Lab 3: LE HVLA/BLT Flashcards

1
Q

What is the HVLA for a Anterior Fibular Head?

A
  • Pt is supine with doc ipsilateral to dysf.
  • Thenar eminence of most lateral hand on anterolateral fibular head
  • Grasp foot with most medial hand, invert, IR, plantarflex the foot
  • Closepack the knee then slightly flex; thrust rapid knee extension with downward and medial thrust THROUGH fibular head
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2
Q

What is the HVLA for a Posterior Fibular Head; technique 1 (supine)?

A
  • Pt supine w/ doc contralateral to dysf.
  • Index finger of thrusting hand monitors fibular head with MCP
  • Opposite hand flexes hip and knee to 90° then everts, dorsiflexes and ER at the ankle
  • Thrust is anterior on fibular head while rapidly flexing the knee
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3
Q

What is the HVLA for a Posterior Fibular Head; technique 2 (prone)?

A
  • Pt is prone w/ knee flexed to 90° and doc contralateral to dysf.
  • MCP of cephalad index finger on posterior aspect of fibular head w/ hypothenar eminence on hamstrings (creates a “wedge”)
  • Externally rotate tib-fib complex
  • Thrust further flexion of knee
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4
Q

What is the HVLA for an ankle inversion and eversion?

A
  • Pt supine w/ doc at foot of table
  • One hand on calcaneus, other on dorsum of foot
  • Thrust for inversion SD: caudad traction with hypereversion of the ankle
  • Thrust for eversion SD: caudad traction with hyperinversion of the ankle
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5
Q

What is the HVLA for a plantarflexed talus?

A
  • Pt is supine w/ doc at foot of table
  • Fingrs interlace on the dorsum of the foot, thumbs on the ball of the foot
  • Traction with dorsiflexion
  • Thurst = tractional with increased dorsiflexion
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6
Q

What is the HVLA for Metatarsal Dysfunction?

A
  • Pt is supine w/ doc ipsilateral to dysfunction
  • Thumbs placed over the distal end of the metatarsal and proximal end of the first phalanx
  • Thurst downward through the thumb (separates the joint)
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7
Q

What is the “Hiss Whip” technique for cuboid, navicular dysfunctions?

A
  • Pt prone with hip and knee of affected leg at edge of table, doc at the foot of table
  • Both thumbs over plantar surface of affected structure with fingers on dorsum of foot
  • Slightly abduct patients LE off the table and flex the knee
  • Thrust downward through thumbs with a “whip-like” motion ankle and knee
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8
Q

What is the HVLA for a transtarsal dysfunction (both plantar cuboid and plantar navicular SD)?

A
  • Pt supine with knee flexed, abducted, and ER. Doc ipsilateral to dysf
  • Cephalad thenar eminence over calcaneus and caudad hand over 1st metatarsal and talus
  • Thrust: rotational with caudad hand and simultaneosuly downward THROUGH the calcaneus
  • For plantar cuboid SD —> Invert forefoot
  • For plantar navicular SD —> Evert forefoot
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9
Q

What is the BLT for a Posterior Fibular Head?

A
  • Pt supine with doc ipsilateral to dysf.
  • Thumb of cephalad hand on the superolateral aspect of the fibular head
  • Caudad hand inferior to the distal fibula
  • Thumb on fibular head applies pressure straight towards the foot while caudad hand inverts the foot to point of BLT
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10
Q

What is the BLT for Femorotibial (knee) dysf (cruciate ligaments)?

A
  • Pt supine w/ doc ipsilateral to dysf.
  • Cephalad palm over anterior femur w/ caudad palm over tibial tuberosity
  • Lean onto the pt’s leg w/ posterior force and approximate femur and tibia with a compressive force
  • Induce internal or external rotation to obtain BLT
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11
Q

What is the “Boot-Jack” technique?

A
  • Pt supine w/ knee under physicians axilla. Doc ipsilateral to dysf.
  • Medial hand holds calcaneus w/ thumb and index finger
  • Fingers of lateral hand wrap around the medial foot
  • Elbow on medial aspect of knee creates a fulcrum with proximal pressure
  • Doc leans back inducing further flexion of hip and knee while distracting the calcaneus from the talus
  • Induce slight plantar flexion to obtain BLT
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12
Q

What is the Cuneiform and Metatarsal BLT?

A
  • Pt supine w/ doc at foot of table
  • Thumbs on dorsum of distal metatarsal and fingers on plantar aspect of foot
  • Press thumbs down toward the metatarsals until reaching BLT
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