player has good hinge joint at the knee. To be good footballer your joints need to be durable to prevent injury and also having good joints helps substantially in competing to your full potential in a sport. This players hinge joint at the knee is noticeably strong as he has no problem in going through the motion of kicking the ball and running. Also we subject to a tackle the players knee joint is strong enough to take impact without serious joint injury. To keep his knee joint strong he needs to make
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connect the upper body and the lower body. They also provide stability‚ strength and flexibility to the upper and the lower body. If the hips are misaligned‚ they will not fully serve their purpose. This creates incorrect movement straining other joints. The knees and ankles have to bear the load leading to new dysfunctions. The problem of aches and pains in tennis players can be intensified by misalignments in other load
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Intro Background One of the most common injuries to the knee involves the anterior cruciate ligament; also known as the ACL. The knee is set up as a central point where three bones meet together forming the knee itself. These bones are the femur (thigh bone)‚ shinbone (tibia) and the kneecap (patella). All of which are connected to other bones by ligaments. The four primary ligaments in the knee are the LCL (lateral collateral ligament)‚ PCL (posterior cruciate ligament)‚ MCL (medial collateral
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or misinterpreted‚ Neumann (2012) chooses to examine the convex-concave rule as applied to studies performed on the arthrokinematics of abduction of the glenohumeral joint (GH). The convex – concave rule states that during typical joint motion‚ a moving bone turns around a stable bone. The non-moving bone provides stabilizing joint surface for moving bone (Foster 2013‚ p. 59). In reference to the arthokinematics of abduction of the GH‚ “the convex humeral head rolls superior relative to the glenoid
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Radiologic case study A male patient of approximate mid 50’s in age went to the doctor with severe tenderness‚ swelling and pain in his left knee after falling down stairs and twisting his knee. The doctor found there was noticable swelling. An MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) showed the back side corner of the knee to be intact but also did show thickening of the ligament located on the outer side of the knee. The MRI shows an oval abnormality that ran alongside of the ligament. However‚ MRI
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Osgood–Schlatter disease or syndrome (also known as tibial tubercle apophyseal traction injury) is an irritation of the patellar ligament at the tibial tuberosity. Sinding–Larsen–Johansson syndrome is an analogous condition involving the patellar tendon and the lower margin of the patella bone‚ instead of the upper margin of the tibia. The condition occurs in active boys and girls aged 9–16 coinciding with periods of growth spurts. It occurs more frequently in boys than in girls‚ with reports of
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is on the back of the thigh which bends the knee. Gastronomies are the calf muscle which lifts the heel and straightens the ankle. Latissimus dorsi is a large muscle on either side of the spine which supports the spine and stabilises the shoulder joint. Trapezius is the muscles on the spine which also raise the shoulder girdle. Biceps is the muscle which bends the elbow. Triceps is the muscle which straightens the elbow. Deltoid forms the curve of the
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metacarpal of the thumb and the other part inserting on the falciform bone‚ the tendon to the falciform bone is the larger of the two. Between the dorsal surface of the falciform bone and the palmar surface of scapholunate‚ there is an arthrodial joint. The falciform is connected to the styliform cartilage on the opposite side of the wrist by a
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Piping Joints Handbook Document No. D/UTG/054/00 03000785 (RP2066) May 2000 Acknowledgements This Handbook was originally written and illustrated by E. Marston (BPE) on behalf of the Forties Field Group in 1991. This version was updated in May 2000 and edited by F. Zezula (BP Amoco‚ UTG‚ Sunbury) and C. Durden (BP Amoco‚ Dyce). A “hard ” pocket size version of this Handbook can be ordered from XFM Reprographics‚ BP Amoco‚ Dyce Office‚ Tel. 01224 832547 or via En-Garde quoting
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Joint Families Man‚I don’t know $#1+ about these. My few brushes with this institution have been during those rare occassions when we used to visit some distant relatives in the countryside.The house was large‚with the staircase forming the backbone‚and its inhabitants noisy in a friendly manner.I never tried to remember the exact names of the relationships i shared with them-it was too complex for me. Therefore‚I know almost as much about joint families as a child born in a nuclear family
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