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purpose of spinal column
1) protect the spinal cord, nerve roots, and body organs
2) allow for upright posture and maintain balance
3) provide motion
anatomy of the cervical spine
seven vertebrae - lordosis
- C1 = atlas
- C2 = axis
anatomy of the thoracic spine
twelve vertebrae - kyphosis
- ribs (10 attached, 2 floating)
- vertebral bodies are wedge shaped
anatomy of the lumbar spine
five vertebrae - lordosis
- best at flexion/extension
anatomy of the sacrum
five vertebrae
- coccyx right below
which mammal doesn't have seven cervical vertebra?
manatees
vertebral body
anterior of spinal cord, shock absorbing (compressive force)
vertebral arch
posterior of spinal cord, articulating
transverse process
lateral projections on both sides of the vertebral arch
spinous process
posterior projection of a vertebra
pedicle
body --> transverse process
laminae
transverse process --> spinous process
vertebral foramen
spinal cord runs here
atlas and axis articulation
half of the rotation of the cervical spine occurs here
function of the cervical spine
1) support the axial load of the head
2) keep the head upright
3) allow mobility of the head
which cervical vertebrae is most prominent?
C7
osteoarthritis of the spine
loss of disc height affects the alignment of the facet joints
- causes bone spurs/the development of arthritis
stenosis
narrowing of vertebral canal
- symptoms are worse because impingement is of spinal cord, not a "pinched" nerve root
unilateral
outside spine
bilateral
inside spine
what movement is limited by the ribs?
lateral bending
scoliosis (adolescent idiopathic scoliosis)
frontal plane S or C curve in the thoracic/lumbar spine
- paired with transverse plane rotation of the vertebrae causing the ribs to rotate as well
- >18°
- measured using Cobb angle (magnitude)
what two things affect the severity of scoliosis?
1) age of patient
2) double curves
compression factures of the spine
compressive load fractures the anterior aspect of the vertebral body
- bone is good in compression, but not as good when it is unevenly distributed
- common in people with osteoporosis
intervertebral discs
"jelly filled doughnut"
made up of annulus fibrosus and nucleus pulposis
- treatment = spine extension
annulus fibrosus
layers of fibrocartilage that are angled (cross hatched)
- only the outer edge has blood supply
nucleus pulposis
squishes throughout the day due to compression
- toothpaste consistency
- mostly water
- decreases with age
"slipped disc"
nucleus pulposis bulges posteriorly
- occurs due to forward flexion (bending forward, coughing)
why is the spine curved?
- shock absorption
- balance
- flexibility
- evenly distributed body weight
kyphosis
concave towards anterior
- hunching
lordosis
concave towards posterior
- arching
normal cervical lordosis
30-40°
normal thoracic kyphosis
20-40°
normal lumbar lordosis
20-45°
cause of excessive lumbar lordosis
usually due to weak abdominal muscles or tight hip flexors
Thomas test
assesses tight hip flexors
- hip should be parallel to the floor
- if hip is flexed and knee is straight, the hip/quadriceps are tight
- if hip is abducted, IT band tight
steps to using a goniometer
1) align the center of the goniometer with the center of the joint
2) hold the stationary arm along the non moving joint segment (usually proximal)
3) move the joint through it's range of motion, and align the moving arm with the moving segment (usually distal)
four functions of the foot/ankle
1) weight bearing
2) adapt to ground reaction force
3) accommodate terrain
4) provide balance
three points of contact of the foot
1) first metatarsal head
2) fifth metatarsal head
3) heel
- creates stability
- most people naturally bear weight more through medial or lateral border
rearfoot
talus and calcaneus
midfoot
navicular, cuboid, and cuneiforms
forefoot
metatarsals and phalanges
three arches of the foot
1) medial longitudinal arch
2) lateral longitudinal arch
3) anterior transverse arch
medial longitudinal arch
an arch of the foot running from the heel to the base of the big toe on the inside of the foot
- high arch = rigid
- flat arch = flexible
best to be in between
lateral longitudinal arch
an arch of the foot running from the heel to the base of the pinky toe on the outside of the foot
- more prominent in people with high arches
anterior transverse arch (metatarsal arch)
the short lateral arch of the foot formed by the heads of the metatarsal bones
- collapse = pressure on metatarsal heads
ankle mortice (talocrural joint or tibio-talar joint)
primary responsibility is dorsiflexion and plantarflexion
- sagittal plane
subtalar joint
motion of the calcaneus underneath the talus producing inversion and eversion (frontal plane motions)
- joint axis at 45 degrees in the frontal and transverse planes
- in closed chain, calcaneus is locked to the ground and motion primarily occurs as the talus rolls over the calcaneus
- talus is also "rolling" through dorsiflexion and plantarflexion
pronation of the ankle
combined motion of eversion, abduction, and dorsiflexion
supination of the ankle
combined motion of inversion, adduction, and plantarflexion
pronation in weight bearing
relatively unstable, but making contact with the entire foot allows the foot to contour to what you're walking on
supination in weight bearing
more stable, but rigidity means it cannot adapt to the terrain as well
transverse tarsal joint
made up of calcaneal-cuboid joint and talonavicular joint
- allows the forefoot to rotate on the rear foot
- keeps the tarsals on the ground in weight bearing as twisting occurs at the subtalar joint
- inversion locks the transverse tarsal joints for push off
- eversion unlocks the tarsal joint so the foot can accommodate to the ground
great toe (hallucis)
most important toe for maintaining balance
- provides a lever for push off at the end of a step or during jumping/ running motions
