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  2. Ligamentous laxity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligamentous_laxity

    Ligamentous laxity or ligament laxity can appear in a variety of ways and levels of severity. In most people, ligaments (which are the tissues that connect bones to each other) are naturally tight in such a way that the joints are restricted to 'normal' ranges of motion. This creates normal joint stability.

  3. Davis's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davis's_Law

    "Ligaments, or any soft tissue, when put under even a moderate degree of tension, if that tension is unremitting, will elongate by the addition of new material; on the contrary, when ligaments, or rather soft tissues, remain uninterruptedly in a loose or lax state, they will gradually shorten, as the effete material is removed, until they come ...

  4. Sprained ankle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprained_ankle

    A grade 1 sprain is defined as mild damage to a ligament or ligaments without instability of the affected joint. A grade 2 sprain is considered a partial tear to the ligament, in which it is stretched to the point that it becomes loose. A grade 3 sprain is a complete tear of a ligament, causing instability in the affected joint. [3]

  5. How to Tighten Your Loose Skin After Weight Loss - AOL

    www.aol.com/tighten-loose-skin-weight-loss...

    There’s no magic skin tightening cream or exercise that’s going to really noticeably tighten loose skin after weight loss on its own. That’s what makes excess skin a difficult problem for ...

  6. Muscle contracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscle_contracture

    Adhesions bind two separate tissues or organs together with fibrotic scar tissue, joining muscle fibres to facia, ligaments, or joints. Fibrosis occurs within the same organ, the fibrotic scar tissue within skeletal muscle known as myofibrosis, limits muscle contractibility and stiffens muscles.

  7. Joint locking (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_locking_(medicine)

    True locking happens when the intra-articular structure (e.g. ligaments) [1] is damaged, or a loose body is present inside the joint, or there is a meniscal tear. The knee can be unlocked by rotating the leg and full movement can be restored. A person may feel the presence of a loose body in the suprapatellar region or lateral and medial gutter.

  8. Neck-tongue syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neck-tongue_syndrome

    [1] [7] [8] [9] However, it is thought that the majority of NTS cases are due to genetics, in which loose ligaments cause temporary misalignments with the atlanto-axial joint while the neck is rotating. [3] Subsequently, numbness of the tongue is due to either subluxation of the atlanto-axial joint or restriction of the second cervical nerve. [2]

  9. Shoulder surgery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoulder_surgery

    repair of the capsular ligaments (Bankart repair) repair of the biceps long head anchor or SLAP lesion; tightening of the shoulder capsule (capsulorrhaphy or capsular shift) open repairs (for dislocations with fractures, etc.) biceps tenodesis surgery

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