Interventions for PFP Flashcards
interventions
targeted towards pain and impairments
- exercise, taping, bracing, foot orthoses and combined interventions
exercise therapy
- Exercise is recommended to reduce pain in the short,
medium and long term, and improve function in the medium and long term - Combining hip and knee exercises is recommended to reduce pain and improve function in the short, medium and long term – preferable to knee exercises alone
exercise therapy **
combining hip and knee exercises is recommened to reduce pain and improve function in the short, medium and long term - preferable ti knee exercises alone
- improve hip extensors, external rotator and abductors
- improve function of quadriceps
vasti retraining
If there is a vasti dysfunction, strengthening alone may not correct the dysfunction
… vasti retraining may be required
joint stress and pathology
higher stress during leg extension (OKC) - 0-30˚
higher stress during squat (CKC) - 60-90˚
135˚ - on the sides of sesamoid bone
- 45-90 = open chain exercises
0-45 = leg press or squat
Changing hip & lower limb kinematics…
- Hip strengthening +SLSq retraining > Improved hip strength Reduced hip adduction during SLSq
No change in hip adduction during running - running gait retraining > Reduced hip adduction during running, Reduced knee pain
combined interventions
Combined interventions are recommended to reduce pain in the short and medium term
combined interventions
- patellar taping
medial glide and fat pad deload
- reduce pain (but not in long term),
- change patellar alignment ( patellar taping can immediately reduce lateral patellar displacement and tilt in people with PFJ OA)
and compression force
- alter vasti activation
- patellar taping reduced PFJ reaction force during single leg squat in people with AKP
Foot orthosis
Foot orthoses are recommended to reduce pain in the short term
- less comfortable orthoses can increase hip add. and vastus lateralis in those with PFP with gait
- more mobile foot better with orthotics (Midfoot width difference > 11mm)
Foot orthoses: predictor of success
AIM:
- determine whether prefabricated foot orthoses exert different effects on knee load during walking in people with patellofemoral pain and mobile feet, compared to those with less mobile feet
Foot orthoses: predictor of success
2
- In PFP, prefabricated foot orthoses impart beneficial changes in frontal plane knee load during walking in those with more mobile feet
- direction of change is favourable in increased dynamic knee valgus patients
- Biomechanical factors may play a role in therapeutic outcomes of foot orthoses for PFP
… but only in those with more mobile feet