Lau Saugman

1.9K posts

Lau Saugman

Lau Saugman

@LSaugman

Physio, Osteopath.

가입일 Ekim 2019
174 팔로잉142 팔로워
Lau Saugman
Lau Saugman@LSaugman·
@GregLehman 😅 It's easy to feel stupid with many of these "pro's" videos. You could say: pain on palpation, pain with first step, no neurogenic/inflammatory pathology = PHP. Try exercise (Riel et al), heel cup, tape. Dont worry about food posture, flexor hallucis longus etc...
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Lau Saugman
Lau Saugman@LSaugman·
@TDekkersPhysio @AdamMeakins I can see some prominent researchers in the references (Fritz, Ferreira). Do you find that any of the RCT's included in the SR include contemporary practice interventions ?
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Thomas Dekkers | Spinal Specialist Physiotherapist
I understand your take here Adam - its been an under prioritised area of physio IMO. But the way I look at this is that its a research problem rather than a reflection of the capacity of physios to help those with radicular issues. We urgently need better research in the area that is aligned with modern practice- that doesn't worry me, it motivates me.
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The Sp⚽️rts Physio
The Sp⚽️rts Physio@AdamMeakins·
The fact that the evidence base is so poor and weak for Physio helping those with sciatica is most definitely something to be worried/concerned about! It’s not like the profession hasn’t had time or opportunity to demonstrate its worth or not here!
Thomas Dekkers | Spinal Specialist Physiotherapist@TDekkersPhysio

This systematic review concluded that there was “no difference in effectiveness of physiotherapy versus control interventions at short term, medium term, and long term.” Here’s 5️⃣ reasons why we shouldn’t be too worried 🧵

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MSKPhysioJournal
MSKPhysioJournal@MSKPhysioJnl·
🧠A new study reveals that exercise therapy results in significantly greater reduction in pain and disability in the long-term compared with corticosteriod injection for shoulder pain management in general practice. Read the study here: buff.ly/EXIjuF8 #shoulder #exercise #injection
MSKPhysioJournal tweet media
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Lau Saugman
Lau Saugman@LSaugman·
@DrJN_SportsMed Variation in pain and sensation could be explained by neuroinflammation (Albrecht 2018). More inflammatory "soup" on side with worst pain even despite less stenosis
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James Noake
James Noake@DrJN_SportsMed·
Doctor, 40s - ‘A Tale of Two Shins’ 😄 L4/5 destructive bacterial disciitis with osteomyelitic destruction of adjacent L4 and L5 vertebral bodies (MRI STIR sagittal) This led to bilateral foraminal stenosis, right worse than left radiographically on both MRI and CT (see axial - note debris in the left recess) But interestingly – Left sided radicular pain and foot sensory and temperature changes much more severe versus the right Left side much worse on lumbar extension; right worse on flexion Left ‘foot drop’ and tibialis anterior wasting much more pronounced Both worse at night and in the morning, and both aggravated by neural tensioning Although same L5 nerve roots affected and nerve oedema on MRI STIR sagittal images similar bilaterally the pattern of radicular pain is notably different side to side (see pain map) - On ‘worse’ radiological right side, only 3/10 shin ‘warm aching’ On left, most severe pain is deep electric shock superolateral gluteal 9/10 pain which ‘skips’ posterior thigh to re-emerge at the fibula head What do you think explains this variability side to side? Thoughts and discussion welcome Research link – tomjesson.substack.com/p/how-bad-are-…
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Howard Luks MD
Howard Luks MD@hjluks·
LFG :-). Heavy day... I always wait for my achilles to bark... and it never does :-).
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Greg Lehman
Greg Lehman@GregLehman·
@StephenSeiler @hjluks @mikesebroadley And if you truly want heavy loading what it really means is high tendon strain which is a factor of load and joint position. You can’t just train isometrically in neutral. You need heavy plus ROM to get 4.5-6% strain to catalyze stiffness adaptations.
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Lau Saugman 리트윗함
Physio Meets Science
Physio Meets Science@PhysioMeScience·
Just published 🔥 Great editorial in BJSM by @JaredPowell12 and colleagues It is not all about strength: rethinking mechanistic assumptions in exercise-based rehabilitation for musculoskeletal pain relief 👇👇👇 bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/…
Physio Meets Science tweet media
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Ben Whybrow
Ben Whybrow@BWhybrowPhysio·
One slide easily showing what one review suggests does (and doesn’t) work for changing behaviour. And here’s the article ⬇️ pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40909436/
Ben Whybrow tweet media
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James Noake
James Noake@DrJN_SportsMed·
Consent✅ Cervicalgia & R scapula pain - occasional parasthesiae in hand MRI to assess for R sided nerve root compression MRI - C4/5 central disc protrusion causing cord compression - increased signal in the cord is of concern Inflammatory disc changes suggestive of infective disciitis as well - but no constitutional symptoms On further questioning at review - "Yes, my partner has noticed my walking has changed subtly" .... ? UMN signs in lower limbs now Mild clonus on exam & increased tone Urgent neurosurgical opinion
James Noake tweet mediaJames Noake tweet mediaJames Noake tweet media
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Eric Topol
Eric Topol@EricTopol·
Evidence for a detrimental causal effect of social isolation on cognitive function in older adults #google_vignette" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">academic.oup.com/psychsocgeront…
Eric Topol tweet media
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Lau Saugman
Lau Saugman@LSaugman·
@BJSM_BMJ Great study with prospective design but also another add to the messy world of biomechanical associations with pain.
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British Journal of Sports Medicine (BJSM)
🚨 Biomechanical insights into Achilles tendinopathy risk and protection in runners 🏃‍♀️ What were identified as significant predictors of the onset of Achilles tendinopathy? 🤷‍♂️ NEW large prospective study 4HAIE 📄 #OpenAccess 👉 bit.ly/48MdkAD
British Journal of Sports Medicine (BJSM) tweet media
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Nick Krontiris
Nick Krontiris@nick_krontiris·
This meta-analysis finds that, as resistance training volume (weekly sets) increases, both muscle hypertrophy and strength gains tend to increase, with stronger diminishing returns for strength gains, and as frequency (sessions per week) increases, there is a negligible effect for muscle hypertrophy but a meaningful effect with diminishing returns for strength gains.
Nick Krontiris tweet media
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Lau Saugman
Lau Saugman@LSaugman·
@GregLehman @DerekGriffin86 Even though mechanistic research shows "saturation of osteoblasts" after few cycles? There are physiology we do not know yet?
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Greg Lehman
Greg Lehman@GregLehman·
@DerekGriffin86 @LSaugman I think its the same thing with bone density in runners. if someone has a BSI then running, when applied in a healthier person, can be stimulus for the bone to adapt.
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Derek Griffin
Derek Griffin@DerekGriffin86·
While commonly cited that plyometric training doesn't enhance tendon stiffness, the evidence is more nuanced. It looks like there is variation between individuals. Tendon stiffness increased in some & not for others 👇 journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.11…
Derek Griffin tweet media
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Derek Griffin
Derek Griffin@DerekGriffin86·
@GregLehman @LSaugman Also if tendon loses stiffness with tendinopathy, then a lower %MVC is required to achieve the required strain value for adaptation. Hence it should be easier to enhance the stiffness of a tendinopathic tendon vs a healthy (stiffer) tendon.
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