Clinical Examination and Treatment of the Injured Runner: Hypothesis Driven by Experience, Research and Technology – 03/16/2019
This course introduces the very latest evidence about common lower extremity overuse injuries and links them to clinically available running gait analysis technology.
Course Date & Time
March 16, 2019
8:30 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.
Course Location
Kaiser Permanente Oakland
3701 Broadway, 2nd Floor PT Department Gym
Oakland, CA
Instructor(s)/Speaker(s)
Kornelia Kulig, PhD, PT, FAPTA, FAAOMPT (Hon)
Liz Poppert, DPT, MS, OCS
Sponsored by
Kaiser Permanente Northern California Graduate Physical Therapy Education
Target Audience
Physical Therapists
Course Level
Intermediate
Course Description
In this course, we will introduce the very latest evidence about common lower extremity overuse injuries and link them to clinically available running gait analysis technology. We will enable practitioners to develop case specific hypothesis driven clinical exams including fitness testing to hone in on efficacious intervention including manual therapy, therapeutic exercise, fitness training and running gait drill training.
Objectives
After completing this course, participants should be able to:
- Link evidence of tendinopathy to the patient specific movement problem.
- Narrow the broad scope of movement analysis by developing a hypothesis driven, phase specific analysis informed by the tissue stress model and the patient’s presentation.
- Utilize the movement analysis to drive objective examination planning with relevant hypothesis driven performance tests, clinical tests and measures.
- Interpret the movement analysis, tests and measures to differentiate among skill versus physical capacity impairments as sources of the patient problem.
- Develop and implement running specific intervention including manual therapy, skill re-training strategies via phase specific drills, and running specific physical capacity exercise.