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Daily adjustable progressive resistance exercise technique D.A.P.R.E.

Daily adjustable progressive resistance exercise technique D.A.P.R.E. D.A.P.R.E. To Develop Strength. The athlete must perform some progressive resistive exercises on a regular basis if an increase of strength is desired

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Daily adjustable progressive resistance exercise technique D.A.P.R.E.

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  1. Daily adjustable progressive resistance exercise techniqueD.A.P.R.E.

  2. D.A.P.R.E. To Develop Strength • The athlete must perform some progressive resistive exercises on a regular basis if an increase of strength is desired • The D.A.P.R.E. technique takes advantage of the fact that strength can be redeveloped much more quickly than it was developed initially. • Patients perform maximal repetitions during their third and fourth sets, with the number or repetitions performed used as a basis for adjusting the resistance for the fourth set and next day, respectively. • Each side of the body should be worked independently • Prevents the injured limb from depending on the non-injured one • It establishes a functional strength-development goal for the injured side.

  3. D.A.P.R.E. *The number of repetitions performed during the third set is used to determine the adjusted working weight for the fourth set, according to the guidelines in the next table **The number of repetitions performed during the fourth set is used to determine the adjusted working weight for the next day, according to the guidelines in the next table

  4. Adjustment of Working Weight

  5. Cryokinetics in Rehabilitation of Joint Sprains

  6. Cryokinetics • Effects • Cold decreases pain • Exercise increases blood flow • Exercise reestablishes neuromuscular function

  7. Cryokinetics • Advantages • Cryokinetics allows exercise much sooner than normally would be the case. • Cryokinetics retards muscular atrophy and neural inhibitions. • Cryokinetics reduces swelling dramatically through muscular “milking action” • You can progress at the patient’s speed

  8. Cryokinetics • Disadvantages • Ice is very painful during the initial ice immersion.

  9. Cryokinetics • Indications • Ankle sprains • Finger sprains • Shoulder sprains • Other joint sprains

  10. Cryokinetics • Contraindications • Do not perform any exercise or activity that causes pain • Do not use ice on a person who is hypersensitive to cold.

  11. Cryokinetics • Precautions • Pain must be used as a guideline • With lower extremity injuries, patients may limp if not frequently reminded to refrain from limping. • There may be an increase in pain 4 to 8 hours after treatment.

  12. Cryokinetics • Equipment Needed • Slush bucket or ice packs • Toe cap • Towel

  13. Application Procedures • Numb the Body Part • Use ice immersion, ice massage, or cold-pack application • Numbing generally takes 12-20 min. • The patients sensation is more significant than the time of application • Use a toe cap

  14. Application Procedures • Exercise the numbed body part • All exercise should be • Active • Progressive • Pain-free • Exercise should last 2 to 3 minutes, the duration of the numbness • Renumbing takes 3 to 5 min. • Begin with simple rang-of-motion activities and progress through full-sport activity. • With some injuries, progression through full-sport activity will take place in a single treatment session, while with others it may take weeks.

  15. Exercise Progression For an Ankle Strain • Non-weight-bearing range of motion • Weight-bearing • Weight-bearing range of motion • Walking • Strengthening the ankle musculature • Jogging • Hopping and jumping • Sprints • Hopping and sprinting without ice application • Team drills

  16. Relieving Acute Muscle Spasm: Cryostretch

  17. Cryostretch • Combines three techniques for reducing muscle spasm: • Cold application • Static stretching • The hold-relax technique of PNF • Its purpose is to decrease muscle spasm, thereby allowing increased flexibility. • Is similar to cryokinetics in that exercise is performed while the body part is numbed.

  18. Cryostretch • Effects • Ice diminishes pain and muscle spasm • Static stretching overcomes the stretch reflex, decreasing muscle spasm. • Relaxation is often greater after a near-maximal muscular contraction than it was before the contraction.

  19. Cryostretch • Advantages • The combination of the three components into one procedure is more effective than any of the parts independently. • Ice is relatively inexpensive; exercise is free.

  20. Cryostretch • Disadvantages • Ice is painful to some people • Melting ice can be messy.

  21. Cryostretch • Indications • Any muscle with residual muscle spasm • First-degree muscle strain • A muscle that is stiff from prolonged disuse (immobilized)

  22. Cryostretch • Contraindications • Do not perform any exercise or activity that causes pain. • Do not use ice on a person who is hypersensitive to cold.

  23. Cryostretch • Precautions • Pain must be used as a guideline. The patient should not attempt to consciously or willfully overcome pain. • There may be an increase in pain 4 to 8 hours after treatment. • Muscles may tear or pull if the static exercise begins too quickly or suddenly. There must be a gradual build-up to a maximal conatraction.

  24. Summary Of Cryostretch Technique • ICE - Until numb (20 minutes maximum) • Exercise Bout • First Stretch Total of 65 sec. • Static stretch 20 sec. • Isometric contraction 5 sec. • Static stretch 10 sec. • Isometric contraction 5 sec. • Static stretch 10 sec. • Isometric contraction 5 sec. • Static stretch 10 sec. • Rest - 20 seconds • Second Stretch (Same as first stretch) • Renumb with 3 to 5 minutes ice application • Exercise Bout • Two stretches (65 sec.) with a 20 sec. rest between stretches • Renumb with 3 to 5 minutes ice application • Exercise Bout • Two stretches (65 sec.) with a 20 sec. rest between stretches

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