Utilisateur
Phase 1: inflammation (acute)
- 1-10 days
- inflammatory response
Phase 2: proliferation (subacute)
- 2 days-6 weeks- up to 12 weeks
- fibroblastic repair
Phase 3: maturation (subacute/chronic)
- begins 3 weeks up to 12 months
- chronic is 6 months or longer
- remodelling
1. redness
2. swelling (edema)
3. Increased temperature
4. Pain
5. Loss of function
1. form fibrin lattice to decrease blood loss, provide strength to wounch
2. remove damaged cells
3. recruit endothelial cells and fibroblasts in preparation for next phase
1. vasoconstriction - prevents blood loss
2. vasodilation - brings WBC to site, platelets adhere to exposed collagen
3. clot formation - creates a temporary plug
4. phagocytosis - macrophages remove dead tissue through phagocytosis
- decreased ROM
- decreased function and pain
- happens over 30 min
- fractures and ligament avulsions there is always bleeding and odema occurs in 5 minutes
- increased risk of infection
- cellulitis - deep bacterial infection of the skin
- ulceration - development of an ulcer
- partial limb amputation
- stasis dermatitis (eczema)
- purpose to cover the wound
- longer phase than inflammation (many of these things happening concurrenntly during the phase.
- steps in another que card
1. epithelialization - creates scar to protect the tissue
2. collagen and elastin fibres - in random oder form the scar tissue which will get progressively stroger
3. wound contracture - starts around day 5, peaks after aboout 2 weeks
4. neovascularization - new blood vessels are formed for increased blood flow to the area
- longest phase (can take up to a year)
- stress on the scar makes the collagen fibres line up parallel to the line or force
- scar rarely as strong as normal tissue
- scar usually in place 3 weeks post injury
- many factors will impede healing
1. collagen systhesis
2. collagen orientation
3. healed injury
- type
- size (smaller heals faster)
- location (over bone = slower)
- infection
- blood supply
- external forces (e.g. heat and cold)
- movement - may need immobilization
- age - old=slower
- disease
- medications
- nutrition
- regenerative capacity of the tissue
- vascular supply - circulation of blood in the body
- extent of damage
- muscle, tendon, capsule, ligament - 4 weeks
- first week - rest
- second week - gentle painfree movement including AAROM
- week 3 - light strenghtening
- 6 weeks healing time
- often casted for 5 weeks
- diabetic - 6 weeks casted
- recovery of movement and strength - weeks 7-12
(focus on movement first before strength)
***youth under 25 years can heal up to one week faster***
- inflammation that lasts months or longer
- caused by persistent trauma, autoimmune disease, overuse or overload cumulative microtrauma
- results in increased scar tissue
- arthritis
- tendinosis
- contiuous spraining or straining
- diabetes
c. diabetes
c. cyanosis
inflammation
Epithelialization
b. Neovascularization
b. Hip abductors
False - its apart of the stance phase (last step)
refers to walking
- can also be called ambulation
- respiratory
- skeletal
- muscular
- nervous
- neurological
1. acceptance of weight by the supporting limb
2. period of single limb support
3. advancement of the limb
period of the gait cycle during which the foot or supporting limb is in contact with the ground (5 steps)
this is the period of the gait cycle when the reference limb or foot is in the air and not in contact with the ground (3 steps)
1. heel strike
2. foot flat
3. midstance
4. heel off
5. toe off (push off)
1. acceleration
2. midswing
3. deceleration
- gait velocity (speed)
- step and stride length
- increase in single stance time
- decrease in double support time
- symmetry (equal step length and equal timing)
- time and distance
- step and stride length
- cadence (rhythm)
- width of walking base
- lateral pelvic tilt
- arm swing
- vertical displacement of COG
- horizontal displacement of COG
the length between each step (heel of right and heel of left)
full cycle of steps (heel of right to the next heel of right)
the rhythm of walking - are both step and stride length the same time on both sides
- step width is an indicator of stability
- it will be a wider base if the person is less stable
- remember the runner, the mall walker and the person with trendelenburg gait on a graph
- normal gait, the arm and leg on contralateral sides always move together
- this helps with overall balance
- very important when teaching someone how to use a gait aid
hip abductors and errector spinae group
Concentric muscle work initiates the movement to move through the gait cycle
e.g. glutes and hamstring work concentrically in the acceleration of swing phase and the push off of stance phase
e.g. gastrocnemius and soleus work concentrically in push off of stance phase
Eccentric muscle work controls the movement so that the limb moves smoothly through the gait cycle
