PAMs Flashcards
According to AOTA’s position paper Physical Agents and Mechanical Modalities and the Occupational Therapy Practice Framework: Domain and Process, which of the following clinical treatment sessions includes an inappropriate use of physical agent modalities in the context of occupational engagement?
Application of a hot pack to the hand followed by an activity that involves making a cord bracelet
Use of fluidotherapy for the upper extremity followed by passive stretch
Use of a transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation unit for the back during homemaking activities
Use of a cold pack to the elbow after a game of checkers
Solution: The correct answer is B.
A treatment session consisting of fluidotherapy followed by passive stretch does not include occupational engagement as part of the session. AOTA’s position paper on physical agent modalities states that “exclusive or stand-alone use of [physical agent modalities] without linking it to a client-centered, occupation-based intervention plan and outcomes is not occupational therapy” (p. 1). The OTPF-4 states, “Intervention implementation must always reflect the occupational therapy scope of practice; occupational practitioners should not perform interventions that do not use purposeful and occupation-based approaches” (p. 25).
A, C, D: The use of each modality is combined with some form of occupational engagement.
Paraffin & Hotpacks
- 20 mins
- Conduction transfer
- Heats superficial structure up to 1 cm
Superficial thermal
Paraffin
- provides superficial heat as a therapeutic modality
- Ideal for use in hands and digits
- Used to increase circulation and promote healing
Benefits of superficial thermal therapy
- relieves pain
- increases tissue extensibility (Increases ROM)
- Assts with wound healing (increase blood flow)
- Decreases muscle spasm
Fluidotherapy
- 20 min treatment in combination of exercise hand and wrist
- Convection
Superficial thermal
Contraindications for heat
- postsurgical repairs
- acute injuries
- impaired sensation
- edema
- impaired vascular supply
- tumor/active cancer
- MS
- lymphedema
- DVT
Benefits of Cryotherapy
- relieves pain
- controls edema
- decrease abnomal tone
- facilitats muscle tone
- commonly used to treat acute injuries and postsurgical repairs
Ice packs, ice massage
Contraindication of Cryotherapy
- people with sensory deficis (including hypersensitivty
- Impaired circulation or Raynaud’s disease
Cold packs
- Skin checks after 3-5 mins
- Remains cold up to 10 mins
Ice massage
- for smaller areas
- applied in cicular motion directly on skin for 3-5 mins
Benefits of Ultrasound
(2 types)
- Mechanotherapy
- continuous (thermal effects) and pulsed (non-thermal effects)
- Applies heat deep into tissue
- Used to treat joint contractures, scarring and associated adhesions, and muscle spasms
Benefits of continuous type:
1. increases ROM, decreases joint stiffness
2. reduces pain
3. increases BP and tissue permability
4. reduces muscle spasm
5. reaches deeper tissues (up to 5 cm)
Benefits of pulse type:
1. decrease inflammation
2. heals tissue
Contraindication for ultrasound
- pregnant ppl
- active malignant tumor
- some joint replacements (cemented or plastic
- thrmbophlebitis fx
- infections
- over spinal cord
Consult with surgeon with tendon and ligament repairs (soft itssues)
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation
(NMES)
1.Use of electrical current to activate muscles
2. Applied through an electrode
3. Increase ROM, facilitates muscle contractions, and strengthens muscles
4. Promotes nerve injury repair
5. Contraindication: pacements or cardiac conditions
Electrical stimulation (E-STIM)
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator (TENS)
- decreases pain (bsed on gate theory)
- Uses electrical current
- Provides constant electrical stimulation with a modulated current that is directed to the peripheral nerves through electrode placement
- Contraindication: pacements or cardiac conditions
Electrical stimulation (E-STIM)
Benefits of E-STIM
- pain control
- decrease swelling
- stimulates and strengthens muscles
- muscle re-education
- stimulates denervated muscle