lumbar Spine Segmental Assessment and Treatment of hypomobility Flashcards
Spine hypomobility etiology
Back injury
- unwillingness to move/fear, protection
- restriction in facet joint capsul, ligaments
- myofascial restriction, muscul tightness
Some folks are inherently tighter
- joint capsules, ligaments and muscles
Disease assoicated with hypomobility
- anklyosing spondlyitis, DM etc
Hypomobility Signs and symptoms
- C/O stiffness, tightness, lack of ROM
- pain at end ranges/postures
- pain subsides when off end range
- no worsening of condition
- may have referred pain
Complications of restricted motion
- adaptive shortening over time: muscles ligaments and capsules
- disuse of atrophy of musculature
- degeneration of synvoium
- reduced nutrition- disc articular cartilage
- loss of segmental mobility
- loss of function
- liability to further injury
How can hypomobility be reversible
- mobilization/manipulation for joint stiffness
- soft tissue mobilization, myofascial release
- stretching of joints, assoicated muscles
- exercise to promote motion
hypomobility observation
What are somethings to pay attention to
- posture: clues to what might be tight
- LS FB ROM limited = decreased L/S curve reversal, tight facet capsules, posterior ligaments and muscles
- one or multiple spine segments
- note where motion is occuring or not occuring
- note compensatory motion at hips, pelvis, T/S
Hypomobility: dysfunction movement observation
- deviations from planar path; if resriction is unilateral, deviation to tight side
- L/S ROM capsular patterns
- patient may increase effort toward end range
L/S ROM capsular pattern
- FB = deviation to tight side
- SB opposite tight side\ = limited
- Rotate to tight side = limited (less)
Spine assessment
- spine palpation
- “pinch” SP to look at alignment
- reference is position or movement of superior segment
Describe
LS spine segmental mobility testing
- apply PA force to SP
- Apply PA force on unilateral TP
- quantity: assess amount of motion compared to “normal” or different levels of spine
Quality of LS motion
- spine joint play and end feel
- end feel: nature of restricition at end range
- normal capsular end feel with firm stop and some creep/give
- abnormal = stiff without creep or give
LS segmental mobility testing reliability
- poor inter-tester reliability
- pain provocation (spring test) is more reliable
Lumbarization
- abnormalities during palpation
- S1 is acting like a lumbar vertebrae and is not fused
Sacralization
- abnormalities during palpation
- L5 is congenitally fused with S1
- motion does not occur
Spina bifida occulta
- not a distinct palpable SP
- Osseous defect of vertebral arch and spinous process
- neural contents are OK
- may have hair or discoloration over the area
Spine segmental mobility testing
- joint play = spring testing
- PPIVM = passive physiological intervertebral mobility testing
- perform mobility assessment at all levels of the LS before commencing mobilization
Contraindications for mobilization/manipulation
grades 1 and 2 = none
grades 3-5 = likelihood of causing osseous and ligamentous damage
- disease states such as cancer and osteoporosis
Rotation grade 5 thrust
- LS - presence of annular disck weakness
- C/S vertebral artery
Passive Physiologic intervertbral mobility testing
- PPIVM
- palpation between SP while moving patient LS into Flexion, extension, SB, rotation
- quantity = assesed compare to normal; compare different levels
- quality PPIVM end feel - restriction at end range
- graded = normal, hypomobile, hypermobile
Red flags for low back pain
- significant trauma, pain, inflammation
- Hx Cancer
- patient over 50
- unexplained weight loss
- unrelenting night pain
- pain worse when lying down
- osteoporosis
- loss of bone or ligamentous integrity
- steriod use
Criteria for L/S manipulation
- duration of LBP <16 days
- no symptoms distal to the knee
- FABWQ score <19
- spine mobility testing at least one hypomobile L/S segment
- at least one hip with 35ºof IR
Spine and soft tissue assessment: condition and mobility
- is spine involved = common for soft tissue to be involved therefore examination of spine region includes assoicated soft tissue
- exam Soft tissue skin/fascia for swelling, edema, mobility, tenderness
- muscles specificially for decreased mobility/tightness
- hypertonicity - spasm/protective guarding
- hypotionicity: if NR involved = inhibition postinjury
- hypertrophy - muscles protecting instability acquired
- trigger points
Soft tissue involvment
- soft tisse involvement may change what is going on at a segmental level
- soft tissue mobilization may allow you to better detect joint restrictions that are truly capsular restrictions
- joint mobilization may effect tone of soft tissue
- can use them in conjunction with on another
treatment seqeuncing rule
- mobility before length before strength