e.g. glutes and hamstring work eccentrically in deceleration of swing phase and heel strike of stance phase
e.g. gastrocnemius and soleus work eccentrically in heel strike of stance phase
right hand
top of the cane should be at wrist height
15-20 degree bend should occur in the elbow
grade 1: muscle contraction, cannot move limb
grade 2: can move limb through range, if gravity eliminated
grade 3: can move limb through range against gravity
grade 4: can move limb against gravity with a small load
grade 5: can move limb against gravity with a heavy load
**to be able to use this grading system, a muscle must be able to contract**
- 2-3 finger gap between top of crutch an armpit
- hand grip at wrist level
- elbows slightly bent at 30 degree angle when holding grips
- found at the ends of bones in synovial joints and functions to provide a smooth, low friction surface
- disperses compressive and shearing forces
- pain is not felt until inury reaches subchondral bone
- no nerve or blood supply causing limited ability to heal
- goal is to provide the inured area with large amount of synovial flushing and utilize milking action to receive nutrients from the subchondral bone (movement causes milking action)
- found between bones that require little motion
- e.g. meniscus, labrum, interveterbral discs
- acts as a shock absorber for large and repeated loads
- must be repaired surgically if torn/injured
- aneural and avascular (no nerve or blood supply, limited ability to heal)
- when knee meniscus or labrum injured, minimize compression via weight bearing to allow tear to heal and avoid pain
- when intervertebral disc injured, compression can be used to prevent a bluged spinal disc (can be painful)
Reducing pain is an indication for a gait aid? (truth)
No pain no gain, so you can walk on an injury into pain (lie)
Use a cane on your right side if you have a left leg injury (truth)
Use a cane on your right side if you have a right leg injury (lie)
b. Intervertebral disc
a. controlled stress
c. Isometric strengthening
c. Mobilizing joint range
Good to heaven, bad to hell
true
a. Left hip drop
b. Right pelvis translation
- balance between ROM/mobilization that is painful but gaining movements vs loosing movements
- happens in the shoulder (most common) - called frozen shoulder
- can happen in other joints where there has been surgery or broken bones as well
- inflammation of the capsule
- very painful - stratum fibrosum involved
- unclear cause
- occurs in perimenopausal age (male and female)
- gross loss of motion in all directions
1. freezing (4-6 weeks)
2. frozen (up to 6 months)
3. thawing (6 months to 2 years)
- sometimes interwoven into Stratum Fibrosum and contain lots of neurosensory organs
- Poor blood supply (only from bone attachment)
- As they heal, scarring occurs
- full healing may extend to 12 to 14 weeks
- controlled stress will strengthen the repair
- Training and strengthening them by moving in normal exercise
- Exercise in off center ways to push the ligaments to strengthen them - dancing and skiing, etc.
- control inflammation in acute stage to provide pain-free ROM
- strengthen surrounding muscles to stabilize the area
- provide controlled stresses to help align newly laid collagen fibres in an organized and efficient direction as it heals
grade 1 - minor - doesn't show up in clinic <25% damaged
grade 2 - moderate - <50% of ligament is damaged
grade 3 - major - >50-100% of ligament is damaged - avulsed meaning pull or tear away
- attaches muscle to bone
- limited blood supply and neural supply
- musculotendinous junction has best blood supply (more than bony attachment)
- injuries are due to macrotrauma or microtrauma due to repetitive overload, often of eccentric nature
- you can't seperate a muscle injury from a tendon injury
- AROM pain free range 24 hours of pain onset
- ROM and pain free stretching
- when able to achieve full pain free ROM add concentric strength
- gradually start eccentric loading as healing progresses
I.C.E.
Isometric
Concetric
Eccentric
**focus on isometric at beginning stages of healing and then move on to concentric and then eccentric**
- has lots of blood supply and innervation
**muscles strains graded in accordance to the amount of tissue destruction**
grade 1: minimal tear in fibres; no palpable defect and minor loss of function
Grade 2 strain: up to half of fibres are torn and leads to painful dysfunction that limits ROM and activity
Grade 3 strain: considered a rupture of all the fibres and leads to major disability and often a palpable defect.
* this is not the same as muscle grading
- grade 2 strain, painfree ROM (PROM, AAROM or AROM) for first two weeks. Sustained stretching is allowed, but painfree. Week 3 light loaded strengthening may begin, but only if painfree.
- Grade 3 strain, approach is the same, but light loaded strengthening would not begin until week 5.
