
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It is currently widely accepted among clinicians that chronic tendinopathy is caused by a degenerative process devoid of inflammation. The evidence for non-inflammatory degenerative processes alone as the cause of tendinopathy is surprisingly weak.
In this podcast, Jon Rees a rheumatologist at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust tells Jill Cook why the role of inflammation offers potential opportunities in treating chronic tendinopathies and should be explored further.
Read the article online: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/2013/03/08/bjsports-2012-091957.full
By BMJ Group4.4
4646 ratings
It is currently widely accepted among clinicians that chronic tendinopathy is caused by a degenerative process devoid of inflammation. The evidence for non-inflammatory degenerative processes alone as the cause of tendinopathy is surprisingly weak.
In this podcast, Jon Rees a rheumatologist at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust tells Jill Cook why the role of inflammation offers potential opportunities in treating chronic tendinopathies and should be explored further.
Read the article online: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/2013/03/08/bjsports-2012-091957.full

43,547 Listeners

7,810 Listeners

2,123 Listeners

211 Listeners

42 Listeners

370 Listeners

747 Listeners

4 Listeners

8 Listeners

5 Listeners

3 Listeners

1 Listeners

3 Listeners

9 Listeners

39 Listeners

14 Listeners

1 Listeners

54 Listeners

0 Listeners

6 Listeners

15 Listeners

72 Listeners

3 Listeners

29 Listeners

8,844 Listeners

23 Listeners

254 Listeners

193 Listeners

91 Listeners

40 Listeners

29,338 Listeners

2,177 Listeners

0 Listeners

1,846 Listeners