the treatment of exercise-related knee injuries
Jiaqi Ling
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 12924, Third International Conference on Biological Engineering and Medical Science (ICBioMed2023); 129242D (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3012821
Event: 3rd International Conference on Biological Engineering and Medical Science (ICBioMed2023), 2023, ONLINE, United Kingdom
Abstract
The largest synovial joint is the knee joint. Knee movements are performed in two planes, allowing for bending and extension as well as internal and external rotation, and its injury is generally considered one of the most common problems of injuries in the human body. According to statistics, 300,000 children participate in organized sports, of which the most common injury to the body is the knee, and non-traumatic knee is common action of athletes. Knee arthroplasty and intra-articular arthroplasty have historically been the most common methods of treatment, and the replacement body is also continually updated, and the intra-articular injection has gradually changed from sodium hyaluronate to platelets; Rehabilitation or physiotherapy for exercise-related knee injuries is relatively mature and largely a step-by-step approach. For the treatment of exercise-related knee injuries, the combination of traditional Chinese medicine and Western medicine may be the latest development. Specifically, it includes acupuncture, electroacupuncture and herbal dressing, and surgery, among others. This article describes the exercise-related knee injury and discusses the latest treatment of knee injury. Explain each treatment method, clarify its various adaptations and follow-up treatment.
© (2024) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jiaqi Ling "Advances in the treatment of exercise-related knee injuries", Proc. SPIE 12924, Third International Conference on Biological Engineering and Medical Science (ICBioMed2023), 129242D (8 January 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3012821
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KEYWORDS
Injuries

Surgery

Diseases and disorders

Education and training

Medicine

Muscles

Sodium

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