Axial Skeleton- "Intro, Function, and Sacral- WK13 ( Ch9+10) Flashcards

1
Q

What are the primary and secondary curves of the spine ?

A

Primary: sacral and thoracic kyphoses
Secondary: Lumbar and Cervical Lordoses

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2
Q

What happens to the spinal curves during sagittal plane movement: Cervical Flexion and Extension

A

Flexion: Decreased Lordosis
Extension: Increased Lordosis

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3
Q

What happens to the spinal curves during sagittal plane movement: Thoracic Flexion and Extension

A

Flexion: Increased Kyphosis
Extension: Decreased Kyphosis

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4
Q

What happens to the spinal curves during sagittal plane movement: Lumbar Flexion and Extension

A

Flexion: Decreased Lordosis
Extension: Increased Lordosis

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5
Q

What happens to the spinal curves during sagittal plane movement: Sacral

A

sacrococcygeal curvature is fixed

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6
Q

What is one negative of having spinal curves ( especially at transitions) ?

A

The spine becomes subject to shear forces

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7
Q

Where does the line of gravity fall for each spinal curve and is this a good thing or a bad thing ?

A

Just in front of the curves concavity; This is a good thing (1) it allows for natural maintenance of normal curves (2) alternating flexion and extension torques minimizes NET torque; which minimizes muscle use and ligament stretch.

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8
Q

For each ligament give its attachments, function, and special qualities: Ligamentum Flavum

A

attch.: superior laminae to inferior laminae
function: form posterior wall of the vertebrocanal, resist flexion
special qualities: highly elastic, “yellow ligament”

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9
Q

For each ligament give its attachments, function, and special qualities: Supraspinous and Interspinous

A

attch.: between spinous processes
function: resist flexion
special qualities: superiorly becomes ligamentum nuchae, inferiorly becomes more sparsse and partially replaced by TL fascia and small musculotendinous fibers.

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10
Q

For each ligament give its attachments, function, and special qualities:Intertransverse

A

attch.: extend between adjacent transverse processes
function: resists forward and lateral flexion
special qualities: thin and poorly defined

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11
Q

For each ligament give its attachments, function, and special qualities:ALL

A

attch.: from basilar part of occipital bone to anterior sacrum
function: resists extension
special qualities: long, strong, straplike, widens caudally

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12
Q

For each ligament give its attachments, function, and special qualities:PLL

A

attch.: posterior surface of C2 to the sacrum
function: resists flexion
special qualities: cranially broad, inferiorly narrow

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13
Q

For each ligament give its attachments, function, and special qualities: Apophyseal joint capsules

A

attch.: along the rim of the facet surfaces
function: maintains physical integrity of the joint while guiding spinal kinematics
special qualities: lax in anatomic position; increasingly taut at movement extremes.

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14
Q

What happens to the PLL as it descends through the lumbar spine and how does this affect the discs in the lumbar region ?

A
  • It becomes more narrow as it ascends
  • It does not inhibit posterior bulging of the discs.
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15
Q

Describe a motion segment and it’s components:

A

Transverse and Spinous processes
Facet Joints
Interbody joint, disc

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16
Q

Define the following terminology as it relates to movement at a spinal motion segment: Osteokinematics

A

movement or rotations within 3 cardinal planes

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17
Q

Define the following terminology as it relates to movement at a spinal motion segment: Arthrokinematics

A

relative movement between articular surfaces, facet joint movement

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18
Q

Define the following terminology as it relates to movement at a spinal motion segment: Axis of Rotation

A

using the anterior and superior surface of the vertebral segment

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19
Q

C6 rotation means that the vertebral body rotates to the ____________ but the spinous process rotates to the ____________

A

right, left

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20
Q

What are “ intra-articular inclusions” and how can they affect facet joints ?

A

Small and inconsistently formed accessory structures like subcapular fat pads or fibro-adipose meniscoids

  • They may act as “ deformable spacers” ; provide protection at extremes of motion; may become impinged and lead to cervical pain; may “lock” or block joints by resisting arthrokinematics.
21
Q

Which part of the IVD has nerve and blood supply ?

A

the outer layers of the annulus fibrosus

22
Q

How does the annulus help dissipate loads ?

A

The annulus resists radial deformation adding rigidity to gel-like nucleus

23
Q

How does the disc get its nutrition ?

A

From vertebral bodies and blood vessels in superficial annulus, nutrients must diffuse to get deeper.

24
Q

Why are we taller in the morning than in the evening and why would a disc be more painful in the morning ?

A
  • Due to increased disc volume as water re-enters the disc over night
25
Q

Explain the process of disc degeneration.