hallux valgus
transverse plane deformity where the proximal phalanx migrates laterally with respect to metatarsal
- often happens in pronators
- flexor hallucis becomes an adductor
hallux rigidis
limited hyperextension of MTP joint
- can't "roll over" the big toe
- impacts normal walking and running
- increased pressure, risk for callusing/skin break down
- can lead to pain and disability
plantar aponeurosis
thick, deep layer of the plantar fascia that attaches on the plantar surface of the calcaneus
- has some extensions proximal to connective tissue surrounding Achilles' tendon
- is stretched during dorsiflexion of the ankle and hyperextension of the toes
- has incredible tensile strength
plantar fasciitis
typically pain at the arch closest to the heel (insertion)
- more common with tight Achilles and high arches
pes cavus
increased medial longitudinal arch
calcaneal varus
calcaneus moves into varus position during weight bearing (usually rigid)
cavovarus deformity
pes cavus and calcaneal varus ("supination")
- more likely to report ankle pain
pes planus
a flattened or elongated medial longitudinal arch
calcaneal valgus
calcaneus moves into valgus position during weight bearing (usually flexible)
planovalgus deformity
pes planus and calcaneal valgus ("pronator")
- more likely to report knee pain
Feiss' line
a line running from the medial malleolus to the first metatarsal head
- marking where navicular falls compared to sitting or standing (navicular drop)
center of mass
single point of a body about which every particle of its mass is equally distributed
- the point at which the force of gravity may be considered to act
- approximately 1/2" anterior to S2
line of gravity
action line of the force of gravity, vertically acting on the center of mass
base of support
the area formed under the body by connecting with one continuous line all points in contact with the ground
balance
maintaining the line of gravity within the base of support
ground reaction force (GRF)
the forces that act on the body as the result of its interaction within the ground
- equal and opposite in direction and magnitude to the force the body applies to the ground
ground reaction force vector
the vector representing ground reaction force
- where it passes in relation to the body indications what "moment" will occur at that joint
what must happen for a weight bearing joint to be stable or in equilibrium?
the ground reaction force must fall exactly through the AXIS OF ROTATION, or else there must be a muscular force to counteract the moment caused by gravity
posture
the relative arrangement of body segments
- the alignment of body parts whether upright, sitting, or recumbent
- assessment of body position and the long-term repetitive and static forces acting on the body
- middle 50% of available range is the safest
vertebral load
distance from center of rotation of segment to the load
- weight of segment + weight lifted
- body positioning
correct posture
position that minimizes stress to each joint
- mechanical stress
- minimal muscle activity needed to maintain
- within mid-range of motion
best performance
- efficiency of respiration
- decreased pain
faulty posture
position that increases stress to joints
- extremes of motion
causes cumulative stresses that may result in pathology
- articulate cartilage wear, osteophytes
- soft tissue weakened, stretched, or tightened
what causes faulty posture?
1) anatomy, disease, or pathology
- osteoarthritis
2) positional
- habit
- social
- muscle imbalance or tightness
3) structural
- spinal fusion
posture observation
must observe all joints, in all three planes of motion (sagittal, frontal, transverse) and from all four sides (anterior, posterior, lateral)
anterior to ankle muscular response to line of gravity
stability provided by plantar flexors to counteract anterior rotation of tibia
anterior to knee muscular response to line of gravity
stability provided by the ACL, posterior capsule, with tension in the hamstrings and gastroc to prevent hyperextension
posterior to hip muscular response to line of gravity
posterior rotation controlled by hip flexors to prevent hyperextension
trunk muscular response to line of gravity
minimal muscle activity is required when line goes through center of lumbar and cervical vertebrae
ideal posture of the head
neutral, not tilted forward or backward
ideal posture of the C-spine
normal lordosis
ideal posture of the scapulae
flat against the upper back
ideal posture of the shoulders
not elevated or depressed (spine of scapula in line with T3)
ideal posture of the T-spine
normal kyphosis
ideal posture of the L-spine
normal lordosis
ideal posture of the pelvis
neutral (slight anterior pelvic tilt, not rotated to one side, not higher on one side)
ideal posture of the hip joints
neutral, no flexion or hyperextension, not abducted or adducted
ideal posture of the knee joints
neutral, no flexion or hyperextension, no genu valgum or varum
ideal posture of the ankle joints
neutral, tibia is vertical, no calcaneal valgum or varum
ideal posture of the toes
toe out - approximately 5-7° of external rotation
three common types of poor posture
1) kyphosis lordosis posture
2) flat back posture
3) sway back posture
- common in basketball players (tall people)
short/stiff muscles of kyphosis lordosis posture
- lumbar erector spinae (trunk extensors)
- hip flexors
- pectoralis major
- levator scapula
long/weak muscles of kyphosis lordosis posture
- abdominals
- lower cervical and upper thoracic erector spinae
- rhomboids
short/stiff muscles of flat back posture
- rectus abdominus
- hamstrings
- thoracic erector spinae
long/weak muscles of flat back posture
- lumbar extensors
- possibly hip flexors
short/stiff muscles of sway back posture
- upper abdominals
- hip extensors
- hamstrings
long/weak muscles of sway back posture
- lower abdominals
- lower thoracic extensors
- hip flexors