Canadian Physiotherapy Association Pain Science Division
43 episodes
5 days ago
Paincast is the official podcast of the Pain Science Division at the Canadian Physiotherapy Association. Paincast aims to bring together researchers, clinicians, and students to facilitate discussions about pain and physiotherapy. Please contact paincast.psd@gmail.com if you have any feedback, concerns, or if you’d like to be a guest on the podcast. For older episodes, please visit https://physiotherapy.ca/divisions/pain-science/paincasts/
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Paincast is the official podcast of the Pain Science Division at the Canadian Physiotherapy Association. Paincast aims to bring together researchers, clinicians, and students to facilitate discussions about pain and physiotherapy. Please contact paincast.psd@gmail.com if you have any feedback, concerns, or if you’d like to be a guest on the podcast. For older episodes, please visit https://physiotherapy.ca/divisions/pain-science/paincasts/
Ep31: All about ACL with Dr. Linda Truong (Part 1): Surgery or Not?
Paincast
50 minutes 39 seconds
1 year ago
Ep31: All about ACL with Dr. Linda Truong (Part 1): Surgery or Not?
In this episode, we talked about
Different options after an ACL tear
What the current body of evidence say about the outcomes of different options
Clarifying research terminologies: statistical vs clinical significance, levels of certainty, what constitute good research
Clinician-Scientist | Physical Therapist | Post-doctoral Fellow
Expertise and research focus:
Qualitative research
Mixed methods research
Musculoskeletal (MSK) and sports rehabilitation
Digital health implementation
Models of care in rehabilitation
Current Focus: Postdoctoral research on innovative care models and the integration of digital health solutions for MSK pain management. My work bridges the gap between clinical practice and digital health technology, aiming to improve patient outcomes through evidence-informed strategies. My clinical expertise lies in management and treatment of traumatic knee injuries (e.g., ACL injuries). I currently work part time at a local physiotherapy clinic and teach within the Master of Physical Therapy program at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver Canada.
Resources
Owen, P., et al. (2023). Infographic. Primary surgery versus primary rehabilitation for treating anterior cruciate ligament injuries. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 57(13), 882-883.
Saueressig, T., et al. (2022). Primary surgery versus primary rehabilitation for treating anterior cruciate ligament injuries: a living systematic review and meta-analysis. British journal of sports medicine, 56(21), 1241-1251.
Beard, D. J., et al. & ACL SNNAP Study Group. (2024). Comparison of surgical or non-surgical management for non-acute anterior cruciate ligament injury: the ACL SNNAP RCT. Health technology assessment (Winchester, England), 28(27), 1.
Culvenor, A. G.,et al. (2022). Rehabilitation after anterior cruciate ligament and meniscal injuries: a best-evidence synthesis of systematic reviews for the OPTIKNEE consensus. British journal of sports medicine, 56(24), 1445-1453.
Beard, D. J., et al. (2022). Rehabilitation versus surgical reconstruction for non-acute anterior cruciate ligament injury (ACL SNNAP): a pragmatic randomised controlled trial. The Lancet, 400(10352), 605-615.
Frobell, R. B., et al. (2010). A randomized trial of treatment for acute anterior cruciate ligament tears. New England Journal of Medicine, 363(4), 331-342.
Reijman, M., et al. (2021). Early surgical reconstruction versus rehabilitation with elective delayed reconstruction for patients with anterior cruciate ligament rupture: COMPARE randomised controlled trial. Bmj, 372.
Whittaker, J. L., et al. (2022). OPTIKNEE 2022: consensus recommendations to optimise knee health after traumatic knee injury to prevent osteoarthritis. British journal of sports medicine, 56(24), 1393-1405.
Kamper, S. J. (2019). Interpreting outcomes 2—statistical significance and clinical meaningfulness: linking evidence to practice. journal of orthopaedic & sports physical therapy, 49(7), 559-560.
Kamper, S. J. (2019). Interpreting outcomes 3—clinical meaningfulness: linking evidence to practice. journal of orthopaedic & sports physical therapy, 49(9), 677-678.
Social media connection
X @LKTphysio
Instagram @lint.fit
Paincast is dedicated to bringing together researchers, clinicians, and students to discuss topics related to pain and physiotherapy. The primary purpose is to facilitate knowledge translation and critical thinking. Some episodes posit themselves as more educational than others, and some more opinionated than others. The listener is encouraged to listen critically. While there is an effort to incorporate research evidence, and the topics are always researched by the host, we recognize there is room for improvement and there is expertise in the community. As such, we invite constructive critique and that you inform us of any inadvertent errors, so that we may correct them. You may submit your feedback through this form: https://forms.gle/UFfbUHBh8uKwSKgS8
Paincast
Paincast is the official podcast of the Pain Science Division at the Canadian Physiotherapy Association. Paincast aims to bring together researchers, clinicians, and students to facilitate discussions about pain and physiotherapy. Please contact paincast.psd@gmail.com if you have any feedback, concerns, or if you’d like to be a guest on the podcast. For older episodes, please visit https://physiotherapy.ca/divisions/pain-science/paincasts/