shin pain

Introduction

Introduction "Sacral pain" is a widely used term that can be used to describe a variety of calf injuries. The patella pain described herein specifically refers to the inflammation described above. Pain or pain in the medial aspect of the humerus, usually in the lower half of the humerus. Pain or pain may extend to the knees. Because the subcutaneous tissue and muscles of the humerus are weak and the blood supply is also poor, it is a common sports injury, which is more common in fighting classes and competitions that are beaten with legs. The contusion of the humerus is likely to cause bruises in the affected area, obvious tenderness, swelling, and hematoma.

Cause

Cause

The calf muscles are too stiff and the stress transmitted to the muscles is too large. The joints are excessively pronation (excessive rotation of the joints under the impact). Exercise on very hard roads, such as concrete-washed sidewalks that are uncomfortable or worn. Severe shoes are overtrained, training load and strength increase too fast. For various reasons, first-time runners are more likely to suffer from humeral pain. However, the most common is because their leg muscles have not previously been stressed in this way.

Examine

an examination

Related inspection

Molybdenum target X-ray inspection pencil rolling test

Pain or pain in the medial aspect of the humerus, usually in the lower half of the humerus. Pain or pain may extend to the knees. The pain is most intense when you start running, but it may disappear during running because the muscles become slack. The humeral pain is different from the stress fracture (fatigue fracture), and it only feels pain when carrying weight-bearing activities (walking, climbing stairs).

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

Tibial tenderness: Tibial tenderness is an early sign of blood disease, one of the early phenomena of blood disease.

Non-continuous humeral bone: The humeral bone is not connected with the soft tissue of the humeral bone fracture, which leads to the injury of the nourishing artery and nutrient vessels, and the lack of blood supply in the lower fracture segment is prone to fracture nonunion (nonunion).

Patellar pseudoarthrosis: Congenital sacral pseudoarthrosis is a general term for congenital patella formation or failure. There are many specific types, each with its own pathology, disease course and prognosis. It is more common in the lower third of the tibia. Finally, a local pseudo joint is formed. The incidence rate of males is slightly higher than that of females, mostly unilateral, and the ipsilateral tibia can also be involved. A small number of patients have a genetic history.

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