OVERUSE INJURIES IN CLASSICAL BALLET

被引:120
作者
KHAN, K
BROWN, J
WAY, S
VASS, N
CRICHTON, K
ALEXANDER, R
BAXTER, A
BUTLER, M
WARK, J
机构
[1] The Australian Ballet, South Melbourne
[2] Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital, University of Melbourne, Melbourne
[3] Melbourne Dance Clinic, Melbourne
[4] North Sydney Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Centre, Sydney, Crows Nest
[5] Alphington Sports Medicine Clinic, Melbourne
[6] Sydney, Neutral Bay
关键词
D O I
10.2165/00007256-199519050-00004
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 [教育学]; 0403 [体育学];
摘要
Successful management of classical ballet dancers with overuse injuries requires an understanding of the art form, precise knowledge of anatomy and awareness of certain conditions. Turnout is the single most fundamental physical attribute in classical ballet and 'forcing turnout' frequently contributes to overuse injuries. Common presenting conditions arising from the foot and ankle include problems at the first metatarsophalangeal joint, second metatarsal stress fractures, flexor hallucis longus tendinitis and anterior and posterior ankle impingement syndromes. Persistent shin pain in dancers is often due to chronic compartment syndrome, stress fracture of the posteromedial or anterior tibia. Knee pain can arise from patellofemoral syndrome, patellar tendon insertional pathologies, ora comination of both. Hip and back problems are also prevalent in dancers. To speed injury recovery of dancers, it is important for the sports medicine team to cooperate fully. This permits the dancer to benefit from accurate diagnosis, technique correction where necessary, the full range of manual therapies to joint and soft tissue, appropriate strengthening programmes and maintenance of dance fitness during any time out of class with Pilates-based exercises and nutrition advice. Most overuse ballet conditions respond well to a combination of conservative therapies. Those dancers that do require surgical management still depend heavily on ballet-specific rehabilitation for a complete recovery.
引用
收藏
页码:341 / 357
页数:17
相关论文
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