Pelvis Bracket anatomical and physiological concepts of position & movement Assess dysfunction using percussion and palpated sense of ease & bind Five.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Neurodynamic Mobility
Advertisements

Spine Assessment Sports Med 2.
LAB #5 – LOWER EXTREMITY Range of Motion Case Study #2 Tyler Hyvarinen ( ) Kelly Heikkila ( ) Allison Pruys ( )
Musculoskeletal Lecture
Therapeutic Taping for the Lumbar Spine and Pelvis
Wallets are causing men unbearable pain and it has nothing to do with a lack of cash. Physiotherapists say they have seen a surge in the number of men.
Biology 323 Human Anatomy for Biology Majors Lecture 9 Dr. Stuart S. Sumida Pelvis and Perineum Human Walking.
Stretches for the Back Expected Results: Reduce fatigue and improve back comfort. Reverse the Curve: (for back and hips) While standing upright with feet.
REVIEWING THE JOINT MOVEMENTS Name the motion in direction of arrow.
Musculoskeletal Exam The basic screening musculoskeletal examination involves inspection, palpation, and range of motion. Muscular strength is covered.
OMM in the Treatment of Spring Sports Injuries
Back and Pelvis Lab 4 Case Study #2 Group #6. Introduction Case Study Client 30 year old female (4 weeks post natal) Experiences pain in her SI region.
The Human Skeleton.
Neural mobilization Tests
Stretches for the Back Expected Results Reduce fatigue and improve back comfort. Reverse the Curve (for back and hips) While standing upright with feet.
Lifting Lifting process is applied frequently by most of the people, so it’s very necessary to know the loads during lifting, include the weight of the.
Movement Rehabilitation Laboratory #2 Part 3: Exercise Prescription Carlos Leon-Carlyle # Bruce Monkman # Loriana Costanzo # Michael.
Mechanical Spinal Traction Veronica Southard PT MS GCS.
Wallet and Back Pain Area Manufacturing Services.
Myology of the Shoulder
Lecture 6 The Hip.
Basic Theory Anatomy and Physiology. Body Planes of Motion.
Amy Vagedes, OMS V and Sarah Watson, OMS V June 12, 2013 SCREEN, SCAN, SEGMENTAL DEFINITION.
SPINE EXERCISE AND MANIPULATION INTERVENTIONS
Body Mechanics, Turning, Positioning and ROM Teresa, V. Hurley, MSN, RN.
Evaluation of the Cervical Spine
Part (5) Hip External & Internal Rotation
Mechanical Low Back Pain and Muscle Energy Technique
The Spine: Exercise Interventions
Shoulder Special Tests. External Impingement Neer’s Hawkins Kennedy Empty Can Test.
TRAINING 101: ANATOMICAL POSITION, DIRECTIONS AND PLANES OF MOVEMENT MR. MCCORKLE.
DIVERSIFIED I REVIEW Photos Courtesy of: 1 “Spine, Spinal Cord and ANS” Cramer & Darby 2 “Spinal Biomechanics and Specific Adjusting” Otto C. Reinert,
Aquatic Exercise Chapter 9.
Copyright © 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 1: Anatomical Terminology and Body Movements.
Movement. Flexion Bending or decreasing the angle between two bones. Examples: Elbow -‘bicep curl’ the up phase Knee - bending at the knee Trunk - leaning.
Evaluation and Treatment of the Acutely Injured Spine Tara J Manal PT, DPT, OCS, SCS Greg Hicks PT, PhD.
Special Tests for Lumbar, Thoracic, and Sacral Spine
Suspension therapy.
Mobility and Stability for Streamlining Diane Elliot England Programmes.
OMM practical#1.
Introduction  Why do health care providers use medical terminology?  Medical terminology is a specialized language used by health care providers. 
Technique List. Prone-direct method-LVMA (springing) Diagnosis: T1-T3 flexion -they like to flex and don’t want to extend (restriction in extension) 1.Patient.
Rib OMM Scott Klosterman DO.
Range of motion.
Human Bio 11 The Muscular System: Skeletal Muscles.
PLANES OF MOTION DIRECTIONAL MOVEMENT ANATOMICAL TERMS.
Terms and Definitions • Abduction – away from the center (midline) of the body • Active-assistive ROM – The nurse assistant assists the resident in performing.
Sacroiliac Joint.
Presented by HealthLinks
Cervical and lumbar Range of Motion
Short Leg & Scoliosis Laura jabczenski, msii.
MANUAL RESISTANCE FOR UPPER LIMB
Anatomical Terminology
Rib Cage Technique List
Sacroiliac Orthopaedic Tests Orthopedics DX 611
Sports Medicine Mrs. Smojver
Pelvic Tilt & Lower Crossed Syndrome
Body Planes Directional Terms & Joint Motions
Anatomical Model Labeled
Chapter 1: Intro to Anatomy
Thoracic and Lumbar Spine Special Tests and Pathologies
Guidelines for Treatment
Strength training/Maintenance For the Runner
Anatomical Directional Terminology
Joints Joints are the areas where two bones meet. They can be classified into three groups: 1)  Immovable (fibrous) e.g. skull bones (sutures), pelvis.
Evaluation Techniques
What we will cover... Content Objectives
Body Planes & Positions
Introduction to Kinesiology
Presentation transcript:

