CIS Flashcards
motile force lymph
diaphragm (bellows) and skeletal muscle motion
lymphatic treatment order
- Thoracic inlet
2. Work distal to proximal
lungs drain to
the right
treat abdominal viscera for mesenteric lifts:
proximal to distal
treat ab viscera - colonic lifts
distal to proximal (this includes colonic milking
contraindications to ab viscera treatments?
perforation
ischemia
SBO is ok if determined to be non-surgical
friable colonic tissue should avoid milking but careful lifts ok
pain with technique
gall bladder problems. Type II somatic dysfunction where?
T5
anterior chapman’s point for gallbladder?
Right 6th ICS
chapmans: anterior vs posterior
anterior- diagnosis
posterior- treatment
but don’t worry about it.
root of mesentery runs
oblique line from left L2 to right S3
right sacro-iliac joint
the sigmoid mesocolonic attachment arises on the medial aspect of the left psoas muscle, curves over the iliac vesels and ends lying over the 3rd sacral segment.
cancer patiens with back pain
98% have underlying mets
most common peds cancer
leukemia
acanthosis nigricans can be a sign of
GI cancer
dermatomyositis and polymyositis have a progressive proximal muscular weakness and is highly associated with
lung cancers
chapman’s Point
gangliform contraction that may block lymphatic drainage, causing inflammation in distal tissues
Small, smooth, firm, discrete nodules in fixed anatomic location
often tender, but DON’T RADIATE
CAP strep pneumo- what ABX?
Macrolide– azithromycine, clarithromycin, erythromicin
doxy
with comorbidities- fluoroquinolones
beta lactams
set up an FPR for T8 flexed and translated to the left?
go to neutral (flatten the curve)
compress from shoulders
go to ease and wait 3-5 seconds (rotate and sidebend right)
carotid sheath encloses what structures?
jugular vein, common carotid artery, CN X, deep cervical lymph nodes
cardiac chapman’s point?
2nd intercostal space near the sternum- myocardium
T8 ERSL. How to treat with still?
put them in posn of ease, compress through the dysfunctional tissues, then move into flexion, rotation, and sidebending to the right
through the restrictive barrier.
This is a direct technique, which is how it’s different from FPR
L5 rules
ONLY APPLY if a SACRAL TORSION is present (axis)
ROSSA- rotates opposite, sidebends same side as axis
- L5 sidebent, sacral oblique axis is engaged on the SAME side as the sidebending.
2- when L5 rotates, sacrum rotates opposite
physiologic sacrum will have neutral L5; pathologic sacrum will have flexed L5
If sacrum is extended, L5 is flexed
standing vs seated flexion
standing- innominate
seated- sacrum
positive seated flexion, right sulcus is deep, right ILA is posterior. sacral dx?
R unilateral flexion
planes
coronal- clown
sagittal- saddle
transverse - separates top from bottom