Introduction to Soft tissue Flashcards

1
Q

Name some signs and symptoms of soft tissue involvement

A
  • pain
  • swelling
  • increased muscle tone/protective spasm
  • tightness/restricted ROM (afraid to move)
  • laxity/increased ROM
  • trigger points - tight bands in muscle
  • muscle inhibition, weakness, atrophy (post injury)
  • muscle hypertrophy
  • Mal-alignment issues
  • muscle imbalances
  • instabilities
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2
Q

Name some abnormalities in soft tissues that can be noticed

A
  • temperature changes
  • sensation changes
  • color/pigmentation, hair, rash, blemishes, irregular moles
  • trophic changes related to disease
  • lesions/breakdown
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3
Q

Myofascial pain syndrome signs and symptoms

A
  • regional: pain, tenderness, limited ROM
  • trigger points: painful/palpable taut bands in muscles with distinct referral patterns
  • may result in muscle tightness and limited ROM
    weakness
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4
Q

What is myofascial pain syndrome often related to or caused by

A
  • poor posture/muscle imbalances
  • poor body mechanics, overuse, overload of deconditioned muscles
  • previous injury, protective immobilization
  • if spine involved: adjacent spine musculature is commonly involved
  • painful guarding/protective spasms
  • tightness, decreased ROM, weakness
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5
Q

Lower cross syndrome

A
  • LQ trunk, LS, pelvis
  • hyperlordic LS
  • anterior tilt of pelvis
  • tight erector spinea
  • tight hip flexors
  • weak abs
  • weak glutes
  • anterior tilt places hams under tension
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6
Q

Soft tissue mechanical/mobility perspective

steps to determine the mobility of Soft tissue

A
  • observe posture
  • mobility testing superficial to deep
  • STM: multiplaner, assess longitudinal, transverse
  • palpation for trigger points
  • use reactions as objective measures
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7
Q

Palpation for trigger points

A
  • taut bands/knots in muscle, spasms, tissue swelling
  • pressure - banche thumbnail consistency
  • response: won’t allow, says it hurts, wince, and withdraw can be objective
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8
Q

Indication for soft tissue mobilizations

A
  • increase circulation and nutrition to tissue
  • decreased muscle spasm, relaxation of tissue
  • increase extensibility of tissue allows restoration of ROM
  • deactivate trigger points
  • mobilize scar tissue
  • prevent break up and adhesions
  • prevent contractures
  • assist in resolution of edema/fluid accumulation
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9
Q

effects of STM

A
  • histamine released and mast cells which act as a vasodilator
  • increase circulation, local temperature and tissue extensibility
  • decrease spasms and pain
  • increase tissue metabolism (lactic acid can build up)
  • decrease waste products, increase nutrition
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10
Q

STM contraindications and precautions

A
  • Severe injury - acute inflammation and pain
  • infection = don’t want to spread
  • hematoma - bleeding
  • shortened tissue providing stability
  • shortened tissue providing function (posterior pelvic tilt with hamstring tightness can be helpful with spinal stenosis)
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11
Q

STM techniques with stages of healing

A
  • acute/inflammatory stage: gentle techniques
  • fibroblastic stage: controlled mobility for fiber alignment of scars
  • remodeling: more aggressive, increase scar tissue extensibility
    12 week window: can make improvements after this but its harder
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