Pelvis Bracket anatomical and physiological concepts of position & movement Assess dysfunction using percussion and palpated sense of ease & bind Five segmental levels of sacrum Although fused, dysfunction is still expressed segmentally

Sacro-pelvic Examination Standing: Percussion over lumbar spine & sacrum Sidelying: Palpate for ligamentous thickening and changed tension down the line of the S/I joint Feel for bands of muscular tension through gluteal area Repeat on other side Correlate central percussive findings with ligamentous and muscular tension bands

Examination Supine & Sitting Patient lying supine, knees flexed: Rotary scan through pelvis & spine using hand on side of knee to guide rotation Move palpating hand down a segment as the rotation is reversed Confirm findings with patient sitting using trunk to rotate Single leg or both legs One knee flexed check for asymmetry Reverse legs (still palpating the same side)

Then Repeat on Opposite Side - Each side is a separate problem Order of Testing Scanning Standing - percussion Sidelying - soft-tissue test of ligament and muscle Supine scan - one side at a time Analysis of segment Check supine both legs two directions (equivalent to testing rotation sitting) Check sitting and treat if necessary Test each leg separately in both directions Then Repeat on Opposite Side - Each side is a separate problem

Examination Objectives Examiner can scan the sacro-pelvic region using: Percussion, standing; Local pressure palpation of ligamentous and gluteal muscular tissues, sidelying; Spinal rotation supine, introduced from below, and confirm findings in the seated position using motion testing through the shoulders/trunk Examiner can mark location of a major finding and apply motion tests to compare local response to inversion/eversion of each leg singly

Distinguishing sacral from innominate lesions Sacro-pelvic lesions can have the following components: Sacral/axial only Sacral/axial plus lower extremity Lower extremity only Lower extremity problems can be: Unilateral Bilateral Resisting in the same direction Resisting in opposite directions

Functional Treatment of Pelvis Sacral Dysfunction Resistance to spinal axial rotation Compliance throughout inversion/eversion of individual legs No need to involve legs in manipulation Do sitting or sidelying as thorax/lumbar Innominate dysfunction one side (compliant one side only) Treat with patient sidelying and affected leg on top Treat as if the sacrum is made of mobile segments

Disturbed responses in inversion/eversion tests Resistance/Compliance in contra-lateral leg What eases ant/post translation? (test sitting) Ease in post. translation - treat prone (on elbows if necessary) Ease in ant. translation - treat supine (on elbows if necessary) Control ipsilateral and palpate contralateral leg Prone - stand by ipsilateral leg Supine - stand by contralateral leg Two directional cues Both legs compatible (same as) axial rotation Legs both resisting the same movement

Legs compliant with axial movements (legs different from each other) Functional approach Position patient according to findings - elevated hips or shoulders Treat with both legs together Legs over shoulder Legs over operator’s knee Legs over operator’s arm

Ease/bind same in both legs Use an articulatory/muscle energy approach as more practical than a functional technique Resistance to inversion in each leg Patient supine actively inverting both legs against operator’s fist Operator rotates legs towards resistance of axial rotation Resistance to eversion in each leg Patient supine actively everts both legs while operator grips knees between hand and forearm

Summary of pelvic tests Findings Treatment Approach Axial resistance only Treat seated (or supine) Resistance in ipsilateral leg only Treat lying on contralateral side Sacro-pelvic disturbance: One direction compliant Position and then treat limb identified Both limbs compliant with axial rotation Use functional approach through both legs Both limbs resisting same movement Direct technique confronting sacral resistance