Fundamentals: Hand Therapy Concepts/Treatment Techniques Flashcards

1
Q

Things to consider when treating hand/UE patients (3)

A
  1. What structures are limited
  2. How this limitation effects function
  3. Target treatment to those particular areas
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2
Q

multiarticulate

A

structures that cross multiple joints

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3
Q

Phases of healing (3)

A
  1. inflammation phase
  2. fibroplasia phase
  3. maturation (remodeling) phase
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4
Q

Timeline: inflammation phase

A

immediately following injury and lasts a few days
vasoconstriction followed by vasodilation
migration of WBC to promote phagocytosis

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5
Q

Timeline: fibroplasia phase

A

begins about 4 days after injury and lasts 2-6 weeks

fibroplasts begin formation of scar tissue

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6
Q

Timeline: maturation (remodeling) phase

A

overlaps with fibroplasia and may last years

improved organization of collagen fibers and increase in tissue strength

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7
Q

Deformity position from edema

A

wrist flexion
MP hyperextension
PIP/DIP flexion
thumb adduction

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8
Q

Antideformity (intrinsic-plus) position

A
*recommended after injury unless contraindicated (ex. FTR)
wrist 30 deg extension
MP 90 deg flexion
IP 0 deg extension
MCP 80-90 deg
thumb ABduction with opposition
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9
Q

joint tightness

A

PROM of joint does not change despite repositioning of proximal or distal joints

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10
Q

musculotendinous tightness

A

PROM of joint changes with repositioning of adjacent joints that are crossed by that particular muscle-tendon unit

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11
Q

intrinsic muscle tightness

A

passive PIP/DIP flexion is limited when the MP joint is passively extended or hyperextended

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12
Q

extrinsic extensor muscle tightness

A

PIP/DIP flexion flexion is limited when MP joint is passively flexed

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13
Q

composite motions

A

combined flexion motions of the wrist, MPs, and IPs

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14
Q

extrinsic extensor tightness

A

passive flexion of the fingers (composite) is more limited with wrist flexion than wrist extension

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15
Q

extrinsic flexor tightness

A

passive extension of the fingers (composite) is more limited with wrist extension than wrist flexion

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16
Q

lag

A

the active limitation when PROM is greater than AROM at a joint
*caused by adhesions, disruption of musculotendinous unit, or weakness

17
Q

joint contracture

A

passive limitation of joint motion

*caused by collateral ligament tightness, adhesions, or mechanical block

18
Q

soft end-feel

A

joint has a spongy quality at the end-range

  • favorable
  • indicates a potential for remodeling
  • othoses: static or low-load, long duration type
19
Q

hard end-feel

A

joint has unyielding quality at end-range

*may require serial casting or static progressive orthoses with longer periods of splint wear

20
Q

nociceptive pain

A

caused by structural dysfunction, such as an arthritic wrist

21
Q

neuropathic pain

A

caused by some form of peripheral nerve dysfunction and is typically a sensory pain

22
Q

preventing pain

A

tell clients to avoid pain when exercise

NO PAIN, NO GAIN IS WRONG!!!

23
Q

PROM precautions

A

PROM can injure swollen and inflamed joints and tissues

24
Q

aggressive therapy

A

progressive

take care of joints and fragile tissues but “aggressively” upgrade program and encourage maximum results

25
Q

dyscoordinate co-contraction

A

poor quality movement that can result from co-contraction of antagonist muscles

26
Q

adjunct treatments (5)

A
  1. heat
  2. cold
  3. ultrasound
  4. e-stim
  5. iontophoresis
27
Q

fundamental scar management (3)

A
  1. silicone gel pads
  2. elastomer
  3. massage
28
Q

static orthoses

A

used to immobilize tissues, prevent deformity, prevent contracture of soft tissue, and provide substitution for lost motor function

29
Q

serial static orthoses

A

position the tissue for lengthening and are remolded at intervals

30
Q

static progressive orthoses

A

apply mobilizing force using nonmoving parts such as monofilament, Velcro, or screws

31
Q

dynamic orthoses

A

use moving parts such as rubber bands or spring wires, to apply gentle force

32
Q

exercise principles (2)

A
  1. look up the chain

2. look at the wrist when exercising the fingers

33
Q

blocking exercises

A

exercises in which proximal support is provided to promote isolated motion at a particular site

34
Q

tendon glides (5)

A
  1. straight digits
  2. hook fist
  3. composite fist
  4. tabletop
  5. straight (FDS) fist
35
Q

place and hold exercises

A

gentling perform AAROM to position the finger then ask client to sustain position while releasing the assisting hand
*helpful when PROM is greater than AROM

36
Q

resistive exercises

A

used for strengthening and to improve excursion of adherent tissue

37
Q

functional activity

A

incorporating gains made from exercising into function UE use at home and at work