33- Equinis Flashcards
what is equinus
the inability of being able to produce 10 degrees of dorsiflexion during normal gait (in the closed chain)
do most symptom free ankle joints reach 10 degrees of dorsiflex during gate
no
what are the 3 rocker motions that allow humans to go thru stance phase correctly
- R1 (heel rocker)
- R2 (ankle rocker)
- R3 (forefoot rocker)
what rocker is most likely to be insufficient
R2 (ankle rocker)
sometimes r3
What is failure of R3 caused by
functional hallux limits or hallux rigidus
3 major causes of non neurologically induced equinus
- Bony block bw talus and distal tibia
- Compensatory loss of ankle jt range of motion fr some other condition such as pet cavus (pseudoequinus)
- Muscular tightness/contracture
what are the 3 causes of mm tightness equines
- soleus
- soleus + gastroc
- Gastroc
how to differentiate gastric/ soleus tightness
full extension of knee tests gastroc tightness
at 20 degrees knee flex u can iso soleus
what is the direct and indirect tension of the gastroc cause
direct- can produce achilles tendonosis +/or haglund deformity
indirect- force also transferred to calcaneus causing a bending moment thru the distal jts of the foot slowly causing their premature degenerative
increasing tension in triceps Surrei cause what in the foot
puts more ground rxn force at the toes and increases moment of foot q
-pushes foot into pronation
what can gastroc tightness also cause in the rockers off the foot
mid tarsal jt will experiment a moment so that it will actually dorsiflex (R4)- called rocker foot
what will a tight gastroc cause for the femur
limits femur coming forward
`
so if r2 or failure of r3 occurs what happens
the mid tarsal jt or the knee will have to be sacrificed
r2 failure tends to cause r3 failure
difference in soleus tightness
similar consequences to gastroc tightness by since it doesn’t cross knee, knee extension will not put any further strain on achilles tendon
is their a link bw flat foot and equinues
potentially