Physical Therapy Management of the Patient with LE Amputation

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/101

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

102 Terms

1
New cards

negative mold

casted by a certified prosthetist to replicate the remaining limb; this impression of the body part will later be used to build positive mold that will serve as the guide for the prosthetic device

2
New cards

20%

Job outlook for orthotists and prosthetists projected to grow ___% by 2028, much faster than other occupations.

3
New cards

185,000

How many new amputees per year?

4
New cards

74%

___% of all amputations occur due to disease.

5
New cards

23%

____% of all amputations occur due to injury.

6
New cards

54%

What percentage of amputations are below the knee?

7
New cards

37%

What percentage of amputations are above the knee?

8
New cards

7%

What percentage of amputations involve the arm?

9
New cards

8%

What percentage of amputations occur due to birth defects?

10
New cards

peripheral vascular disease

What is the number one reason for an amputation?

11
New cards

51%

What percentage of amputations are caused by peripheral vascular disease?

12
New cards

trauma

What is the second-most reason for amputations?

13
New cards

41%

What percentage of amputations are due to trauma?

14
New cards

birth defects/congenital disease

What is the third-most cause of amputations?

15
New cards

10

1 in ___ people have diabetes.

16
New cards

3

More than 1 in ___ adults have prediabetes.

17
New cards

60%

Risk of death for adults with diabetes is ___% higher than those without diabetes.

18
New cards

24%

The number of amputations caused by diabetes increased by ___% from 1988 to 2009.

19
New cards

19%, 4.2%

Diabetics represent ___% of total healthcare costs, but they represent only ___% of the total population.

20
New cards

a

This age group of persons living with limb loss has a frequency of 70,000.

a. <18 years

b. 18-44 years

c. 45-64 years

d. 65-74 years

e. 75+ years

21
New cards

b

This age group of persons living with limb loss has a frequency of 293,000.

a. <18 years

b. 18-44 years

c. 45-64 years

d. 65-74 years

e. 75+ years

22
New cards

c

This age group of persons living with limb loss has a frequency of 305,000.

a. <18 years

b. 18-44 years

c. 45-64 years

d. 65-74 years

e. 75+ years

23
New cards

d

This age group of persons living with limb loss has a frequency of 395,000.

a. <18 years

b. 18-44 years

c. 45-64 years

d. 65-74 years

e. 75+ years

24
New cards

e

This age group of persons living with limb loss has a frequency of 223,000.

a. <18 years

b. 18-44 years

c. 45-64 years

d. 65-74 years

e. 75+ years

25
New cards

males

There are more MALES/FEMALES living with limb loss.

26
New cards

white

There are more WHITE/AFRICAN Americans living with limb loss.

27
New cards

falls

What is the leading cause of death in older adults?

28
New cards

partial

levels of amputation nomenclature; only for hand and foot

29
New cards

trans

levels of amputation nomenclature; through the long bone

30
New cards

disarticulation

levels of amputation nomenclature; through the joint itself

31
New cards

tissue viability (wound healing), potential for function, prosthetic issues, cosmesis

What are the four things that surgeons base their amputation level selection on?

32
New cards

partial foot

levels of LE amputations; toe, transmetatarsal, Lisfranc, Chopart

33
New cards

ankle disarticulation

levels of LE amputations; first described by Syme in 1843; only tibia and fibula left, amputation of foot at ankle, malleoli removed, calcaneal fat pad retained

34
New cards

Chopart

disarticulation at midtarsal joint leaving calcaneus and talus

35
New cards

Lisfranc

between tarsals and metatarsals

36
New cards

transtibial (BKA)

levels of LE amputations; known as below the knee; retain knee joint, tibia and fibula transected

37
New cards

knee disarticulation

levels of LE amputations; through knee joint, femur in tact

38
New cards

transfemoral (AKA)

levels of LE amputations; also known as above the knee; retain hip joint, femur transected

