• IT
  • Pathologies

    Tennis Elbow and Tennis Shoulder

    Tennis and supraspinatus tendon injury

    In tennis, the increasingly exaggerated activity and the introduction of new materials (racquets, strings, balls, etc.) have led to an increasingly marked stress on the tendon structures of the shoulder, making supraspinatus tendinopathy one of the most frequent pathologies.Tennis elbow (epicondylitis),...


    Carpal-tunnel syndrome (cts)

      The carpal-tunnel syndrome is the most frequent neuropathy and it is due to a compression of the median nerve of the wrist in its passage through the anatomic part known as carpal-tunnel. Nervous, vascular and tendinous structures pass through this ‘tunnel’, made by the carpal bones...


    Meniscopathy

    The arthrosis of the knee or gonarthrosis is one of the more frequent degenerative pathologies. It can develop spontaneously or subsequently to articular traumas or primitive pathologies. The secondary damages to this pathology are particularly those of the meniscus and the cartilaginous ones. The place...


    Pubalgy

    With this term, for the majority of the Authors, is defined the whole of the effects, caused by a proximal, insertionaltendinitis of the adductor muscles, even if it isn't completely right to limit this pathological event to the tendinitis. The different inflammatory processes, in fact, can sometimes...


    Osseus lesion

    They are a group of frequent pathologies in sports traumatology. Periostitis: with this term, we indicate the inflammations that involve the covering structure of the bone. Osteitis and osteochondritis: with these terms we indicate the inflammatory pathologies against the osseous structures (osteitis)...


    Discopathies

    The intervertebral disc is composed by a central compartment (pulpy nucleus) and by an external one (fibrous anulus). The anulus is constituted by an internal portion with an indistinct limit with the pulpy nucleus and by an external one whose fibres constitute the fibres of Sharpei. These fibres form...


    Ligamentous lesions

    In the majority of the cases, the pathology of the ligamentous apparatus involves the functionality of the articulations, getting worse with more or less important degrees of limitations of the articulations themselves. Elongation: with this term we define the effect of intense and sudden strain on...


    Articular lesions

    The articulations are actively stabilized by the muscles and passively by the tendons and ligaments. The articular lesions are usually acute lesions, even if sometimes they can be secondary to pathologies that have previously changed the articular structures in a repetitive way. Articular acute lesions...


    Tendinous lesion

    The general sport traumatology of the tendinous lesions includes, besides the acute lesions, forms with a marked invalidating chronic evolution, which are caused by an overload to which the locomotive apparatus of the athlete is subjected during the specific activity. Acute tendinous lesions include: Tendinous...


    Muscular lesion

    Muscular Lesion are very common and include: Acute direct: contusion (stupor, ecchymosis, haematoma, muscolar compression); Acute indirect: contracture, straining, pulled muscle of muscular strain of I° - II° - III°, muscular injury; Chronic post traumatic: liquid stratum, post traumatic...