All clinicians aim to classify muscle injury classifications to guide treatment and predict return – it’s a hot topic. The British Athletics Muscle Injury Classification is one helpful classification system and Dr Noel Pollock explains to Dr Markus Laupheimer (BJSM) how and why the Classification developed, as well as why the (older) Munich classification was not ideal. Listen for tips on how this classification adds something special and is of practical value for treating your athletes with muscle injuries.
Timeline:
01:01m – Why a new muscle injury classification?
03:50m – Limitations of the Munich consensus
Open access Munich Paper: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/6/342.full.pdf+html
05:18m – British Athletics classification explained
Open access British athletics paper: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/48/18/1347.full
09:15m – Clinical application, follow up papers
12:00m – Discussion: MRI or not?
http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/49/24/1579.full
14:05m – Future Development of muscle injury classification
Links:
British athletics muscle injury classification: a new grading system
http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/48/18/1347.long (Open Access)
Time to return to full training is delayed and recurrence rate is higher in intratendinous (‘c’) acute hamstring injury in elite track and field athletes: clinical application of the British Athletics Muscle Injury Classification
http://bmj.co/1lWvDdy
Previous podcast:
The Munich muscle classification: Using it for more accurate diagnosis and treatment
https://soundcloud.com/bmjpodcasts/the-munich-muscle-classification-using-it-for-more-accurate-diagnosis-and-treatment?in=bmjpodcasts/sets/bjsm-1
Range of BJSM podcast: http://bjsm.bmj.com/site/podcasts/
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