39
New cards

hip disarticulation

levels of LE amputations; through hip joint, pelvis in tact

40
New cards

transpelvic/hemipelvectomy

levels of LE amputations; resection of lower 1/2 of pelvis; ex: land mine incident

41
New cards

translumbar/hemicorporectomy

levels of LE amputations; amputation of both LE's, pelvis and below L4-L5 level

42
New cards

myofascial

muscle stabilization; muscle to fascia, minimal stabilization

43
New cards

myoplasty

muscle stabilization; muscle to muscle; ex: transfemoral pulls hamstrings and quadriceps

44
New cards

myodesis

muscle stabilization; muscle to bone; good stabilization

45
New cards

tenodesis

muscle stabilization; muscle to tendon OR tendon to tendon OR tendon to bone; distal attachment of severed tendon and best method of stabilizing muscle; ex: usually only done with disarticulation

46
New cards

skin flap

soft tissue covering end of the bone where the tissue came from

47
New cards

anterior flap

surgical process; posterior incision

48
New cards

posterior flap

surgical process; anterior incision

49
New cards

fish mouth (equal length)

surgical process; incision distal end

50
New cards

closure

the primary intension of surgery

51
New cards

bone bridging (Ertl Procedure)

popularized by surgeon ERTL; osteomyoplastic amputation surgery using a bone graft that bridges tibia and fibula to create bony bridge; in theory, it accomplishes better weight bearing surface, prevents scissoring of tibia and fibula, and closes medullary canal

52
New cards

fibula

A modification of the ERTL procedure uses the TIBIA/FIBULA as a bridge.

53
New cards

hip, knee

In a pre-amputation home program, it is important to maximize LE ROM, specifically in ____ and ____ extension.

54
New cards

gluteus maximus, gluteus medius

For a transfemoral patient, it is important to strengthen what two muscles?

55
New cards

quadriceps, hamstrings, gluteus maximus

For a transtibial patient, it is important to strengthen what three muscles?

56
New cards

abdominals

What other muscle group outside of the LE is important to strengthen for both transfemoral and transtibial patients?

57
New cards

bridging

What is the most important exercise for patients with LE amputation?

58
New cards

50-75%

Ambulation with a prosthetic will demand ___-___% increase in energy expenditure.

59
New cards

4-6

stages; acute hospital post-operative care for __-__ days.

60
New cards

4-8

stages; immediate post acute begins with hospital discharge and extends __-__ weeks

61
New cards

immediate recovery

stages; starts from healing of wound to "preparatory" or first prosthesis

62
New cards

transition to stable

stages; transitioning from preparatory to definitive prosthesis and moving toward higher functioning

63
New cards

stable

stages; limb volume level stable and definitive fitting

64
New cards

12-18

The time needed to progress through the stages of rehabilitation after an amputation is usually about __-__ months.

65
New cards

pneumonia, DVT, MI, skin breakdown, contractures

List five complications from surgery that PT can help prevent?

66
New cards

2-5 minutes, 3-4

treatment plan; massage and tapping (duration, times per day)

67
New cards

2-5 minutes, 1-2

treatment plan; desensitization (duration, times per day)

68
New cards

1-2 minutes, 1

treatment plan; scar mobilization (duration, times per day)

69
New cards

emotional support

post-op and pre-prosthetic interventions; recognize each person is unique in adaptation to adjustment; may need referral to a social worker, psychologist, peer visit with another person with amputation; support group

70
New cards

soft

post-op dressings; least compression; frequent reapplication; wrapping skill necessary; easy access to wound; inexpensive and lightweight; readily available; example = ACE wrap, shrinkers

71
New cards

4 hours

How often do ACE wraps have to be reapplied?

72
New cards

semi-rigid

post-op dressings; better control of edema than soft dressing; can loosen; hot, humid, bulky, heavy; wound access limited; skill to apply; example = Unna's dressing, air splint

73
New cards

rigid

post-op dressings; most compression and best edema control; example = plaster of Paris socket but not adjustable or removable IPOP but has many disadvantages

74
New cards

prevent hip and knee flexion contractures

What is the goal of patient positioning?

