Tissue Tolerance
Cross-source consensus on Tissue Tolerance from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Other
Highlighted claims
- Tissue tolerance is the ability of a tissue or tissue system to withstand a given load, stress, or activity exposure. — Femoral Version, Squat Stance, and Tissue Tolerance
- Tolerance changes with exposure, increasing with appropriate repeated exposure and decreasing after long periods without exposure. — Femoral Version, Squat Stance, and Tissue Tolerance
- Symptoms can appear when activity stress exceeds the current tolerance of muscles, joints, nerves, or other tissues. — Femoral Version, Squat Stance, and Tissue Tolerance
- Nerves are treated as adaptive tissues that move, stretch, slide, glide, and can be compressed during normal motion. — Femoral Version, Squat Stance, and Tissue Tolerance
- Physical activity after a long break can cause soreness, knee pain, or other discomfort when tissues are asked to absorb too much too soon. — Femoral Version, Squat Stance, and Tissue Tolerance
- Joints are also described as adapting to mechanical stress through cycles of compression and relaxation within the joint capsule. — Femoral Version, Squat Stance, and Tissue Tolerance
- The practical response to nerve sensitivity is load adjustment and progression rather than stopping all activity. — Femoral Version, Squat Stance, and Tissue Tolerance