Orthopedics focuses on the musculoskeletal system. Learn about the diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of bone, joint, ligament, and muscle conditions.
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The injury has calmed down, the swelling is gone, and you are ready to move. This step is where the real work begins. Rehabilitation is not just about waiting for time to pass; it is an active process of rebuilding. Without rehab, the healed tissue remains weak, stiff, and prone to re-injury. Scar tissue forms in a messy clump like a hairball; exercise combs it out so it becomes strong and flexible fibers.
This final section provides a practical roadmap for rehab. It covers the progression from gentle motion to strength training, the importance of balance (proprioception), and how to listen to your body to avoid setbacks. Whether you are working with a physical therapist or doing exercises at home, these principles apply.
Avoid stiffness. As soon as the doctor clears you (often within days), start moving the joint.
The goal is to restore full movement, equal to the uninjured side. Do not force it into sharp pain, but a gentle stretch sensation is beneficial.
Once you have motion, you need muscle. Muscles protect joints. Start with isometric exercises—contracting the muscle without moving the joint (e.g., pushing against a wall). This method is safe for early healing.
Progress to concentric (lifting weight) and eccentric (lowering weight) exercises. Eccentric exercises—like slowly lowering your heel off a step for Achilles issues—are particularly powerful for remodeling tendon tissue. Use resistance bands, light weights, or body weight.
After an injury, your brain “forgets” exactly where the limb is in space. This is why ankles tend to be resprained easily. Proprioception training fixes this.
This training teaches the stabilizer muscles to fire quickly to catch you if you stumble.
Before returning to the field, you must mimic the demands of the sport. You cannot go from jogging to sprinting in one day.
Scar tissue can be thick and lumpy. Massage helps. Once the skin is fully healed, use lotion to deeply massage the area. “Cross-friction” massage involves rubbing across the grain of the fibers to break up adhesions.
Foam rolling can also help loosen tight fascia and muscles surrounding the injury site.
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No. Braces are for the healing phase or for high-risk activities initially. Relying on a brace forever can weaken the muscles because they rely on the support instead of doing the work themselves.
Pain inhibits nerve signals. The connection between your foot/knee and your brain is “fuzzy.” Balance exercises sharpen this connection again.
Ideally, until you have equal strength and motion to the uninjured side. However, maintenance exercises (like eccentric heel drops or balance work) should become part of your regular workout routine to prevent recurrence.
Yes! Cross-training is great. If you have a leg injury, swim or use an arm bike. If you have an arm injury, run or cycle. Keeping your cardiovascular fitness up helps healing by increasing blood flow.
Muscle soreness (DOMS) is normal 24-48 hours after a new exercise. Joint pain or sharp tendon pain is not. If you are sore in the muscle, stretch and keep moving. If the injury site throbs, rest and ice.
Orthopedics
Orthopedics
Orthopedics
Orthopedics
Orthopedics
Orthopedics
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