Range of Motion and Measurements Flashcards

1
Q

Impaired and altered function of related components of the somatic (body framework)system: skeletal, arthrodial, and myofascial structures, and related vascular, lymphatic, and neural elements

A

Somatic dysfunction

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2
Q

Fractures, sprains, inflammatory processes

A

somatic lesions (can’t be treated with OMT)

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3
Q

TART

A

T-tissue texture changes
A-asymmetry
R- restriction of motion
T-tenderness

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4
Q

2 types of ROM

A

Active (pt. demos) & Passive (examiner guides pt. thru)

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5
Q

Which range of motion is greater?

A

Passive

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6
Q

3 cardinal planes?

A

Sagittal, frontal (coronal), horizontal (transverse)

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7
Q

3 types of joints?

A

fibrous-skull articulations
cartilaginous-discs between vertebrae
synovial-extremities

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8
Q

What kinds of joints do most of body motion?

A

synovial and cartilaginous joints

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9
Q

Gross vs Segmental Motion?

A

Gross: Cervical spine
Segmental: C7 on T1

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10
Q

limit of motion imposed by anatomic structure; limit of passive motion

A

anatomic barrier

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11
Q

limit of active motion

A

physiologic

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12
Q

range between the physiologic and anatomic barrier of motion in which passive ligamentous stretching occurs before tissue disruption

A

elastic

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13
Q

permanant restriction of joint motion associated with pathologic change of tissues

A

pathologic

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14
Q

functional limit with the anatomic ROM, which abnormally diminishes the normal physiologic range

A

restrictive

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15
Q

motion has what 3 qualities?

A

direction, range, and quality

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16
Q

elastic end feel

A

normal

17
Q

abrupt end feel

A

osteoarthritis

18
Q

hard end feel

A

somatic dysfunction

19
Q

empty end feel

A

stop due to pain

20
Q

crisp end feel

A

involuntary muscle guarding

21
Q

rubbery or bouncy end feel

A

viscerosomatic reflex: pain moves to chest wall, kicks on sympathetics; (Example: Hx of GERD: T5-9)

22
Q

firm end feel

A

microtrauma (ex overuse)

23
Q

sloppy end feel

A

ligamentous laxity

24
Q

Two types of flexibility

A

Static and dynamic

25
Q

maximal ROM a joint can achieve with an externally applied force

A

static flexibility

26
Q

ROM an athlete can produce and speed at which they can produce it

A

dynamic flexibility

27
Q

physical measurement of reduced ROM of a joint or group of joints

A

stiffness

28
Q

relationship of joint mechanics with surrounding structures

A

linkage; linking together will increase ROM

29
Q

device used for actual measurement of ROM

A

goniometer

30
Q

extended anatomic position when doing measurements

A

zero starting position

31
Q

part of spine with greatest ROM?

A

cervical spine

32
Q

2 vertebrae, the associated disc, neuromuscular, and other soft tissues

A

functional unit

33
Q

passive rotation of cervical spine

A

70-90 deg each way

34
Q

whole rotation motion of cervical spine

A

140-180 deg

35
Q

passive side bending of cervical spine

A

20-45 deg each way

36
Q

whole side bending of cervical spine

A

40-90 deg

37
Q

flexion of cervical spine: chin to chest

A

45-90 deg

38
Q

extension of cervical spine

A

45-90 deg

39
Q

whole motion flex/ext of cervical spine

A

90-180 deg