12 results match your criteria: "Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College. Tel: 416-482-2340[Affiliation]"

JCCA Special Issue December 2016 -Sports Chiropractic.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2016

Associate Professor, Faculty of Clinical Education, Research and Graduate Studies, Sports Sciences Residency program coordinator, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, ON, M2H 3J1, Canada, Tel: 416-482-2340, 416-546-7375, , email:

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JCCA Sports Chiropractic 6th Issue.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2014

Associate Professor, Faculty of Clinical Education, Research and Graduate Studies, Sports Sciences Residency program coordinator Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College (CMCC), 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, ON, M2H 3J1, Canada, Tel: 416-482-2340, 416-385-0110, , 416-385-0541, email:

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A profile of the Youth Olympic Taekwondo Athlete.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2013

Associate Professor, Faculty of Clinical Education, Research and Graduate Studies, Sports Sciences Residency program coordinator, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, ON, M2H 3J1., Tel: 416-482-2340, 416-385-0110.

Our study aims to identify trends in anthropomorphic attributes and competitive strategies of successful (medalists) versus non medalist young Olympic Taekwondo competitors by gender in terms of body mass, body-mass index (BMI) and fighting technique at the Youth Olympic Games 2010. Results were then compared to adult Taekwondo Olympic athletes in 2000, 2004 and 2008. Data on 96 Taekwondo athletes were obtained from the official Youth Olympic website.

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Sports chiropractic in Canada.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2012

Associate Professor, Faculty of Clinical Education, Research and Graduate Studies, Sports Sciences Residency program coordinator, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College (CMCC), 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, ON, M2H 3J1, Canada, Tel: 416-482-2340, 416-385-0110, , 416-385-0541, email:

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Weight cycling in adolescent Taekwondo athletes.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2011

Associate Professor, Faculty of Clinical Education, Research and Graduate Studies, Sports Sciences Residency program coordinator, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College. Tel: 416-482-2340, 416-385-0110; e-mail:

Background: Weight reduction cycles are used by weight classed athletes in Taekwondo to make a weight category. Tension, dizziness, headaches, and confusion have been associated with rapid weight loss (RWL). There is a lack of research in weight cycling and its benefits among Taekwondo athletes.

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Heel pain due to psoriatic arthritis in a 50 year old recreational male athlete: case report.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2011

Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, Ontario M2H 3J1. Tel: 416-482-2340; Email:

Heel pain is a common presentation in a sports injury practice, with a list of common differentials including achilles tendinopathy and retrocalcaneal bursitis. However, seronegative arthritis can also cause enthesopathies that produce heel pain and should be considered in a differential diagnosis list. In this case, a 50 year old recreationally active male presented with non-traumatic insidious heel pain and without history of any skin conditions or any other symptoms of seronegative spondyloarthritis.

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Treatment of post-traumatic myositis ossificans of the anterior thigh with extracorporeal shock wave therapy.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2011

Assistant Professor, Division of Clinical Education, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, Ontario, M2H 3J1. Tel: 416-482-2340.

Objective: This case study demonstrates the effectiveness of a novel approach to the treatment of post-traumatic myositis ossificans with extracorporeal shockwave therapy in an elite athlete.

Clinical Features: A 20 year-old male semi-professional rugby player presented with progressive pain and loss of range of motion after sustaining a severe, right quadriceps contusion nine weeks earlier. The differential diagnosis of myositis ossificans was suspected and confirmed on radiographic examination.

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Statin induced myopathy presenting as mechanical musculoskeletal pain observed in two chiropractic patients.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

March 2010

Associate Professor, Director of Clinical Education and Patient Care, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, Ontario, M2H 3J1. Tel: 416-482-2340.

Lipid lowering drugs, such as statins, are commonly used to treat approximately 10 million Canadians affected by hypercholesterolemia. The most commonly experienced side-effect of statin medication is muscle pain. Statin induced myopathy consists of a spectrum of myopathic disorders ranging from mild myalgia to fatal rhabdomyolysis.

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This report documents retrospectively a case of Posterior Interosseous Neuropathy (PIN) occurring in an elite baseball pitcher experiencing a deep ache in the radial aspect of the forearm and altered sensation in the dorsum of the hand on the throwing arm during his pitching motion. The initial clinical goal was to control for inflammation to the nerve and muscle with active rest, microcurrent therapy, low-level laser therapy, and cessation of throwing. Minimizing mechanosensitivity at the common extensor region of the right elbow and PIN, was achieved by employing the use of myofascial release and augmented soft tissue mobilization techniques.

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Golf-related stress fractures: a structured review of the literature.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2009

Sports Sciences Resident Year II, Graduate Education and Research Programs, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M2H 3J1. Tel: +1 416 482 2340. Email:

Background: Stress fractures are troublesome injuries. Sites of occurrence are activity-related and specific anatomical sites are endemic to certain sports. Little is known about stress fracture patterns in golf.

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Conservative management of symptomatic Carpal Bossing in an elite hockey player: a case report.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2009

Sports Sciences Resident, Graduate Education and Research Programs, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M2H 3J1. Tel: +1 416 482 2340.

Objective: To present the characteristics and create awareness of symptomatic carpal bossing and discuss potential etiologies and the role of conservative management through the presentation of an athlete with traumatic onset of symptomatic carpal bossing.

Clinical Features: This case report outlines the presentation and conservative management of an elite eighteen year old hockey player with symptomatic carpal bossing after a traumatic on ice collision. Carpal bossing is a bony, dorsal prominence in the quadrangular joint of the wrist that is inconsistently symptomatic.

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Sports chiropractic in Canada.

J Can Chiropr Assoc

December 2009

Associate Professor, Faculty of Clinical Education, Sports Sciences Residency program coordinator, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College (CMCC), 6100 Leslie Street, Toronto, ON, M2H 3J1, Canada. Tel: 416-482-2340, 416-385-0110, , 416-385-0541, email:

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