75
New cards

3 minutes, 1

recommendation for lying flat in bed to prevent contractures? (duration, times per day)

76
New cards

initial balance

pre-gait training program; goal is to maintain midline trunk orientation, use mirror, Balance Master or Wii Fit

77
New cards

weight shifting

pre-gait training program; goal = hips and shoulders should move symmetrically

78
New cards

stool stepping

advanced stance control activities; emphasize control of hip and knee of prosthetic side and smooth weight shift to prosthesis

79
New cards

proprioception training

teaches where the foot is in space; start walking rails, proceed to holding onto a chair, graduate to free standing

80
New cards

pre-gait

initial balance training, weight shifting exercises, sound limb stepping, prosthetic limb stepping are considered PRE/POST-GAIT training.

81
New cards

true

T/F: Patient can progress outside of parallel bars if they are able to shift weight A/P, R/L without deviations.

82
New cards

false

T/F: Patient can progress outside of parallel bars if they are able to step backward with sound limb and shift weight adequately onto prosthesis without deviations.

83
New cards

false

T/F: Patient can progress outside of parallel bars if they are able to step forward with prosthetic limb using trunk deviations rather than rotation of hip flexors.

84
New cards

true

T/F: Patient can progress outside of parallel bars if they are able to walk length of parallel bars with flat hands on bars without deviations.

85
New cards

sound/prosthetic limb stepping

pre-gait training program; therapist observes forward pelvic rotation, knee flexion, ankle movement, stride length and foot placement

86
New cards

resisted gait training

gait training; PT observes pelvic rotation, hip/knee flexion, BOS, lateral trunk leaning, stance time, stride length,

87
New cards

resisted trunk rotation

fine tuning gait training; PT observes gait biomechanics, trunk rotation is occurring, avoid lateral trunk lean

88
New cards

unassisted ambulation

gait training; PT observes trunk rotation, lateral trunk lean, pelvic rotation, pelvis dip, hip/knee flexion, prosthetic stance time, BOS, stride length, speed of sound limb

89
New cards

immediate post-operative prosthesis (IPOP)

eliminates contracture potential, reduces time to fitting of preparatory prosthesis, restricted use on vascular or diabetic patient due to skin abrasion and inability to monitor the residual limb; example of a rigid dressing

90
New cards

ampushield RRD

rigid removable dressing; can accomplish goals = protection, compression, contracture prevention, reduce pain

91
New cards

75%

Up to ___% of new amputees fall prior to receiving prosthesis resulting in prolonged wound healing, revision surgeries, higher level amputations with reduced mobility potential.

92
New cards

surgical

type of pain; pain from the surgery itself treat as with any post-op pain; local, diminishes over time, residual limb massage

93
New cards

exostosis

overgrowth of cartilaginous tissue on a bone; seen at the cut end of a bone; may occur at area of retracted muscle; causes painful areas unable to tolerate any contact; may require removal for successful prosthetic use

94
New cards

neuroma

type of pain; neuropathic pain originating from severed peripheral nerves; focal point/palpable mass where pain can be reproduced especially if close to bone

95
New cards

phantom

type of pain; pain in a limb that has been amputated; may originate from cerebellum; incidence varies from 10-85% (persistent 10-15%); higher incidence in those with significant pre-operative pain; dull, aching, stabbing, knife-like, sharp, squeezing, shooting, burning, cramping, pre-op

96
New cards

phantom limb

non-painful sensations of limb that is no longer there; feeling in the part of the body that is missing; 90% of patients report this; due to cortical sensory illusions

97
New cards

cylindrical

What is the ideal shape of a residual limb?

98
New cards

K0

K Scale of Functional levels; no potential for use of prosthesis

99
New cards

K1

K Scale of Functional levels; potential for use of prosthesis for transfers or limited ambulation at fixed speed on level surfaces

100
New cards

K2

K Scale of Functional levels; potential to ambulate on low level environmental barriers: limited community ambulator