[libribook.com] Traumatic Scar Tissue Management 1st Edition

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Overview of ChaptersIndividual chapters will cover normal/abnormal scar formation; the role ofvarious systems in wound healing; the impact of pathophysiological scars andassociated sequelae; the biochemical and emotional impact of trauma;communication skills (including interprofessional communication); assessmentand treatment protocols; client/therapist self care and shared experiences fromtherapists and people with scars.In order to assist with research translation, throughout this bookpathophysiological and clinical considerations will be interspersed as Boxeswhere it makes sense to do so.The views expressed in these pages are founded on the result of severalyears of close observation, study, and experiment. It is possible some of mydeductions are erroneous, but at least they are capable of being arguedand are not merely arbitrary.J.B. Mennell (1920)ReferencesAndrade CK (2013) Outcome-based massage: putting evidence into practice. 3rd edn Baltimore Md:Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.APA (2015) American Psychological Society. Available at: https://apa.org/topics/trauma/index.aspx[Accessed 16 February 2015].Berman B, Bieley HC (1995) Keloids. Journal of American Academy of Dermatology 33: 117–23.Blakeney P, Creson D (2002) Psychological and physical trauma: treating the whole person. Available at:http://www.jmu.edu/cisr/journal/6.3/focus/blakeneyCreson/blakeneyCreson.htm [Accessed 10 December2014].Bordoni B, Zanier E (2014) Skin, fascias, and scars: symptoms and systemic connections. Journal ofMultidisciplinary Healthcare 7: 11–24.Bouffard NA, Cutroneo KR, Badger GJ et al (2008) Tissue stretch decreases soluble TGF-β and type Iprocollagen in mouse subcutaneous connective tissue: evidence from ex vivo and in vivo models. Journal ofCellular Physiology 214: 389–395.Cho YS, Jeon JH, Hong A et al (2014) The effect of burn rehabilitation massage therapy on hypertrophicscar after burn: a randomized controlled trial. Burns 40(8): 1513–20.

Diamond M (2012) Scars and adhesions panel. Third International Fascia Research Congress, Vancouver.Farlex (2012) Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing. © Farlex 2012.Fritz S (2013) Mosby’s Fundamentals of therapeutic massage, 5th edn. St Louis, Elsevier, p 45.Goel A, Shrivastava P (2010) Post-burn scars and scar contractures. Indian Journal of Plastic Surgery:official publication of the Association of Plastic Surgeons of India 43(Suppl): S63.Haraldsson BG (2006) The ABCs of EBPs. How to have an evidence-based practice. Massage TherapyCanada. Available at: http://www.massagetherapycanada.com/content/view/1402/[Accessed 7 December2014].Lewit K, Olsanska S (2004) Clinical importance of active scars: abnormal scars as a cause of myofascialpain. Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics 27(6): 399–402.Mennell JB (1920) Physical treatment by movement, manipulation and massage, 2nd edn. Philadelphia:Blakiston.Sackett DL, Rosenberg W, Gray JA et al (1996) Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn’t. BMJ312(7023): 71–72.Sackett DL, Strauss SE, Scott Richardson W et al (2000) Evidence-based medicine: how to practice andteach EBM, 2nd edn. New York, Churchill Livingstone.Sund B (2000) New developments in wound care. London, PJB Publications.Valouchová P, Lewit K (2012) In: Schleip R, Findley T, Chaitow L, Huijing P (eds) Fascia the tensionalnetwork of the human body. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone Elsevier, p 343.

Overview of Chapters

Individual chapters will cover normal/abnormal scar formation; the role of

various systems in wound healing; the impact of pathophysiological scars and

associated sequelae; the biochemical and emotional impact of trauma;

communication skills (including interprofessional communication); assessment

and treatment protocols; client/therapist self care and shared experiences from

therapists and people with scars.

In order to assist with research translation, throughout this book

pathophysiological and clinical considerations will be interspersed as Boxes

where it makes sense to do so.

The views expressed in these pages are founded on the result of several

years of close observation, study, and experiment. It is possible some of my

deductions are erroneous, but at least they are capable of being argued

and are not merely arbitrary.

J.B. Mennell (1920)

References

Andrade CK (2013) Outcome-based massage: putting evidence into practice. 3rd edn Baltimore Md:

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

APA (2015) American Psychological Society. Available at: https://apa.org/topics/trauma/index.aspx

[Accessed 16 February 2015].

Berman B, Bieley HC (1995) Keloids. Journal of American Academy of Dermatology 33: 117–23.

Blakeney P, Creson D (2002) Psychological and physical trauma: treating the whole person. Available at:

http://www.jmu.edu/cisr/journal/6.3/focus/blakeneyCreson/blakeneyCreson.htm [Accessed 10 December

2014].

Bordoni B, Zanier E (2014) Skin, fascias, and scars: symptoms and systemic connections. Journal of

Multidisciplinary Healthcare 7: 11–24.

Bouffard NA, Cutroneo KR, Badger GJ et al (2008) Tissue stretch decreases soluble TGF-β and type I

procollagen in mouse subcutaneous connective tissue: evidence from ex vivo and in vivo models. Journal of

Cellular Physiology 214: 389–395.

Cho YS, Jeon JH, Hong A et al (2014) The effect of burn rehabilitation massage therapy on hypertrophic

scar after burn: a randomized controlled trial. Burns 40(8): 1513–20.

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