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Purpose . To consolidate and expand your knowledge and skills of Manual Therapy. Objectives. Canadian Manual Therapy history Subjective examination Objective examination –lumbar, pelvis , hip,cervical , TMJ,
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Purpose To consolidate and expand your knowledge and skills of Manual Therapy
Objectives • Canadian Manual Therapy history • Subjective examination • Objective examination –lumbar, pelvis , hip,cervical , TMJ, • Treatment approaches including mobilizations, exercise, education and manipulation
Definition of Manual Therapy A comprehensive system of diagnosing and treating neuromusculoskeletal disorders involving specific skills, including assessment, mobilization, manipulation and education, in conjunction with exercise, to restore optimal motion, function and/or reduce pain. MTSC Vision 2001
Clinical Reasoning Hear See Feel Biomedical Knowledge Clinical Knowledge – knowledge, skill experience
Clinical Reasoning • The process of drawing conclusions based upon known or presumed facts • Development of an accurate diagnosis and prognosis
Hypothesis Generation • Data collection • Interpretation of information • Cross-examination • Contributing factors • Hypothesis modification • Treatment • Reassessment • Prognosis
Beginner • Systematic approach • Gather as much information until diagnosis emerges • Check list may be helpful • Takes longer to recognize clinical patterns Level 1 pg 4
Novice • Repertoire of clinical patterns • Abandon checklist • Lack experience to identify all clinical patterns • Often tempted to make assumption
Expert • Need a superior knowledge base from which to generate a high quality hypothesis • Clinical patterns
What qualities define a clinical specialist? content knowledge practical knowledge technical skill application of general principles or theory critical analysis Mildonis et al, JOSPT, 1999
Expert • Intense focused connection with patient, verbal and non • Use clinical patterns and inductive reasoning to develop a diagnosis • Comfortable with the uncertainty of not knowing the immediate diagnosis
Expert • Management becomes more efficient and effective • “ seeing” the clinical pattern • Allows PT to focus on 1 or 2 primary issues • Recognize what features are most significant and in need of attention
Former Paradigm • Unsystematic observations OK • Knowing basics OK • Common sense enough • Clinical experience enough
The Danger of Relying on Experience Alone “making the same mistakes with increasing confidence over an impressive number of years.” M. O’Donnell. A Skeptic's Medical Dictionary Is that 25-years of experience or 1-year of experience repeated 25-times?
New Paradigm • Intuition- misleading • Rationale for treatment and discharge may be incorrect • Understanding rules to interpret the literature is necessary
Why Evidence- based Practice • 30,000 biomedical journal articles per year with a 7% increase each year • There are over 3,200 physiotherapy articles published per year • To keep up to date, a clinician would need to read approximately 10 articles per day • If 2 articles are read per day, after 1 year a clinician would be approximately 4 years behind
Consequences of Not Keeping Up-To-Date • Lag in optimal practice behaviors • Clinical practice is opinion driven • Patients may be denied best care • Patients may selectively know more than clinicians
Evidence-based Practice “the integration of best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values” D.L. Sackett et al, 2000
Definition of Manual Therapy A comprehensive system of diagnosing and treating neuromusculoskeletal disorders involving specific skills, including assessment, mobilization, manipulation and education, in conjunction with exercise, to restore optimal motion, function and/or reduce pain. MTSC Vision 2001
Aim of Manual Therapy • Pain relief • Restoration or improvement of function • Restoration of an acceptable predetermined level of physical lifestyle • Prevention of further episodes • Education, communication , documentation
Homeostasis Restoration of normal repair processes facilitated and pain is alleviated
Diagnosis • Is physical treatment a treatment of choice? • If so, what type of physical treatment should be used? • Manual Therapy must be based upon diagnostics rather than signs and symptoms
Scope of Manual Therapy • Mobilization, Traction, Manipulation • Muscle Energy, PNF • Dynamic soft tissue release • Muscles rebalancing, muscles co-contraction • Stabilization, Exercise Therapy • Functional Rehabilitation
Cyriax • Principle – “ search for physical signs , positive and negative and their interpretation” • Selective tissue tension testing • Contractile • Inert
Subjective Assessment Why is it SO Important?
List the negatives of a history from the patient’s point of view List the positives from a patient’s point of view What are your goals when starting a subjective assessment?
The Art of Listening “ We are in danger of overlooking the simple psychological potency of giving patients a good hearing, listening attentively, giving them the benefit of the doubt , handling them with confidence and skill and simply striving to do our shop floor clinical work with effectiveness. Failure to properly examine the patient may lead to unnecessary mischief.” ……..Grieve 1991
Listening is an ART: • That is where it differs from hearing • Hearing is passive • Listening is active • Hearing is involuntary • Listening demands attention • Hearing is natural • Listening is an acquired discipline ( the Age ’82)
Use our communication skill to help patient understand…… • What manual therapy is all about • What it can do for them • What the treatment will entail • What are their options • What part they play in recovery and treatment • What part they play to maintain their acquired healthy state A Moore + G Jull Manual Therapy 2001
Assessment • Subjective History • Objective - observation - active – passive- resisted • Interpretation of Evaluation • Capsular pattern • Resisted findings
Treatment • Transverse frictions • Stretch • Manipulation • Injections
Lower Quadrant Scan • Rule out serious pathology • Isolate area of dysfunction • Identify others areas in the body that may need attention
Observation • Postural type • Gross deformities • Gait
Clearing Tests • Squat • Twist • Walk (on heels and toes)
Active movements – OP if not painful • Lumbar Spine flexion, extension, side flexion and rotation • Hip flexion, extension, rotation, abduction • Knee flexion, extension • Ankle dorsi, plantar, inversion, eversion
Myotomes • L1-2 hip flexion • L3 Knee extension • L4 Ankle dorsiflexion • L5 Gt toe extension, hip abduction • S1 PF ankle, eversion , knee flexion • S2 Hip extension
Dermatomes • Light touch – cotton ball, kleenex • Sharp- dull – acupuncture needle, paper clip
S2 L5 L4 Sensory Testing Lower Quadrant Hoppenfeld’76
Reflexes Achilles - S1 Quad - L3 Hamstrings - L5
Pathological Reflexes Neg Clonus Pos Babinski
Dural • SLR • Slump • Prone knee bend
Articular • SI stress test – anterior , posterior • PA’s lumbar spine – spring tests
Kaltenborn • Subjective • Objective • Cyriax • Plus accessory movements
Treatment • Hyper • Hypo • Restore normal glide • Arthrokinematics – decrease capsular tightness
Maitland Concept Open mind Mental agility Mental discipline Logical Methodical process of assessing cause and effect Link with
Assessment Subjective Provides guidelines Pain patterns Objective Priorize assessment Active, passive, pain, resistance Accessory movements Salient signs Quadrants Movement diagrams
Treatment • Interpretation of evaluation • Grading • Techniques • Reassess
Maitland “ When trying to improve the quality of the sick joint’s movement by a passive movement technique it is necessary to put your mind inside the joint area and involve yourself emotionally with what the joint is trying to tell you”