Intro to Counterstrain Flashcards

1
Q

Trigger or tender

characteristic pain pattern

A

trigger

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2
Q

trigger or tender

no characteristic pain pattern

A

tender

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3
Q

trigger or tender

located in muscle tissue only

A

trigger

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4
Q

trigger or tender

located in muscle, tendons, ligaments, and fascia

A

tender

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5
Q

trigger or tender

locally tender

A

both

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6
Q

trigger or tender

elicits a jump sign when pressed

A

both

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7
Q

trigger or tender

radiating pain pattern

A

trigger

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8
Q

trigger or tender

no radiating pain pattern

A

tender

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9
Q

trigger or tender

elicits twitch response with snapping palpation

A

trigger

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10
Q

trigger or tender

no twitch response

A

tender

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11
Q

trigger or tender

dermogrpahia of skin overp oint

A

trigger

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12
Q

trigger or tender

dermographia of skin not present

A

tender

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13
Q

a tissue is strained leading to recruitment of pain receptors within that tissue that respond by reflexive contraction. which pain model

A

nociceptive

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14
Q

MoA of counterstrain in which excessive stretch of primary spindle induces protective contraction of extrafusal fibers

A

proprioceptive

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15
Q

counterstrain theory in which agonist is shortened in response to strain

A

nociceptor

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16
Q

countesrtrain theory in which the antagonist muscle is shortened

A

proprioceptive

17
Q

four phases of counterstrain

A

relaxation
reset fo spindle fibers and nociceptors
washout
slow return to neutral

18
Q

phase of counterstrain in which the affected tissue is shortened in three plaines

A

relaxation

19
Q

phase of counterstrain where the primary and secondary endings of muscle spindle stretch receptors (but not golgi tendon organs) are reset

A

spindle reset

20
Q

when does metabolic washout begin to occur

A

10-15 seconds after optimal position is achieved

21
Q

when does peak washout occur

A

approximately 1 minute

22
Q

why do we slowly return to normal in counterstrain?

A

a rapid return could reactivate spindle cell activity

23
Q

where can tender points be found

A

where motor nerve pierces investing fascia and enters the muscle
tendons, ligaments, fascia, muscle bellies

24
Q

where do you document counterstrain

A

in objective

usually abbreviated

25
Q

what is the limit to the amount of counterstrain points you should treat in one day

A

no more than 6 per day

26
Q

absolute contraindications for counterstrain

A

trauma
severe illness with positional restrictions
instability of treatment area
vascular/ neurolgic syndromes that compromise these areas
severe degernative spondylosis

27
Q

relative contraindications to counterstrain

A

patient cannot voluntarily relax
pt cannot discern level of pain or its change in secondary positioning
pt who cannot understand the instructions
pt with underlying conditions in whom positioning exacerbates the underlying conditions

28
Q

benefits of counterstrain

A

passive, indirect technique
can be used in patients with severe osteoporosis, metastatic bone disease and acute injuries
only abosulte requirement is pt must be able and willign to relax