Examination of Postural and Muscle Tone - Infant Flashcards
1
Q
muscle tone
A
- resistance of m. to passive elongation or stretch when an individual attempts to maintain m. relaxation or degree of residual contraction in resting m. (O’Sullivan)
- readiness of m. to respond to gravity (Movement Assessment of Infants)
2
Q
palpation/consistency (O’S)
A
- assess consistency, firmness, and turgor
- hypotonic - soft and flabby
- hypertonic - taut and hard
3
Q
palpation/consistency (MAI)
A
- assess in supine and prone
- gastroc/soleus, triceps, biceps
- 1 = m. feels soft; little resistance to pressure
- 3 = m. feels sturdy, but some yielding to pressure (normal)
- 5 = m. feels hard like a rock; little yielding to pressure
4
Q
extensibility (O’S)
A
- assess via repeated passive motion, increasing speed of motion
- 0 = no response
- 1+ = decreased response (hypotonia)
- 2+ = normal response
- 3+ = exaggerated response (mild to mod. hypertonia)
- 4+ = sustained response (severe hypotonia)
5
Q
extensibility (MAI)
A
- in supine assess hid ADD, ankle PF, shoulder EXT
- 1 = no resistance
- 2 = slight resistance throughout ROM
- 3 = normal graded resistance through ROM
- 4 = greater than normal resistance, full ROM only during slow movement
- 5 = strong resistance, prevents movement through full ROM
6
Q
passivity (O’S)
A
pendulum test: position infant in supine with knee flexed over edge of table, fully extend knee, let go and observe amount and duration of swing
7
Q
passivity (MAI)
A
- supine or sitting
- hold either LE or UE just proximal to the wrist or ankle joint and shake distal part of extremity quickly
- 1 = extremity does not tighten at wrist or ankle
- 2 = hand or foot flap for many excursions, but eventually tightens
- 3 = extremity tightens at wrist or ankle after a few excursions
- 4 = extremity stiff initially, but some flapping occurs
- 5 = extremity is stiff at wrist or ankle, hand or foot does not flap
8
Q
postural tone
A
- pattern of m. tension that exists throughout the body affecting m. groups OR
- m. activation against supporting surface
9
Q
signs of hypotonia
A
- excessive collapse of body segments
- loss of postural alignments
- inability to sustain a posture against gravity
10
Q
signs of hypertonia
A
- distal fixing (toe curling, hands fisting)
- difficulty moving a body segment through a range
- asymmetric posture
11
Q
grading of postural tone (MAI)
A
- supine or prone
- 1 = hypotonia: child lies flat against support surface, unable to maintain antigravity posture, movement infrequent and weak
- 3 = normal: child shows variety of resting positions, moves away from surface, assumes age appropriate antigravity postures and easily maintains them, frequent movements with varied combinations of extremities
- 5 = hypertonia: child is pulled strongly toward an extended and asymmetrical posture, pulled away from antigravity postures, infrequent and slow and stiff movement