BJSM Podcast

BMJ Group
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Sep 11, 2013 • 11min

Professor Ron Diercks talks about sports medicine research in the Netherlands

This podcast comes together with the Dutch Sports Medicine Association edition of BJSM. Guest editor Hans Zwerver talks with Prof Ron Diercks, head of the Sports Medicine Center of the University Medical Center in Groningen, about the development of sports medicine research in the Netherlands and the Groningen Sport Science Institute. Ron discusses the impact of the expected recognition of Sports Medicine in the Netherlands and also comments on the shoulder consensus statement and of course the cover photo of the Dutch BJSM edition... See that great cover, and all the content from the special edition, here: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/14.toc
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Aug 16, 2013 • 17min

Time to revisit inflammation in tendons, with Jon Rees

It is currently widely accepted among clinicians that chronic tendinopathy is caused by a degenerative process devoid of inflammation. The evidence for non-inflammatory degenerative processes alone as the cause of tendinopathy is surprisingly weak. In this podcast, Jon Rees a rheumatologist at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust tells Jill Cook why the role of inflammation offers potential opportunities in treating chronic tendinopathies and should be explored further. Read the article online: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/2013/03/08/bjsports-2012-091957.full
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Aug 14, 2013 • 17min

Scapular summit 2013 with Ben Kibler

Adam Weir talks to Ben Kibler from the Shoulder Center of Kentucky about the 2013 consensus statement on scapular dyskinesis in shoulder injury. Read the editor's choice article for free online: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/14/877.full The second international consensus conference on the scapula was held in Lexington Kentucky. The purpose of the conference was to update, present and discuss the accumulated knowledge regarding scapular involvement in various shoulder injuries and highlight the clinical implications for the evaluation and treatment of shoulder injuries.
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Aug 12, 2013 • 33min

Sports medcast in association with AMSSM: Heat injury

Welcome to the first Sports Medcast, brought to you in association with the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine. In this episode, hosts Dr Scott Young and Dr Cole Taylor discuss the practical considerations of heat injury evaluation and management with Dr Fran O'Connor, Chair of Military Medicine at the Uniformed Services University in Bethesda, MD. We'd very much like to hear your feedback on this episode, email us at thesportsmedcast@gmail.com.
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Jul 16, 2013 • 19min

Physio education, with David Pope

David Pope (@DavidKPope) is a practicing physiotherapist in Australia and a pioneer in social media for physio education. His podcasts via ClinicalEdge (www.clinicaledge.com.au/pages/podcast) with stellar guests such as David Butler and Jill Cook have had many tens of thousands of listeners. In this podcast, BJSM turns the microphone around and asks him to share the secrets of contemporary clinical teaching methods and clinical reasoning.
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Jul 12, 2013 • 13min

Prof Antonio Pelliccia - La cardiologia dello sport: stato dell’arte e prospettive future

In questo Podcast, il Prof Antonio Pelliccia, esperto a livello modiale nell’ambito della Cardiologia dello Sport, parla della prevenzione della morte improvvisa nello sportivo. Campo in continuo sviluppo, la cardiologia dello sport trova nell’Italia uno dei paesi pionieristici, sia in ambito clinico che nella ricerca scientifica. You can listen to an English version of this podcast here: http://goo.gl/4VgAfC
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Jul 12, 2013 • 10min

Prof Antonio Pelliccia - Sports cardiology: the cutting edge and looking to the future

In this podcast, Prof Antonio Pelliccia, Institute of Sport Medicine and Science, Rome, Italy, an international expert in sports cardiology, talks about the prevention of sudden death in athletes. In a field in continuous development, sports cardiologists in Italy are leading the way, both in clinical and scientific research. This podcast is also available in Italian: http://goo.gl/5fweGj
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Jun 25, 2013 • 30min

High-fat for health, with Professor Timothy Noakes

Dr Peter Brukner has been looking at nutrition for health, both of athletes and in the wider population. In this podcast he speaks to Professor Tim Noakes, author of The Lore of Running, originator of the central governor theory, and a strong exponent of the low carbohyrate-high fat diet. Tim talks about his views on carbohydrate, and how his experience of a very low carb diet has changed the way he views the decades old advice of low-fat intake - particularly when it comes to treatment of patients with type-2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. They discuss this diet in the specific setting of sport - long distance and football codes. Professor Noakes has over 21,000 followers on Twitter (https://twitter.com/ProfTimNoakes) and his most recent book, Challenging Beliefs, includes an introduction to his thoughts on this topic. Peter Brukner's editorial on this topic is in the July 2013 issue of BJSM - http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/11/663.full
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Jun 3, 2013 • 16min

Mark Thompson on tendon mechanics and the 2014 International Scientific Tendon symposium

We are talking tendons again in this podcast because the next International Scientific Tendinopathy Symposium has been scheduled for September 5 and 6 in Oxford, UK. This exciting event follows on from two successful conferences in Vancouver in 2012 and Umea in 2010. The consensus paper from the Vancouver conference is open access in the June 2013 edition of BJSM [http://bit.ly/13fLIN1]. In this podcast I am talking to with Dr Mark Thompson, a biomedical engineer from Oxford University, who leads the Oxford Mechanobiology Group. Amongst other things he is working with Prof Andy Carr, who has a large number of publications particularly on the rotator cuff tendon. Mark discusses the mechanics of tendon and tendinopathy, and how mechanics contribute to the clinical perspectives of the condition.
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May 20, 2013 • 15min

Carl Askling on hamstring injuries - in Swedish

Carl Askling, Ph.D., P.T., är forskare och lektor på Gymnastik och Idrottshögskolan, Stockholm och är knuten till Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm. Carl Askling har skrivit en avhandling om akuta skador av hamstringsmuskulaturen, “Hamstring Muscle Strain”, Karolinska Institutet, 2008, och har fortsätt att forska runt akuta hamstringsskador på bl.a. fotbollspelare. I den här podcasten talar idrottsläkare Babette Pluim med Carl om hans senaste forskningsresultat. See also: Carl’s podcast on hamstring injuries in English bit.ly/zFjobU Return to play after thigh muscle injury in elite football players: implementation and validation of the Munich muscle injury classification bit.ly/14Jo4rY Acute hamstring injuries in Swedish elite football: a prospective randomised controlled clinical trial comparing two rehabilitation protocols bit.ly/11b99pH High-speed running type or stretching-type of hamstring injuries makes a difference to treatment and prognosis bit.ly/13FToJj Type of acute hamstring strain affects flexibility, strength, and time to return to pre-injury level bit.ly/YUKEgJ

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