Book stuff Flashcards
ability to move from one posture to another; BOS and/ or COM is changing
transitional mobility
ability to maintain postural stability and orientation with the COMover the BOS with the body not in motion; BOS is fixed
static postural control (stability, static equilibrium or static balance)
ability to maintain postural stability and orientation with the COM over the BOS while parts of the body are in motion; BOS is fixed
Dynamic postural control (controlled mobility, dynamic equilibrium, or dynamic balance
Ability to consistently perform coordinated UE and LE movement sequences for the purposes of investigation and interaction with the physical and social environment; during locomotion, COM is in motion and BOS is changing
skill
What is impaired? failure to initiate or sustain movements through the range; poorly controlled movements during transfers
transitional mobility
What is impaired? failure to maintain a steady posture; excessive postural sway; wide BOS; high guard arm position or handhold; loss of balance (COM exceeds BOS)
static postural control
What is impaired? failure to maintain or control posture during dynamic trunk or extremity movements; loss of balance
dynamic postural control
what is impaired? poorly coordinated movements; can of precision, control, consistency and economy of effort
Skill
What are abnormal synergies highly predictable and characteristic of?
middle stages of recovery from stroke
functionally linked Mts that are constrained by the CNS to act cooperatively to produce an intended motor action; used to simplify control, reduce or constrain degrees of freedom and initiate coordinated patterns of movement
synergies
umbilical deviation in superior/ lateral direction indicates integrity of which spinal segments?
T8 to T9
- stim to each quadrant of abdomens produces movement towards the stimulus
umbilical deviation in inferior/ lateral direction indicates integrity of which spinal segments?
T10 to T12
What is injured with hypotonia
- anterior horn cell
- peripheral nerve
- cerebellar lesion (along with asthenia aka weakness)
What is dystonia a result of?
- CNS lesion in basal ganglia and can be inherited (primary idiopathic)
- associated with neurodegenerative disorders (Wilson’s disease, due to excessive l-dopa therapy)
- metabolic disorders (amino acid or lipid disorders)
Rigidity is the result of excessive supra spinal drive acting on what?
alpha motor neurons
- spinal reflex mechanisms are typically normal