Exam Final Flashcards

0
Q

When Giles performed his study on the IVFs where did he measure the IVF?

A

On the medial border(which was smaller) and the nerve root-ganglion complex(which was larger)

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1
Q

When Crelin measured the IVFs in his study where did he measure?

A

Measured the lateral border of the IVF relative to the exiting spinal nerve

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2
Q

In regards to nerve impingement and IVF space what are the 3 main points that differ between crelin and giles?

A

Crelin-measured lateral border, x-section of nerve to IVF left 5-6x reserve space, distance of nerve to IVF never less thn 4mm
Giles- measured entire length of the interpedicular canal zone, x-section was a smaller reserve(3.3-4.6x), distance of nerve to IVF 0.4-0.9mm

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3
Q

What was Giles conclusion to his measurements revealing much smaller clearances?

A

“compressive irritation…may arise, especially should there be intervertebral disc and/or osteophytic projection into the intervertebral canals.”

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4
Q

Are subluxations likely to cause severe compression signs?

A

Very unlikely

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5
Q

A patient with nerve root compression(severe or mild) is this likely to do to a subluxation?

A

Neither are likely to be due to subluxations…keep looking for diagnoses

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6
Q

Is radiating pain due to irritated nerve roots?

A

Usually not and nerve tension tests with be negative

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7
Q

What is radiating pain usually due to?

A

Somatic referred phenomenon from irritated joint structures

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8
Q

What is palmers “too much nerve energy”?

A

May be increased action potentials from the irritated joints irritating the CNS

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9
Q

What are the symptoms of nerve root irritation?

A

Patients with dermatomal pain/paresthesia and positive nerve tension test

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10
Q

When thinking of nerve root irritation what are the first things that you should be thinking of?

A

chemical/mechanical irritation from- disc herniation osteophytes, stenosis, and tumors

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11
Q

When should subluxations and NR irritation be considered?

A

if other more probable diagnoses do not seem likely and subluxations are present, the the radicular syndrome may be associated with the subluxation

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12
Q

What are possible ways that a subluxation could cause NR irritation?

A

The joint dysfuntion may be associated with chemical irritatns from the discv,, from local inflammation(H+ ions), or nerve root adhesion

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13
Q

What is the differential diagnosis for radicular from deep referred pain? symptoms(from history)

A
Radicular-
Dermatomal pain 
Pain may be sharp or electrical
Dermatomal paresthesia
Reports of subjective numbness or weakness 
Deep referred-
Diffuse pain
less likely to cross the knee(elbow)
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14
Q

What is the DDX radicular from referred? signs(from physical)

A

Radicular-
Positive tension tests suggest NR irritation
Neurological deficits suggest compression/cell damage
Deep referred-
Negative tension tests
No neuro defiits

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15
Q

Thinking of the co activation model what does manipulation do?

A

It acts as a “counter-irritant” closing the pain gate

16
Q

When manipulation is acting as a counter irritant what is it ding?

A

It activates multiple pools of tissue r/c’s composed of both mechano and nociceptors which may help block central sensitization

17
Q

What are the 3 things that Wycke’s mechanreceptors do?

A
  1. Reflexogenic effects
  2. Postural effects
  3. Pain suppression
18
Q

What are the reflexogenic effects of Wycke’s receptors?

A

Project to fusimotor fibers(gamma system)
Affect muscle tone and stretch excitability
Affect muscle above, below, and contralaterally

19
Q

What are the postural effects of Wycke’s receptors?

A

Type1 mechanorecepetors project paracentral and parietal centers influencing postural and kinesthetic perception

20
Q

What is the pain suppression aspect of wycke’s mechanreceptors?

A

Stimulation of mechanoreceptors inhibit pain(phasic response)

21
Q

Observations have been recorded be EMG whee local muscular hypertonicity(spasm) in symptomatic patients was largely abolished immediately after an adjustment. Who made these observations?

A

Herzog

22
Q

What are teh hypothesis reached by Lehman, Vernon, and McGill?

A

manipulation may “interrupt the pain-spasm cycle by down-regulating the central sensitization”

23
Q

What was Korr’s hypothesis?

A
  • Manipulation causes a barrage of impulses from the muscle spindle afferents
  • Which inhibits the “gain” within the system, restoring it back to normal so the muscle was not so predisposed to spasm
  • This happens though an as yet undetermined pathway
24
Q

What was concluded from Wycke’s study on cats?

A

Distraction of the cervical facet joints in the cat produced simultaneous onset on EMG activity in selected forelimb muscle
-He attributes this to capsule mechanoreceptor reflex response

25
Q

What were the results of Herzogs study?

A

(As predicted) Adjustments produced EMG activity in targeted muscles. Slower impulses did not create this response

26
Q

What were the results of leiber’s study? Grade I vs. Grade IV mobilizations

A

Grade IV mobilizations resulted in an increase isometric strength of the lower traps compared to a grade I mobilization

27
Q

What were the results of Yery’s study with hip flexors?

A

There was a significant increase in hip flexor strength(14%) in the study group(grade IV mobilizations) based on 5 pre and post test isometric repetitions measured on an isokinetic machine

28
Q

What is Herzog’s speculation?

A

Adjusting appears to relax muscles and activate hypotonic muscle “converge to normal”

29
Q

What did sterling find with cervical spine mobilization?

A
  • Activated deep flexor activity

- Decreased SCM EMG activity

30
Q

What can poor proprioceptive information lead to?

A

faulty coordination and control

31
Q

What does dynamic loading require? Otherwise what results?

A

Good proprioceptive input and quick, coordinated muscle response
Injury

32
Q

What is Revel’s test?

A

The blinded person with a laser strapped to their head and pointing the laser at a target…repositioning errors are observed

33
Q

Where is the body are the highest density of mechanoreceptors?

A
  • Upper cervicals
  • Sacroiliac joints
  • Foot and ankle