Grace Walker, physical & occupational therapist and nutritionist agrees with author Darice Britt from South University who states that rehabilitation of an injured athlete should be carefully evaluated and monitored on a daily basis.
Physical therapists carefully examine the injured
athlete to determine whether there are weak or inflexible muscles in the body that could cause
future injury. They are trained to target specific joints and
muscles in the body through exercise, manual therapy, and pressure point
release techniques that help rebuild strength and movement of the body
after injury.
Since injuries are time-dependent, the normal healing
process follows a pattern of acute phase, subacute phase, and chronic phase.
“Each phase dictates a different treatment approach and it is the physical therapist’s responsibility to accurately diagnose which phase and what treatment the patient should receive" Says Apostolos Theophilou, DPT, clinical coordinator of the Physical Therapist Assisting program at South University
Theophilou also says:
“Through the years, therapists have been successfully able to log the ‘steps’ for each phase, thus now we have collective treatment protocols that have a complete analysis of what activities and treatments the athlete should be receiving based on his current phase”Call Walker Physical Therapy & Pain Center to schedule an appointment with an expert physical therapist!
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