- bones have good blood supply
- periosteum (outer layer of bone) has sensory nerve supply
- when injury happens to bone:
1. inflammation
2. soft callus (helps stabilize fracture)
3. hard callus (stronger stability) 3 weeks to 4 months
4. bone remodelling
- bones have longer healing time
- immobilization (4 weeks youth, 5 weeks healthy adult, 6 weeks compromised healthy/elderly/multiple injuries)
- Immediately post immobilization, ROM and stretching are necessary to prevent contractures
- Strengthening begins, painfree, at 6 weeks
- Compression on bones in painfree limits helps bone growth – bones respond well to weight bearing
- improve persons stability (expand BOS)
- reduce weight bearing
- compensate for lost balance, strength or coordination
- reduce pain
- promote healing
- 4 point - right crutch, take a step with left foot, left crutch out, take a step with right foot
- 2 point - crutch goes forward at the same time as injured foot (held in opposite hand) then unaffected leg and crutch go forward, repeat
- modified 2 or 4 point - remove a crutch and do the same thing
3 point - using crutches normally - both crutches and good foot on the floor at the same time
Modified 3 point - walking instead of hoping
- limb cannot touch the ground
- three point gait is an example of this
- no WB restriction ... may use a gait aid for stability
- two point gait - abulatiion aid and opposite LE move toether simultaneously
- four point gait - as per above but not simultaneous
- Limited amount of WB permitted through LE (sometimes expressed with % BW OR amt of BW)
- Not used very often, not very realistic
- Weight is determined by surgeon
- minimal WB allowed - usually for balance
- very small amount of weight bearing
- patient determines
- ranges from minimal to full WB
- generally should not result in pain
1. STOP walker
2. rolator walker
3. 2 ctutches
4. 1 crutch
5. quad cane
6. single cane
- make sure you are close enough to the patient that you can catch them if they are falling
1. decreased muscle loss
2. increased muscle mass
3. improved body composition
4. improved bone mineral density
5. improved glucose metabolism
6. improved gastrointestinal (GI) transit time
7. improved/decreased resting blood pressure
- muscle mass declines with ageing and disuse
- strengthening off sets this
- Hypertrophy – increase in size of muscle cells/fibres (Ability to increase size of the muscle itself)
- Hyperplasia – increase in number of cells/fibres (more splitting of the muscle fibers)
- Combination of both allows muscle to exert greater force (ie stronger)
- Body composition changes in relationship to exercise and increase of muscle mass
- Increases with increased muscle activity due ttension/forces on bone
- Reduces the risk of osteoporosis
- weight bearing and banging of bone on land matters with how dense your bones will be when you’re older
- Improves with exercise
- Reduces the risk of diabetes
- If you have diabetes, it helps manage the sugars
- type I - genetic
- type II - acquired over time
- Improves with exercise- food moves more quickly and easily through digestive system
- Helps with eliminating waste
- More waste out, less issues with constipation and less risk of cancer in colon
- Decreases with exercise
- Important in heart health
- Muscle structure - composed of thousands of muslce fibres
- Muscle fiber structure
1. Actin and myosin make up the contractile element of the muscle
2. sarcomere is Z line to Z line, actin is bound to Z-line, myosin is bound to actin
- Motor unit
- Motor unit recruitment (recruit more of the motor units)
- Cross section
- Force velocity (eccentric vs concentric)
- The functional unit of skeletal muscle consists of:
1. Single alpha motor neuron
2. Axon from motor unit and terminal branches
3. All the individual muscle fibers innervated by the axon via the terminal branches
- Strength of muscle contraction affected by:
1. Number of motor units recruited
2. Frequency of stimulation (firing of the motor neuron)
3. Comes from the Central Nervous System
- The larger the cross section of the muscle, the more tension it can produce (ie size of the muscle fibres and number of muscle fibres/myofibrils)
- the larger the muscle is, the stronger it is
- Concentric: muscular tension decreases as velocity of the shortening contraction increases, tension increases as velocity decreases (ie muscle shortens as it contracts)
- Eccentric: muscular tension increases as velocity increases (muscle lengthens as it contracts)
**Tension = Length or Tautness and NOT Force
**speaking of the tension on the muscle, not the tendon
- 2 ways:
1. Hypertrophy/Hyperplasia: Increase in the size of muscle: increased actin and myosin in the muscle fibre
2. Neural Adaptation: Enhanced motor unit activation (e.g. Practice)
1. overload - challenge and fatigue lead to adaptive change
2. Intensity: – strength of the stimulus per unity of time (resistance and speed)
3. Volume: - the amount of training (sum of all repetitions, sets, duration)
4. Specificity – to specific activity (e.g. point in ROM that your working a certain muscle this is where you get stronger) - e.g. Karen is really strong in the legs because she squats so much with her job
5. Cross-training – can be beneficial, but less effective and less efficient than training specifically for an activity
e.g. getting hockey players to do other things in the summer to keep strong and keep the ROM high (such as a goalie working on flexibility)
6. Overtraining – can be bad - may lead to injury
7. Precautions:
Avoid valsalva maneuver (holding breath during exertion) by breathing rhythmically or talking
Avoid DOMS*: delayed onset muscle soreness by keeping exercise intensity below the threshold of pain
- Fast twitch: respond quickly
- takes more stimulus to fire them
- once fired they produce high tension, move quickly
- fatigue rapidly
- less blood supply (ie white in appearance)
- Peripheral musculature
- Power Muscle
- e.g. arm and legs
- takes less stimulus to fire them
- once fired they produce less tension
- slow to fatigue
- more blood supply (ie red in appearance)
- Torso musculature
- Endurance Muscle
-e.g. everything that has to do with holding our posture (soleus is an exception)
- Work 10-30 reps alternate days
- Move slowly through full range,
- Especially in eccentric direction
- Work 10-30 reps daily
- Sustained holds of 10+ seconds
- Holding posture in different ways
- Isometric, Isotonic (OKC or CKC), Isokinetic (rarely used)
- Are you doing open kinetic or closed kinetic
- how many times in one session
- e.g. 5 reps, 10 reps, 20 reps
- how many exercise sessions
- how many times a day
- challenge of exercise (ie load)
- e.g. poundage (how hard the exercise is)
useful before/after sport, work conditioning, sequence training