Shakirkhan
Shakirkhan
Shakirkhan
Semester # 6th
Roll # 418
What is a Disability?
A disability is defined as a condition or function judged to be significantly impaired relative to the usual
standard of an individual or group. The term is used to refer to individual functioning, including physical
impairment, sensory impairment, cognitive impairment, intellectual impairment mental illness, and
various types of chronic disease.
Disabilities can affect people in different ways, even when one person has the same type of disability as
another person. Some disabilities may be hidden, known as invisible disability. There are many types of
disabilities, such as those that affect a person's:
Vision
Hearing
Thinking
Learning
Movement
Mental health
Remembering
Communicating
Social relationships
Fuctional disability:-
A functional concept of disability, defines a disability as any long-term limitation in activity resulting
from a condition or health problem. This is the World Health Organisation (WHO) definition and is the
recommended international standard for data collection on disability. The use of this standard ensures
that the results are comparable with those from other countries
2. Beneficence
3. Justice
Pain:-
2 Tendernes:-
(5) Antalgia:-
Antalgia from the Greek ‘away from’ and ‘pain’ is how your body tries to reduce the pain caused by
acute disc injury by leaning the spine away from the side of the injury.
Q 2 Explain closed pack postion of hip and knee specifiying bony and ligaments ?
Close pick position:-
The joint position in which articulating bones have their maximum area of contact with each other. It is
in this position that joint stability is greatest. The close-packed position for the knee, wrist, and
interphalangeal joints is at full extension, and for the ankle joint at full dorsiflexion.
Axes of motion
Arthrokinematics
Ligamentous restraint
AXES OF MOTION
JOINT
AXIS
MOTION
CLOSE-PACKED POSITION
hip
(iliofemoral)
lateral
flex/ext
AP
abd/add
longitudinal
ER/IR
vertical (mechanical) axis of hip: a line that connects femur's points of contact with acetabulum and tibia
(Kendall, McCreary, & Provance, 1993, p.230).
a rare transverse plane view that shows the hip's longitudinal axis
HIP ARTHROKINEMATICS
In an open chain, when the convex femoral head moves on a stationary acetabulum,
FLEXION
EXTENSION
ABDUCTION
ADDUCTION
LIGAMENTOUS RESTRAINT
LIGAMENT
Iliofemoral
Ischiofemoral
Pubofemoral
abduction and internal rotation
The majority of the three ligaments' fibers are elongated at the joint's close-packed position in
combined extension, internal rotation and abduction.
The close-packed position for the knee, wrist, and interphalangeal joints is at full extension, and for the
ankle joint at full dorsiflexion. Any movement away from the close-packed position takes a joint into the
loose-packed position in which the area of contact and joint stability is reduced.
Q 3 Define end feel ?what will be normal and abnormal end feel at major joints of lower limb and upper
limb ?
End feel:-
The end feel is a type of sensation or feeling which the examiner experienced when the joint is at the
end of its available passive range of motion.
120 degree
Hip extension
20 degree
Hip abduction
45 degree
Hip adduction
10 degree
40 degree
45 degree
Knee flexion
135 degree
Knee extension
0 degree
Talocrural dorsiflexion
20 degree
Talocrural planterflexion
50 degree
Tarsal inversion
35 degree
Tarsal eversion
15 degree
Shoulder flexion
180 degree
Shoulder extension
50 degree
Shoulder abduction
180 degree
Medial rotation
60 degree
Lateral rotation
90 degree
Elbow flexion
140 degree
Elbow extension
0 degree
Forearm supination
90 degree
Forearm pronation
90 degree
Wrist flexion
80 degree
Wrist extension
80 degree
Wrist abduction
20 degree
Wrist adduction
30 degree
Soft: Occurs sooner or later in the ROM than is usual or in a joint that Soft tissue edema normally has a
firm or hard end. Feels boggy, with a fluid shift.
Firm: Occurs sooner or later in the ROM than is usual, or in a joint that normally has a soft or hard end.
Hard: Occurs sooner or later in the ROM than is usual, or in a joint that normally has a soft or firm end. A
grating or bony block is felt]
Empty: No real end because pain prevents reaching the end of ROM.No resistance is felt except for the
patient’s protective muscle splinting or muscle spasm.
(i) Genu-vilgum:-
PYLE DISEASE
Pyle disease is a bone dysplasia characterised by genu valgum, metaphyseal anomalies with broadening
of the long bones extending into the diaphyses and giving the femora and tibiae an 'Erlenmeyer flask''
appearance, widening of the ribs and clavicles, platyspondyly and cortical thinning.
Related symptoms:
Scoliosis
Muscle weakness
Pain
Mandibular prognathia
If you have an anterior pelvic tilt you may notice that the muscles in the front of your pelvis and thighs
are tight, while the ones in the back are weak. Your gluteus and abdominal muscles may also be weak.
All of this can cause: lower back pain.
Foot drop is caused by weakness or paralysis of the muscles involved in lifting the front part of the foot.
Causes of foot drop might include:
Nerve injury. The most common cause of foot drop is compression of a nerve in your leg that controls
the muscles involved in lifting the foot (peroneal nerve). This nerve can also be injured during hip or
knee replacement surgery, which may cause foot drop.
A nerve root injury — "pinched nerve" — in the spine can also cause foot drop. People who have
diabetes are more susceptible to nerve disorders, which are associated with foot drop.
