Soft Tissue Mob intro Flashcards

1
Q

Pain is produced by the ______ when it perceives that danger to the body tissue exists and that action is required

A

brain

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2
Q

Cell physiology

A
  • AP elicits NT signaling to cascade along the axon of dendrites
  • Afferent info ascends through spinal thalamic tract to the brain
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3
Q

Interpretation of NT elicits _____ OUTPUT

A

PAIN

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4
Q

What are 3 pain mechanisms?

A
  • nociceptive
  • neuropathic
  • central sensitization
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5
Q

Nociceptive pain is increased sensitivity of _______ nerves

A

peripheral afferent nerves

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6
Q

What occurs in nociceptive pain

A
  • inflammatory mediators contribute to increased sensitivity to other stimuli
  • upregulation of existing and new ion channels
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7
Q

Neuropathic pain is sensitivty at the _____

A

nerve

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8
Q

Neuropathic pain can spread due to:

A
  • changes in axoplasmic flow
  • immune cell activation
  • intraneural edema
  • progressive demyelination
  • upregulation of ion channel
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9
Q

Central sensitization is defined by:

A
  • augmentation of sensory processing in the CNS
  • impaired descending inhibitory pain pathways
  • over-activation of facilitatory pain pathways
  • temporal summation of second pain
  • long term potentiation of pain synapses
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10
Q

Central sensitization occurs in what patients?

A

Chronic pain patients

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11
Q

In central sensitization, pain that has outlived its usefulness and has made changes in your ______ to make it easier to understand the pain

A

brain

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12
Q

What happens in somatosensory cortex smudging

A
  • avoid, protect and heal
  • inhibition, weakness, aberrant movement patterns
  • homuncular changes of somatosensory cortex
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13
Q

Smudging and changes in _________ awareness, sensorimotor reorganization

A

kinesthetic

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14
Q

Muscle Guarding is defined as increased _______ activity in the muscle

A

resting

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15
Q

Muscle guarding possible causes:

A
  • protective response to painful stimuli
  • neuro dysfunction
  • emotional stress, anxiety, fear
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16
Q

What are trigger points?

A

hyper-irritable area of tissue chemo- and mechanonociceptors located within the muscle

17
Q

What is the difference between Active and Latent trigger points?

A

Active is symptomatic and refers pain at rest or during motion
Latent does not cause patient pain unless they are activated by palpation

18
Q

What trigger points do we as PTs treat?

19
Q

Travell’s energy deficit hypothesis

A
  • After injury, trauma (micro or macro) of the muscle inflammatory cascade initiated
  • Interleukin factors, cytokines, CGRP, lactic acid build up
  • Metabolites increase acidity (lowering pH) = increasing muscle spindle excitability via alpha motor neuron, gamma gain
  • Tonic, low-grade muscle contraction, can lead to the trigger point
20
Q

_________ are constantly stimulated which leads to low level tension and can cause a trigger point (knot)

A

Muscle spindles

21
Q

Manual therapy is traditionally used to produce a number of therapeutic effects:

A
  • pain reduction
  • increase soft tissue extensibility
  • improve quality of motion in a restricted area
22
Q

Caution of manual therapy for physical therapists

A

do not become over reliant on manual techniques to improve patients because we want to promote independence

23
Q

Much of much of Manual therapy use is based off of…

A

clinical outcomes rather than evidence-based proof

24
Q

Indications for manual therapy

A

MSK pain/mechanical pain

  • pain reported with activity and that is relieved by rest
  • pain that is relieved or provoked by particular motions/positions
  • pain altered by changes related to sitting or standing posture
25
Q

Contraindications for Manual Therapy

A
  • systemic or localized infection
  • acute circulatory conditions (DVT, etc)
  • malignancy in area
  • open wound at site
  • recent fracture at site
  • hematoma
  • hypersensitive skin
  • advanced DM
  • RA
  • Cellulitis
26
Q

Precautions for Manual Therapy

A
  • joint effusion or inflammation
  • RA (if not in flare)
  • OP
  • Steroid or anticoag therapy