Active Individuals
Across
- 3. Diseases that affect the heart and lungs.
- 5. Diseases such as Type 1 Diabetes or Type 2 Diabetes.
- 7. Medical care for children who have not hit puberty.
- 8. A special population of athlete who receives care after giving birth.
- 11. When an athlete trains to hard, does not rest, and gets hurt.
- 14. Fitness for fun.
- 17. Keeping an injury from happening in the first place.
- 18. Populations with unique physiological challenges.
- 19. Youth, high school, collegiate, and professional athletes.
- 22. Conditions like mono that affect the athlete's whole body.
- 23. X-Rays, MRIs, ultrasounds, and CT scans.
- 24. An injury that comes on suddenly.
- 25. Care that is different from what others would receive empowering them to participate.
Down
- 1. What is the scope of active people served in sports medicine?
- 2. Older athletes who train and compete in their sport.
- 4. Injuries affecting the skeleton or the muscles.
- 6. Details including how an injury occurred.
- 9. People in their teenage or young adult years.
- 10. People who are prone to injury because they overdo it on the weekend.
- 12. Conditions such as asthma and diabetes that might
- 13. A traumatic brain injury often caused by sports.
- 15. Older adults who maintain their physical fitness.
- 16. Care is tailored for athletes in different stages of life.
- 20. Physical or mental impairments affecting an active lifestyle.
- 21. The identification, assessment, and management of sports injuries.
- 24. The degree to which an athlete or active person can perform a physical skill.