Muscle or nerve disorders. Various forms of muscular dystrophy, an inherited disease that causes
progressive muscle weakness, can contribute to foot drop. So can other disorders, such as polio or
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.
Brain and spinal cord disorders. Disorders that affect the spinal cord or brain — such as amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS), multiple sclerosis or stroke — may cause foot drop.
(iv) Torticollis:-
Torticollis is the tilt and/or rotation of the head because of tight and weak neck muscles. It occurs when
the muscle that runs up and toward the back of the neck (the sternocleidomastoid muscle) becomes
tight, weakened, or thickened.
Your hip flexor muscles work together to flex your hip joint, or to bring your knee toward your chest.
Your illiopsoas — the psoas major, psoas minor and iliacus — muscles are the major muscles involved in
hip flexion. When these muscles are injured or tight, they can be sensitive to incline walking.
Q 5 write the special test for following joints providing information about test ?
(i) Hip
(ii) knee
(iii) shoulder
Clinical Examination:-
( Vii)Thomas Test
(x)Fulcrum Test
(xii) Legg-Calve-Perthes_Disease
Procedures:-
Inspection:-
Skin
Soft Tissues
Bony
Gait
Varus thrust
Antalgic (painful)
Patella tracking
Bony
joint line
patella
translation
tibial tubercle
patellar tendon
quadriceps tendon
iliotibial band
collateral ligaments
popliteal fossa
Swelling
pre-patellar bursitis
intra-articular effusion
patella balloting
milking
traumatic hemarthrosis
Neurovascular:-
Motor
Sensory
Pulses
popliteal
dorsal pedis
posterior tibial
Reflexes
patellar (L4)
ROM:-
Flexion
125-135 deg
Extension
Special Tests:-
Collateral Ligaments
Lachman's Test
Steinmann's Test
McMurray's Test
Shoulder Exam:-
In examining a patient with a painful shoulder we should start with a general inspection, looking for
musculoskeletal abnormalities and any associated functional deficits. Then, we can carry on some
specialized tests that will help us uncover any lesions of the muscular or ligamentous structures of the
joint.
Inspection:-
The physical exam of the shoulder starts by observing the patient removing his or her shirt. This is our
first opportunity to notice any functional impairments of the shoulder joint.
General Inspection:-
Once the patient has uncovered the upper trunk and extremities we can move to a general inspection of
the front, the side and the back of each shoulder. Our goal is to identify any abnormalities in the muscle
bulk or any asymmetrical bony defects.
Before proceeding with the examination of the shoulder it is very important to complete a full
examination of the cervical spine to make sure that no spinal pathologies are contributing to the
presentation. We should at the very least check for cervical spinal tenderness, by palpating the cervical
spinous processes, and the range of motion of the neck in flexion, extension and rotation.
Range of Motion:-
We should then test the range of motion (ROM) of the shoulder in different directions. If movement in a
specific direction is painful or limited, this may signify that pathology is present in a specific structure of
the shoulder. For all these maneuvers, have the patient standing in front of you.
Forward Flexion:-
Starting with the patient having the forearm fully extended at the elbow with the arm attached to the
side of the trunk, ask the patient to flex the arm at the shoulder by moving the upper extremity
anteriorly and then superiorly, until it is above the head.
Abduction:-
Ask the patient to abduct both arms by elevating them laterally until they are above the head, at 180°.
Cross-body Adduction:-
Have the patient flexing the upper extremity forward to 90°. From this position, ask the patient to
maximally adduct the shoulder by moving the arm horizontally all the way to the other side. Make sure
to test one side at a time.
External Rotation:-
Ask the patient to flex the elbow at 90° with the arm attached to the trunk and the palms supinated.
Then have the patient externally rotate the shoulder by bringing the forearms laterally.
Extension:-
Starting with the patient having the forearm fully extended at the elbow and the palms supinated, ask
the patient to extend both arms at the shoulder by moving the upper extremities posteriorIy.
Internal Rotation:-
First ask the patient to flex the elbows at approximately 45° with the fists clenched and the thumbs up,
then ask to position both hands behind the back until the thumb touches the apex of the homolateral
shoulder. This maneuver tests for the functional integrity of the internal rotation of the shoulder.
Scapular Motion:-
Before completing the inspection of the shoulder it is good practice to repeat all the maneuvers that test
for range of motion while observing the movement of the scapulae. Any asymmetries in the rhytm of
scapular movement would indicate pathology in the anterior aspect of the shoulder.
Specialized Tests:-
Supraspinatus
Subscapularis
Serratus Anterior
Shoulder Impingement:-
Neer's Test
Hawkins-Kennedy Test.
Bonus question:-
Write how you will assess a patient when you are in clinical set up with justification of each setup to
be performed.The patient had major compalin of pain in lumber region radianting to legs.he has no
history of fall.
Answer:-
Assesment.
Ubaid is 32 year patient by occupation he is a weight lifter he come to clinic refer by nuro physisian with
complain of lower back pain mainly in lumber region.
In past medical history in xrays and mri finding L3,L4 disc compression because of that pain expand radiate till
lower limb.
Detail assesment:-
Rom
Muscle grading
Orthotic prescription:-
As orthotic prescription Lso or prefebricated lumber belt also advise to do phsiotheraphy traction and to
continue medicine as prescribe by neuro physician.
Thank you