Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDonavan Gundry Modified over 9 years ago
2
Be able to document accurately and appropriately in scientific language.
3
Use the patient’s own words Remember to include the functional limitation
4
Type of pain e.g. burning or stabbing Intensity out of 10 e.g. 5 / 10 Intermittent or constant Do the different areas indicated on the body chart bear relevance to each other?
5
Area 1 Burning pain 6 / 10 Constant pain
6
High lumbar flexion ¾ range 8 / 10 Area 1 * (indicate comparable sign with an asterisk) Rotation L √ (clear free active) Rotation R √√ (clear with overpressure) Low lumbar extension 6 / 10 OP Area 1
7
L = R (sensation is the same on both sides) Sensation: L ‹ R (L4) – sensation is less on the left side L4 dermatome Motor: R › L (L5) – could break the movement on the left side L5 miotome Reflexes: L = R (both the same) or L < R L3,4 (the reflex on the left side was weaker)
8
In: SLR (R) Did: 60° DF + In: ULTT 2a (L) Did: Med rot + In: mid-slump L = R
9
Thoracic spine: Flex √√ Low rotation √√ Sacro-iliac joint: Compression Grade II 3 / 10 Area 3 1 st rib longitudinal caudad Grade 1 6 / 10 Area 1
10
Muscle strength according to Oxford scale Muscle length – according to ranges (0 – 60°)
11
Muscles must be given where muscle spasm occurs or where trigger points occur. e.g. m quadriceps
12
↓Unilat ↓ (right) Unilat ↓ (left) →← L1Gr I 3 / 10 √√√√ L2√√Gr II 6 / 10 Gr III- 4 / 10 Gr I 1 / 10 L3 √Gr IV 1 / 10 √√√ L4Gr II 6 / 10 √√√√
13
L2 ↓ Gr II 6 / 10 L4 Unilat ↓ R Gr III- 1 / 10 L5 Unilat ↓ L Gr I 8 / 10
14
Main problems of the patient as indicated on the body chart List everything that tested positive (not the same as normal) Prioritize for the specific patient In other words – what was affected the most Impairment must be determined objectively (what can be tested)
15
Lower lumbar pain due to: painful intervertebral joint movements of L2 – L5 or hypomobile and painful intervertebral facet joint movements of L2 – L5 L muscle spasm of m erector spinae L trigger points in m quadratus lumborum L Referred pain in L leg (L4) due to: ↓ neural mobility of n isciadicus L trigger points in m quadratus lumborum Referred pain down the leg could be due to nerve root irritation but this is a hypothesis and not a problem – can this be tested objectively
16
Decreased mobility of n iskiadicus due to: painful intervertebral facet joint movements of L2 – L4 L muscle spasm of m erector spinae L poor posture Use your clinical reasoning skills to determine the true cause of the problem What came first (chicken – egg senario)
17
Weak abdominal stabilisers due to: painful intervertebral facet joint movements of L2 – L4 L muscle spasm in m erector spinae L poor posture Muscle spasm in m erector spinae due to: painful intervertebral facet joint movements of L2 – L4 L poor posture poor kinetic handling / ergonomics
18
Activity: Can not sit for prolonged periods of time Participation: Can not go to church Can not play bingo
19
Decrease pain in the lumbar area b.m.o: mobilisation of the intervertebral joints / mobilisation of intervertebral facet joints Decrease muscle spasm of m erector spinae L b.m.o. massage, specific soft tissue mobilisation, electrotherapy modalities Decrease triggerpoints in m quadratus lumborum b.m.o triggerpoint therapy, hotpack
20
Increase the mobility of n isciadicus L b.m.o neural mobilisation techniques Activation of abdominal stabilisers b.m.o activation exercises Re-education op posture b.m.o. corrective excercices Home advice
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.