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posture
relative arrangement of parts of the body, position in which you hold your body
posture is often thought of as
static positioning - but involves coordinated action of many muscles to maintain stability
inactive posture
postures adopted during resting or sleeping, require little muscular activity
active posture
integrated action of many muscles required for active posture
static posture
how the body is positioned, aligned and maintained during certain positions like standing, sitting, kneeling
dynamic posture
the body or its segments are moving (walking, running, throwing, jumping, lifting) (AKA body mechanics)
traditional view of posture
ideal posture with "correct" and "incorrect"
studies about posture vary in stating
theres no link in posture and MSK pain, correcting posture does not alleviate chronic pain, etc.
emerging view of posture
beneficial to strive for postural variability, comofortable change posture and ability to adapt posture to a situation (next posture is best posture)
assessments necessary to determine the role of posture in body mechanics
body alignment, muscle strength, muscle length/flexibility and ROM
common PT goal for posture
adequate ROM and strength, but not excessive - attempt to restore their balance (patient specific)
posture is often the first assessment done following
subjective assessment
typical sequence of PT exam tests
subjective, posture, GAIT, ROM-strength, special tests
reasons why some have bad posture and no pain
variance in constancy of postural deviance, mobility deficits or advantages, motor control issues, etc.
postural dysfunction
chronic positioning of the spine/body in position that is unnatural or out of neutral position
postural dysfunction results in
joints, muscles, and vertebra in stressful positions
prolonged positioning increases load/stress on tissues, can lead to
imbalance, elongated/shortened tissues, stretch weakness, stiffness/weakness, microtrauma, difficulty digesting or breathing, urinary incontinence
potential causes of postural dysfunction
repetitive activities, sports, work stresses, physiological/age, medical/pathology, anything that can lead to asymmetry or muscular imbalance
if it is deemed a postural deficit is structural
it can be attributed to a bony cause - determine if PT can change this, or if there are accommodations that can be made to improve function
taking a "normal" postural assessment can be helpful for
describing asymmetries
ideal anterior/posterior plumb line
midway between heels, betweens LEs, midline of pelvic, spine, sternum and skull
ideal lateral plumb line
external auditory meatus, midway shoulder/acromion, lumbar vertebral bodies, through greater troch. of hip, slightly anterior to knee and lateral malleolus, calcaneocuboid joint
neutral position =
zero position
normal spinal curves for weightbearing
cervical lordosis (ant convex), thoracic kyphosis (ant concave), lumbar lordosis (ant convex)
neutral pelvis position
ASIS same horizontal plane, ASIS and pubic symphysis same vertical plane
describe any deviation from standard as
mild, moderate or significant
common methods for postural assessment
visual, photographs, posture grids, smartphone apps
forward head posture
head froward of shoulders, upper back increase kyphosis, cranial extension (to keep eyes up), neck and cranial extensors shorten (increased tone), neck and cranial flexors lengthen and weaken
upper crossed syndrome states what is weak
deep neck flexor and scapular stabilizers, retractors and depressors
upper crossed syndrome states what is unihibited/overactive
upper trap, levator scap, and pectoral group
pelvic crossed syndrome
low ASIS, high PSIS
what is lengthened and weak with pelvic crossed syndrome
abdominals, gluteals
what is tight with pelvic crossed syndrome
erector spinae, iliopsoas, and hamstrings
flat back posture
head forward, slightly extended, upper thoracic increased flexion, lower thoracic flattened, lumbar spine flattened, posterior pelvic tilt, hips slightly extended
sway back posture
head forward, C-spine slight extension, thoracic increased flexion, posterior displacement of upper trunk, flattened lumbar
kyphotic/lordotic posture
head forward, C-spine hyperextended, scapulae abducted (rounded shoulders), thoracic kyphosis increased, lumbar lordosis increased, anteriorly tilted pelvis, hips slightly flexed, knees potentially hyperextended, ankles slight relative PF
likely muscle imbalances with kyphotic/lordotic posture
weak deep neck flexors, abdominals, glute max, and long thoracic extensors, tightened upper trap, levator scap, iliopsoas, erector spinae, lumbar extensors
methods to measure resting scapular position
use scapular landmarks - inferior/superior angles, spine of scap
postural assessment views
anterior, posterior and lateral (start at the feet and work upwards)
to standardize a posture assessment
have patient make a sandwich with one of your feet in the middle
inclinometers can
be used on small surfaces, good to measure cervical ROM (can meausre back ROM with 2 inclinometers)
smart phone apps as inclinometers have
good intra-rater reliability, low inter-rater reliability, good validity for frontal and sagittal plane