Neuromuscular Conditions (2) Flashcards

1
Q

What is multiple sclerosis?

A

Destruction of the myelin sheath on the nerve fibres of the central nervous system & brain lesion in the cerebellum.

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2
Q

How does MS affect the nerves

A

Affects the nerve conduction velocity and quality of signal. Also leads to changes in muscle recruitment patterns.

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3
Q

Prevalence of MS

A

0.1%

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4
Q

Symptoms of MS

A

Numbness, pain, onset of dementia, spasticity and fatigue.

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5
Q

Onset of MS

A

20-40 years

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6
Q

What other condition is MS related to?

A

Rheumatoid arthritis (immune function)

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7
Q

What is Parkinson’s

A

Degenerative disorder of the CNS affects neurotransmitters. Reduction in motor cortex stimulation.

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8
Q

How does Parkinson’s affect the Basal Ganglia?

A

Insufficient dopamine formation

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9
Q

Potential causes

A

No specific causes have been identified.

Potential causes
- Loss of the type of nerve cells (neurons) that produce dopamine in an area of the brain responsible for regulating movement
- Excess proteins in the same area of the brain as well as the presence of excess proteins in nerve fibres. May interfer with the transmission of nerve cells (Lewy bodies)

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10
Q

Parkinsons Symptoms

A

Slowing of the movement, tremors, muscle rigidity, postural instability

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11
Q

MS Medications

A

Corticosteroids & interferon beta 1a and 1b (anti-autoimmune reaction)

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12
Q

MS considerations & goals

A
  • Reduced strength and endurance
  • No assistance from SSC in spastic muscles
  • Muscle atrophy an impaired activation patterns
  • Exercise is limited by peripheral factors rather than central
  • Excessive fatigue post-exercise

Goals
- ensure typical motor unit recruitment continues, maintenance/improve ROM, improve aerobic capacity, monitor post-exercise fatigue

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13
Q

MS Assessment & Prescription

A

Assessment
- standard exercise and strength assessment
- assess balance and flexibility
- can compare to general population norms however it has been previously reported that 75% of MS patients have “low fitness”
- later stages of disease include functional testing

Prescription
- general guidelines
- endurance 3x/wk (65-70% MHR) 30 mins/day
- 3 x week (functional focus) - circuits and therabands useful.
- Heavy lifting with sensory deficit on agonist is a contraindicator

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14
Q

Parkinsons Medication

A

Levodopa and dopamine agonists

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15
Q

Parkinsons Exercise Goals & Considerations

A

Attempt to overcome poor posture and slow movements. Functional performance takes precedence.

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16
Q

Parkinsons Physical Assessment

A
  • General physical testing - STS, TUG, single leg balance, ROM, etc
  • ## If aerobic testing is considered must consider precautions eg ECG
17
Q

Parkinson’s Exercise Prescription

A

Flexibility
- Focus on shoulders and spine (has direct relationship to posture).
- 3-5x/week at max strength tolerance capacity

Strength
- Poor evidence -> rely on general conditioning with a view to modifying ROM and intensity. Must assess RPE.

Endurance
- Poor evidence –> rely on general conditioning guidelines with a view to modifying intensity and duration. RPE = 10-12/20. Area of least importance.