week 2 Flashcards

1
Q

when is neuroplasticity used to promote rehabilitation

A

post neurological event
MS relapse
stroke
TBI

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2
Q

what are the two ways neuroplasticity occurs

A

unmasking of dormant pathways
collateral sprouting

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3
Q

what are the 10 principles of neuroplasticity

A

use it or lose it
use it and improve it
specificity
repetition matters
intensity matters
salience matters
age matters
transference
interference
time matters

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4
Q

where in the nervous system does neuroplasticity occur

A

the brain

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5
Q

what 3 systems need to be intact for optimum balance within the individual

A

sensory, motor and cognitive

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6
Q

what are the 3 typical postures patients with hemiparesis might adopt

A

fix
fall
push

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7
Q

what is falling (hemiparesis patient)

A

this happens when a patient falls towards their affected side due to weakness (limb and trunk)

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8
Q

how do you treat falling?

A

strengthen trunk (in sitting and in lying)
sitting practice with facilitation
reaching within BOS with unaffected upper limb
reaching out of BOS with unaffected upper limb
progress to reaching with affected upper limb
bilateral upper limb tasks
functional tasks in sitting
moving lower limbs in sitting

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9
Q

when does fixing happen (hemiparesis patient)

A

when a patient leans towards their unaffected side to compensate for weakness (limb and trunk)

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10
Q

how do you treat fixing

A

increased BOS
strengthen trunk (in sitting and in lying)
reaching within BOS with unaffected upper limb
reaching out of BOS with unaffected upper limb
bilateral upper limb tasks
functional tasks

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11
Q

when does pushing happen (hemiparesis patient)

A

when a patient pushes with their unaffected side towards their affected side due to disturbance in midline perception

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12
Q

how do you treat pushing

A

increase BOS (the smaller the BOS the more they will push)
use head of bed/other environmental tools
use vision to orientate (visual vertical appears to be unaffected in pushers)
as someone improves then reduce BOS
weightbearing through unaffected side (in sitting and lying)

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13
Q

what do you have to be careful with with pushers

A

be careful not to fatigue this patient group - this will increase the push
don’t push a pusher

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14
Q

before working on sit to stand with a patient what do you need to think about

A

patients sitting balance
patients lower limb strength
patients engagement in physio
patients ability to follow instructions
patients weight
your positioning
your ability and experience
environment
equipment available

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15
Q

what do you need to consider when facilitating sit to stand

A

side of weakness
balance
anxiety/fear of falling

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16
Q

how can you adapt sit to stand

A

height of surface
foot position
speed
alignment
upper limb involvement
half task (mini-squat)

17
Q

who is a tilt table useful for

A

people who don’t have the muscle strength to sit to stand even with facilitation
people who are unable to maintain standing even with facilitation
low consciousness level
are struggling with postural hypotension

18
Q
A