A

age, high loads —> decreased disc permeability and increased calcfication of end plates —> less nutrients to disc and dehydrated and thin discs increased compressive loads and affects facet kinematics

26
Q

How does the disc help transmit loads through the spine at each motion segment ?

A

compression of disc leads to even distribution of forces in spine as nuceleus disperses forces radially and the annulus resists this deformation

27
Q

How does the disc respond to the following motion: sagittal plane flexion and extension

A

flexion: anterior compression, posterior stretching
extension: posterior compression and anterior stretch

28
Q

How does the disc respond to the following motion: Frontal plane lateral flexion

A

lateral flexion: ipsilateral compression; contralateral stretch

29
Q

How does the disc respond to axial compression, bending, torsion, shear

A

axial compression: force transmitted through disc –> end plates —> vertebral bodies

bending: 1 side compressed: tension on other side; nucleus migrates

torsion: resisted mainly by structures other than disc; annular fibers rupture with: torsion, axial compression and forward bending

shear: disc creep leaves facets only to resist motion

30
Q

Name the plane of motion that each region of the spine moves the best in: cervical, thoracic, lumbar

A

cervical: sagittal and horizontal plane
thoracic: sagittal plane
lumbar: sagittal plane

31
Q

Explain proper posture as if educating a patient

A

low back and neck curved naturally back, ears over shoulders, mid back neutral

32
Q

What happens to the rest of the spine with a posterior pelvic tilt in sitting ?

A

the rest of the spine flexes forward ( forward head posture). Upper cervical must extend slightly to remain with the eyes forward.

33
Q

What are the consequences on cervical structures of a chronic forward head posture ?

A

adaptive shortening of posterior suboccipitals, posterior ligaments and membranes associated with A-O and A-A joints. Pain and headache.

34
Q

What muscles belong to the extrinsic ( global) and intrinsic ( local) stabilizers of the spine ?

A

Extrinsic ( long muscles attaching to structures outside vertebral column): abdominals, erector spinae, QL, Psoas

Intrinsic ( short attaching to structures within vertebral column): transversospinal and short segmental muscles

TS: semispinals, multifidi, rotatores
SM: interspinales, intertransversarius

35
Q

What differences exist between the sit-up and the curl-up ?

A

sit-up: more hip flexor action, more emphasis on oblique muscles
curl-up: more rectus abdominis, modest lumbar flexion, better for patients with disc pathology

36
Q

What are 4 ways to improve lumbopelvic stability and what are some exercises that could be prescribed for the same purpose.

A
  1. activate deeper stabilizers
  2. challenges wide range of muscles
  3. endurance
  4. postural control, equilibrium, positional awareness
  • drawing-in maneuver, supine bridge, prone plank, balance boards
37
Q

Which functional activities place the greatest pressures on the lumbar discs ?

A

holding load in front of body and bending forward; straight knees when lifting, sitting in forward slouched posture

38
Q

What is difference between squat and stoop lifting ?

A

squat lift places more stress on the knees whereas and stoop lift places more stress on back.

39
Q

Which is better squat or stoop lifting ?

A

both have their pros and cons, likely a mixture of both is best

40
Q

What is the valsalva maneuver and how does it affect lumbar discs ?

A

Voluntary increasing intra-abdominal pressure by contraction of abdominal muscles. unloads intervertebral junctions.

41
Q

How can you teach your patient to safely lift an object from the ground ?

A
  1. lift slowly
  2. reduce weight
  3. decrease the EMA: lift things between your knees if possible
  4. increase the IMA: maintain neutral spine.
42
Q

What are some causes of SIJ pain ?

A

may be secondary to injury to the joint or surrounding connective tissue. May result from obvious trauma; unilateral or unidirectional torsions at the hip. May be due to excessive stress caused by postural or structural abnormalities.

43
Q

What is one of the best diagnostic tool to determine if the SIJ is the source of pain ?

A

assessing reduction of pain level after administration of anesthetic

44
Q

Describe nutation and counternutation.

A

nutation: SI forward nod
counternutation: SI backward nod

either by tilting of sacrum or tilting of ilium

45
Q

What are some stabilizers of the SIJ ?

A

passive: gravity, sacrotuberous, sacrospinous, and interosseus ligament
active: erector spinae, lumbar multifidi, diaphragm and pelvic floor muscles; abdominals, hip extensors, lats, iliacus and piriformis

46
Q

What are the ROM norms for cervical flexion, extension, and lateral flexion?

A

45

47
Q

What are the ROM norms for cervical rotation ?

A

60

48
Q

What are the ROM norms for thoracolumbar flexion and extension

A

flx.: 80
extension: 25

49
Q

what are the ROM norms for thoracolumbar lateral flexion and rotation ?

A

lateral flexion: 35
rotation: 45