Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
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Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
Chapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2ant to be aware, of any physical anomalies, morphologic changes, and fractures However, the first two cannot bit objectively established by physical examination, and the. last cannot always be identified with sufficient diagnostic certainty. Radiographs are therefore needed to provide definite answe Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2rs. they serve two puiposes they ptovrde either a sup plementary 01 a definitive contribution to the physical examination, and they explain its findinEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
gs.When requesting radiographs, it is important to be. able, to justify the request When interpreting rhe. radiographs, uniform catena should be used Chapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2the radiologist both desirable and necessary.Finally, although CT and MRl scans are too expensive for routine use, they can provide definite answers as to whether or not manual therapy 15 indicatedELECTRODIAGNOSTIC STUDIESElectrocardiograms, electroencephalograms, and electromyograms can be produced Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2 and interpreted only by the appropnate medical specialists Electromyography and ner/e conduction velocity studies can be an important adjunct to manuEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
al assessment and are sometimes necessary for differential diagnosisThe manual therapy examination may yield findings that suggest tissue biopsy wouldChapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2n cases where relative 01 absolute counterindications for manual therapy aie suspected, laboratoiy tests can often give a definitive answer. The results of any previous labora lory' tests should he taken into account, together with any treatment that was prescribed at the time, for example, insulin. Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2 anti hypertensives, or anticoagulants.OTHER SPECIAL MEDICAL I I S I SAn accurate diagnosis may not be possible without input from other medical speciEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
alties such as gymecology, rheuma tology. urology, ear, nose, and throat (ENT); internal medicine; and psychiatry tn manual diagnosis, the relationshiChapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2 a presenting predominant pain m another structure that is related to the same segment. It is important when examining the patient to identify which2312329 Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment Planningstructure IS the cause of the pathologic loop (pathogenetic sensitivity diagnosis; Gutmann. Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2 1970). lhe therapist must also pay attention to any pathology in secondary structures that arc related to the segment because these can continuouslyEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
reactivate the VICIOUS cycle. Internal medicine thus can contribute not only to diagnosis but also to therapy.OVERALL ASSESSMENTDunng this assessment,Chapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2nosisKINESIOLOGIC DIAGNOSISOnce the kinesiologic diagnosis has been made, die neat ment plan can be drawn up. This is followed by the first treatment session, which is regarded as a trial treatment.TRIAL TREATMENT1 he outcome of the trial treatment may lx- negative. Possible reasons for this include Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2 inaccurate diagnosis, failure Io choose the right therapy, or failure to administer It properly; under these circumstances, it may be necessary to reEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
start the diagnostic process, adjust the therapy, or improve on Its delivery. On the other hand, the outcome of the trial may be successful, in which Chapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2continual adjustment {luring the patient's recovery to take into account his or her changing condition.Chapter 10History and Examination: Practical ConsiderationsTERMINOLOGYFunctrono/ mechanism. Before describing in chapters 13 18 the. various regions of the spine and the temporomandibular joints, a Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2s well as the practical clinical examination pnxedurcs used in testing three-dimensional movement, we must look at the functional mechanisms (hat enabEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
le movement in the sagittal, frontal, and trans verse (cardinal) planes separately m the chapter section titled ’Functional Aspects." The reason for dChapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2al movement and the stresses It places on tissues The whole is mote than the sum of the pans and is different from it. Nevertheless, separate analyses ol the different cardinal plane movements and the stresses they place on different tissues can provide some insight—by extrapolation—into the mechani Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2sms and stresses involved in three-dimensional spinal movement.Order 0/ e.xamirưition. lhe general principle lor regional and segmental active-assisteEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
d examination is that three-dimensional movements involving sidebending and ipsilateral rotation are described before three-dimensional movements invoChapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2th regard to the Side or the direction of movement to be examined. During examination of three-dimensional function, theside to be examined is determined by the axial rotation componentIpsilateral, contralateral. I he.se terms refer to the positioning of the therapists hands m relation to the side o Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2r direction of movement to be examined. In this context, ipsilateral means on the side or in the direction of movement to be examined, and contralaterEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
al means the other side. During the examination of three dimensional function, the direction ol movement to be examined is determined by the axial rotChapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importa Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2 flexed position unless this is prevented by dysfunction of the lumbar spine.Therapist starting position. During examination of weight bearing three-dimensional lunction of the cervical, thoracic. and lumbar spine, the therapist stands at the side being examined; this is determined by the direction Ebook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2of rotation.Performance of examination. During weight-bearing three-dimensional examination of the lumbar spine, the patients center of gravity shouldEbook Orthopaedic manual therapy diagnosis: Part 2
remain as close as possible above the point of support.Chapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importaChapter 9Supplementary Data, Diagnosis, and Treatment PlanningRADIOGRAPID AND OTHER IMAGING STUDIESBIOPSYWhen making a manual diagnosis, ii is importaGọi ngay
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