Introduction to RTP - Back in Action
Return to Play (RTP) is a critical, multifactorial process guiding an athlete's safe re-entry to sport post-injury. It's not just about time passed, but a comprehensive assessment.
Key Goals:
- Safe Return: Prioritize athlete's long-term health.
- Minimize Re-injury Risk: Prevent recurrence or new injuries.
- Optimize Performance: Aim for pre-injury levels or better.
Core Considerations for RTP Decision:
- Biological Healing: Sufficient tissue repair.
- Functional Capacity: Adequate strength, ROM, agility, sport-specific skills.
- Psychological Readiness: Confidence, motivation, addressing kinesiophobia.
- External Factors: Sport type, competition level, external pressures.
ā The Biopsychosocial model is paramount in RTP, acknowledging that pain & function are influenced by biological, psychological, & social factors.
Shared Decision-Making: A collaborative approach involving the athlete, medical team (doctor, physio), and coaches is essential.

Assessing Readiness - The Green Light
"Green Light" signifies an athlete has met objective criteria for a safe return to sport (RTS), minimizing re-injury risk. Assessment is multi-faceted:
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Clinical Milestones (Prerequisites):
- Pain: Visual Analog Scale (VAS) < 2/10 during sport-specific activities.
- Swelling: Absent or minimal effusion post-activity.
- Range of Motion (ROM): Symmetric, within 90-95% of the contralateral limb.
- Strength: Isokinetic testing or handheld dynamometry showing > 90% Limb Symmetry Index (LSI).
- Proprioception: Adequate, assessed by balance and coordination tests.
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Functional Performance Tests (FPTs):
- Evaluate dynamic stability, power, and neuromuscular control under stress.
- Target: LSI > 90% for most tests.
- LSI Formula: $LSI = (\frac{\text{Value for Injured Limb}}{\text{Value for Uninjured Limb}}) \times 100%$
- Common FPTs: Hop tests (single leg hop for distance, triple hop, crossover hop), agility T-test, Y-balance test.

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Psychological Readiness:
- Often overlooked but vital. Assesses confidence, fear of re-injury, and motivation.
- Standardized Tools: Anterior Cruciate Ligament-Return to Sport after Injury (ACL-RSI) scale, Injury-Psychological Readiness to Return to Sport (I-PRRS).
ā Achieving >90% on Limb Symmetry Index (LSI) for key strength and functional tests is a widely accepted benchmark before progressing to unrestricted sport.
Phased Return - Stepping Up
Structured, criteria-based progression for athletes post-injury/surgery, ensuring safety and optimal performance. Typically 4 phases.
- Phase 1: Recovery
- Focus: Pain/swelling control, protect healing, early pain-free motion.
- Progression: Minimal pain/swelling, good ROM.
- Phase 2: Restoration
- Focus: Regain strength, endurance, flexibility, balance, neuromuscular control.
- Progression: Achieve ~70-80% of pre-injury strength/function.
- Phase 3: Sport-Specific Activity
- Focus: Gradual reintroduction to sport-specific drills, ā load/intensity.
- Progression: Confidence, no adverse reaction to drills.
- Phase 4: Full Unrestricted Return
- Focus: Full training, practice, and competition.
- Criteria: Successful completion of sport-specific functional tests.
ā Psychological readiness (e.g., fear of re-injury) is a critical factor for successful return to play.

HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Pain-free full Range of Motion (ROM) and strength >90% of contralateral limb are key.
- Successful sport-specific functional testing without pain or instability is mandatory.
- Psychological readiness, including confidence and no kinesiophobia, is vital for return.
- A phased, gradual progression of training intensity and volume prevents re-injury.
- Decisions based on objective criteria, not just time elapsed, are crucial for safe Return to Play (RTP).
- Shared decision-making (athlete, physician, coach) optimizes successful outcomes.
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