Posture Flashcards

1
Q

What is posture?

A
  • gauge of mechanical efficiency
  • takes into account kinesthetic sense, muscle balance, and coordination
  • standing postire is a basis for all other postures and movements (best baseline)
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2
Q

What happens to muscle activity duing standing?

A
  • very little muscle energy needed to maintain an erect standing position
  • Help from static stabilizers (ligaments + shape of the joint are exampes)

muscles are active to
* keep weight bearing bones in alignment
* Oppose gravity’s downward force

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3
Q

what is the muscle activity of the foot, leg, and thight+hip during standing?

A

Foot: little to no intrinsic muscle activity

Leg: posteior muscles
* control sagittal postural sway
* soleus most active (gastroc also helps to control sway)

Thigh + hip:
* illiopsoas is constantly active (bc it attches to the thigh and hip)
* gluteus medius and TFL controls the front sway

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4
Q

What is the muscle activity of the spine and upper extremity

A

Spine: alternating contractions as we sway through the sagittall plane
* either abs OR sacrospinalis

Upper extremity
* serratus and traps support shoulder girdle
* supraspinatus resists humeral dislocation

Sway occurs in the frontal and sagittal plane
- helps pump blood to our veins and return blood to the body
- if we dont sway our muscles don’t contract and blood pools from our head and we pass out

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5
Q

How does sitting posture change?

A
  • moves spinal colum farther from the torso
  • muscles move farther from the axis of rotation
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6
Q

What factors does balance come from? what happens if we lose 1 or more of these systems?

A
  • visual feedback (eyes interpret and tell us to correct ourslef)
  • proprioceptors
  • pressure receptors (even distribution of pressure)
  • Vestibulocochlear system (canals and maculae help)

Lose one or more: our other systems will try to make up for it

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7
Q

What factors effect posture?

A
  • age
  • mood
  • education/awarness
  • pain/injury
  • muscle strength (least important)
  • flexibility/mobility (least important)
  • genetics (very important)
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8
Q

How to evaluating posture?

A
  • use an app or a grid
  • evaluate from all angles and locate LOG
    *
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9
Q

Anterior view posture eval?

A

LOG passes through:
* middle of forehead, nose, chin, sternum, & pubic sysmphysis
* equidistant betwen medial femoral condyles and medial malleoli

Symmetry of:
* ears/eyes, clavicles, ribs, ASIS’s, patellae, feet/toes (fick angle 12-18 inches) (we toe out when we stand normally)

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10
Q

Posterior view posture?

A

LOG passes:
* middle of head
* bisects spine (c, T, L)
* through gluteal cleft
* between knees and ankles

Observations:
* no tilting of heaf
* arms hanging natural and symetrical
* scapulae are flat and sym
* PSIS and iliac crest level
* knees leevl
* achilles vertical and sym

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11
Q

Lateral view posture eval?

A

LOG passes:
* anterior portion of head/face (through auditory meatus)
* Posterior to cervical and lumbar spine
* anterior to T-spine and SI joints
* Post to acetabulofemoral jt
* anterior through knee joint
* anterior to latreal malleoulus

Observations:
* head and shoulder position
* spine curvature
* pelvic angle
* knee extenion angle

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12
Q

What are the malalignments of anterior view?

A
  • Pelvic tilt and rotation (view level of ASIS’s and illiac crests)
  • Genu valgum and varum: see what hits first
  • Patella alignment: alta, baja, squiniting, frog eyed
  • In-toing/out-toeing (Fick angle is normal, BUT toe-in is abnormal)
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13
Q

What are the malalignments of posterior view?

A
  • scoliosis (lateral shift of the trunk)
  • Cobb angle (draw a line through top and bottom of curve, create 90 angle and where the line intersects is the cob angle)
  • shoulder angle of the dominant arm is lower (weight of gravity and more strethed out bc of increased ROM)
  • Rearfoot valgus and varus
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14
Q

What are the malalignments of lateral view?

A
  • Genu recurvatum (hyperextenion, indicative of hypermobility)
  • forward head/rounded shoulders
  • hyperkyphosis (over-rounding of thoracic spine, mostly common at T spine. Can also cause a flatnes of lumbar spine)
  • Hyperlordosis: anteriorly roatted pelvis
  • Sway back: head forward, T spine posterior, L spine anterior, post pelvic rotation, ant pelvic shift, genu recurvatum (upper shifts back and lower shifts forwards)
  • Flat back (spine loses curvature)
  • Crossed syndromes: upper (neck and chest) or lower (hips and glutes)
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15
Q

Can you correct your posture?

A
  • Yes:
  • depends on: intent to change, instruction towards different strategies. experince with desired postire (biofeedback), enviromental influence (workplace home)
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