Clinical Reasoning Framework/Examination Framework/ Management Framework

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53 Terms

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biomedical model

model that focuses solely on biological factors; illness/pain caused by factors including injury, physiological state, pathogens (factors outside of patient control)

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diagnostic tests, medical diagnosis, medical treatment

3 biomedical model clinical phases

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diagnostic

during phase 1 of the biomedical model, _____ tests are ordered to identify cause of symptoms (low specificity --> some findings are common and do not necessarily mean pathology/pain.)

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diagnosis

during phase 2 of the biomedical model, a ____ is provided based on diagnostic test results (overdiagnosis, personify, psychological/existential burden)

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treatment

during phase 3 of the biomedical model, _____ is provided based on medical diagnosis (fix it narrative, overmedicalization)

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biopsychosocial

model that focuses making clinical decisions holistic. Includes biological, psychological, and social component

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Bio

part of biopsychosocial model that describes the cause of symptoms stemming from the functioning of the person's body (physiological pathology, biology, anatomy

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psycho

Part of biopsychosocial model that describes the thoughts, emotions, and behaviors that lead to disease. (lack of self control, emotional turmoil, negative thinking)

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Social

Part of biopsychosocial model that describes how different social factors influence health (socioeconomic status, culture, poverty, technology, religion)

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80

____% of factors affecting MSK recovery are outside of clinical care including environmental factors, health behaviors, and social/economical factors

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Social Determinants of Health

nonmedical factors that influence health; directly contribute to well-being, health behaviors, and lifestyle --> most powerful factors that influence recovery and prognosis

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severity

part of SINSS model; intensity of symptoms

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low

a pain rating of 0-3/10 is ____ severity

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moderate

a pain rating of 4-7/10 is ____ severity

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high

a pain rating of 8-10/10 is ____ severity

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irritability

part of SINSS model; amount of time or type of activity required to aggravate symptoms, amount/time or type of action it takes to ease symptoms, relationship between aggravating and easing factors

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nature

part of SINSS model; type of tissue involvement, mechanical basis for symptoms; includes hypothesis list, type of diagnosis (region specific, region non-specific, persisting pain, or red flag), pain mechanism, PDDM

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stage

part of SINSS model; duration of symptoms

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acute

stage of symptoms; <1 month

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subacute

stage of symptoms; 1-3 months

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chronic

stage of symptoms; >3 months

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acute on chronic

stage of symptoms; acute episode with chronic history of same symptoms

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subacute on chronic

stage of symptoms; subacute episode with chronic history of same symptoms

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stability

part of SINSS model; change in symptoms over time (getting better, getting worse, stable)

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hypothesis list, diagnosis type, pain mechanism, PDDM

What are the four components of nature in the SINSS model

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primary hypothesis

Hypothesis list; most likely diagnosis (never a red flag)

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secondary hypothesis

Hypothesis list; second most likely diagnosis, can be multiple (never a red flag)

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red flag hypothesis

Hypothesis list; can be multiple, ALWAYS prioritized (rule out first)

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clinical diagnosis

process of determining the CAUSE of a patient's symptoms; typically does NOT guide treatment

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classification system

process of organizing data into named categories; assists with making clinical decisions regarding patient management

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region specific, region non-specific, persisting pain, red flags

4 different types of diagnoses

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region specific disorder

type of diagnosis; <15% of patients present with this. There is a definitive mechanism of injury. Majority of clinical tests are designed to assess for this type of diagnosis (tendon strain/tear, ligament strain/tear, fracture, radiculopathy)

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region non-specific disorder

type of diagnosis; approx 65-80% of patients presenting to outpatient PT, mechanical symptoms that have no biological explanation (also called somatization) (non-specific low back pain, rotator cuff related shoulder pain, patellofemoral pain, intra-articular hip pain, somatic referred pain)

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persisting pain

type of diagnosis; not very common and difficult to treat; change in central nervous system due to prolonged pain (central sensitization, nociplastic pain, fibromyalgia, chronic regional pain syndrome

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nociceptive, neuropathic, nociplastic

3 pain mechanisms

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nociceptive pain

pain mechanism; results from stimulation of nociceptors, clear stimulus-response relationship, usually felt at or near the site of injury

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neuropathic pain

pain mechanism; lesion, disease, or irritation affecting the peripheral nervous system --> history of nerve injury, trauma, compression, inflammation or ischemia. Increases with activities that compress or stretch involved structures, patients report more persistent and severe symptoms

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nociplastic pain

pain from altered nociception despite no clear anatomical coorelation. Increased responsiveness of nociceptive neurons in the CNS. Persistent, spreading, worsening, unpredictable pain without a clear cause. Psychological factors are common (fear of pain/movement, pain catastrophizing)

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3 regional hypersensitivity

For something to be considered Nociplastic pain, patients should report pain of at least ___ months duration, report ____ pain rather than discrete pain distribution, pain that cannot be explained by nociceptive/neuropathic mechanisms, clinical signs of ______

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nociceptive, nervous system, comorbidity, cognitive-emotional, contextual

5 drivers of pain

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nociceptive

driver of pain; non-specific deconditioning, structural stability deficits (assess symptom modulation, movement control, mobility and pain)

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Nervous system

driver of pain; neurogenic or neuropathic; hyperalgesia, allodynia, central sensitization (test radicular pain pattern, signs of radiculopathy, signs of myelopathy

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comorbidity

driver of pain; co-morbid mental health disorders, sleep disturbances, DIAGNOSED mental health (test co-occuring painful MSK pathologies)

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cognitive-emotional

driver of pain; pain avoidance-behaviors like fear avoidance, mood, beliefs, undiagnosed mental health (test negative affect/mood, expectations, pain-related beliefs and cognitions, illness perception, self-efficacy, coping)

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contextual

driver of pain; poor attitudes of employer, family or health care professionals, low/non-access to care (test low RTW expectations, low job satisfaction/high job stress, perceptions of heavy work, high occupational demands)

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pain mechanism

What is primarily responsible for the patient's current pain presentation

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PDDM

what factors will primarily be driving this patients prognosis

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what is wrong with me, what can you do for me, what can I do for me, how long will this take

4 questions for patient education

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specific

Many PT interventions have non-_____ effects

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what are my options, what are possible benefits/harms, how likely are benefits/harms of each option to occur

three questions for shared decision making; after these, provide recommendation but ultimately allow patient to make final decision

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patient centered care, guideline concordant, patient experience/outcomes, cost effectiveness

4 components to value based care

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guideline concordant, integrated care

Implementation of clinical practice guidelines into practice

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best research evidence, clinical expertise, patient values/preferences

Three parts to EBP