Balance Flashcards

1
Q

Postural control

A

control the bodys position in space for stability and orientation between body segments and the environment, appropriate for a task

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2
Q

Postural stability

A

maintenance of COM within BOS

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3
Q

Postural orientation

A

Ability to maintain relationship between body segments and between body and environment for a task

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4
Q

Aging and postural control

A

MSK: Decreased ROM in LE, loss of spinal flexion flexibility leads to flexed posture
NM: Decreases in vision, somatosensory, vestibular functions, multisensory deficits

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5
Q

Peripheral vestibular structures

A

Vistibular end organ
CN VIII
Basilar artery
Anterior inferior cerebellar artery

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6
Q

Otoliths

A

Utricle- horizontal
Saccule- vertical
detects linear motion, tonic discharge, push/pull relationship

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7
Q

Semicircular canals

A

Anterior, posterior, and lateral
perpendicular relationship
angular motion detection
tonic discharge
push/pull relationship

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8
Q

Vertebrobasilar system (blood supply)

A

PICA supplies the inferior vestibular nuclei and inferior portion of the cerebellum
Basilar artery supplies pons and superior vestibular nuclei

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9
Q

Vestibular Ocular Reflex

A

stabilize gaze during movemebt
VOR gain normal is 1:1 head:eye movement
VOR is intact and mature by 1 year of age

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10
Q

Vestibulo-Spinal Reflexes

A

Coordinated head and body movements to maintain head in upright position
Lateral VSR: adjusts limb movement for balance
Medial VSR: cervical connections, branches to extraocular muscles

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11
Q

Central processing

A

Adaptive strategies change with demands of task and environment
Anticipatory strategies pretune sensory and motor systems based on prior learning

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12
Q

Postural control strategies

A

Ankle: driven by somatosensory system
Hip: driven by vestibular system
Stepping: driven by vestibular system

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13
Q

Purpose for testing balance

A

Screen for fall risk
Basic screen of large populations
Compare to normative data for large populations
provide an individualized training program for improvement and fall risk reduction

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14
Q

Activities of balance confidence- ABC scale

A

out of 16
100% confident in all
50-80% somewhat impaired
<50% likely homebound

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15
Q

Falls efficacy scale FES

A

Score 10-100
>70 fear of falling
>80 increased risk of falling

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16
Q

Timed up and go TUG

A

< 20s independently mobile
>30s needs assistance for mobility
>12s fall risk

17
Q

BERG Balance scale

A

0-56
age 60-69: 55
age 70-70: 53-54
age 80-90: 50-53

18
Q

POMA

A

Balance and gait, out of 28
<19 high fall risk
19-24 medium fall risk
25-28 low fall risk

19
Q

Intervention Vertically (pusher syndrome)

A

Orient to perturbed position, use intact senses to re-calibrate missing or dysfunctional senses

20
Q

steady state and stability interventions

A

vertical position feedback, reaching activities, head righting skills

21
Q

Anticipatory balance control intervention

A

repeated sit to stand
walking on toes
lateral weight shifts

22
Q

Reactive postural control

A

reflexes
ankle/hip strategies
stepping strategies

23
Q

Cephalocaudal progression of control

A

birth: lacking head control
3 months: emerging anticipatory and reactive postural response in neck muscles
6-8 months: steady state control for independent sitting
10 months: postural response in standing
15 months: postural response in walking
3 years: visual –> somatosensory control of balance
10-12 years: mature postural control

24
Q

Postural control in children with CP

A

increased excursion and velocity of postural sway
difference in balance strategies

25
Q

Kids best test

A

Ages 7-18
27 tasks
all domains

26
Q

Pediatric balance scale

A

Ages 2.5-13.5
14 items
all domains except reactive

27
Q

Early clinical assessment of balance

A

Children with CP ages 1.5-12
13 items
all domains except sensory/orientation

28
Q

Segmental assessment of trunk control

A

children and adults with CP 3+ months
static, active, and reactive control across 7 segemtenal areas
only steady state and postural domains