@article {Scott536, author = {Alex Scott and Sean Docking and Bill Vicenzino and H{\r a}kan Alfredson and Johannes Zwerver and Kirsten Lundgreen and Oliver Finlay and Noel Pollock and Jill L Cook and Angela Fearon and Craig R Purdam and Alison Hoens and Jonathan D Rees and Thomas J Goetz and Patrik Danielson}, editor = {Al Tunaiji, H and Alvarez Rey, G and Andersson, G and Backman, L and Behzad, H and Bovard, J and Brasher, P and Collins, M and Cornish, J and de Groot Ferrando, A and Valera Garrido, F and Dijkstra, P and Fernandez, TF and Fong, G and Gaida, J and Gillies, J and Grewal, N and Hart, D and Hildebrand, K and Huisman, E and Khan, KM and Langberg, H and Lawson, A and Martinez Silvan, D and Mousavizadeh, R and Minaya Munoz, F and Musson, D and Nassab, P and O{\textquoteright}Brien, E and Robinson, J and Rosengarten, S and Samiric, T and Scase, E and September, A and Sharma, A and Smith, M and Smith, RK and Solomon, D and Sunding, K and Thornton, G and van Schie, H}, title = {Sports and exercise-related tendinopathies: a review of selected topical issues by participants of the second International Scientific Tendinopathy Symposium (ISTS) Vancouver 2012}, volume = {47}, number = {9}, pages = {536--544}, year = {2013}, doi = {10.1136/bjsports-2013-092329}, publisher = {British Association of Sport and Excercise Medicine}, abstract = {In September 2010, the first International Scientific Tendinopathy Symposium (ISTS) was held in Ume{\r a}, Sweden, to establish a forum for original scientific and clinical insights in this growing field of clinical research and practice. The second ISTS was organised by the same group and held in Vancouver, Canada, in September 2012. This symposium was preceded by a round-table meeting in which the participants engaged in focused discussions, resulting in the following overview of tendinopathy clinical and research issues. This paper is a narrative review and summary developed during and after the second ISTS. The document is designed to highlight some key issues raised at ISTS 2012, and to integrate them into a shared conceptual framework. It should be considered an update and a signposting document rather than a comprehensive review. The document is developed for use by physiotherapists, physicians, athletic trainers, massage therapists and other health professionals as well as team coaches and strength/conditioning managers involved in care of sportspeople or workers with tendinopathy.}, issn = {0306-3674}, URL = {https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/9/536}, eprint = {https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/9/536.full.pdf}, journal = {British Journal of Sports Medicine} }