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Low Back Surgery – Money For the Surgeon Or Help For the Patient?

Michael W. Page, D.C. | January 22, 2010

Years ago, I was an insurance adjuster. I handled claims for large farm labor companies in California and I was the worker’s compensation adjuster. When people were injured, they heard from me. I learned what happened and I paid them their disability benefits and also paid for all of their medical bills. I estimate that over the 3 1/2 years that I adjusted claims, I paid for at least 150 lower back disc surgeries. The average cost of these surgeries was $60,000. I would routinely authorize $10,000-$12,000 bills to be paid directly to the main surgeon. Some of these surgeries would last 3-4 hours and sometimes up to 8-10 hours. I had one surgeon who used to do 2 surgeries per day.

In order to perform 2 surgeries per day, office staff including nurse practitioners and physician assistants are the ones who see the patients before and after surgery. This kind of impersonal service is what is required to make $20,000 per day. At that rate, is the focus on the patient or finances of the office and surgeon?

Seeing dozens of patients with almost identical symptoms can lead a doctor who treat most of them quite similarly. Even though the surgeon has the best intentions, at the end of the day, most patients are treated similarly and often not given the individual attention they deserve. Attention must be paid to side effects, possible problems, and alternatives to such a drastic procedure as surgery.

As a result of seeing this kind of health care, I quite my job and went back to school to become a chiropractor with the aim and goal of helping people to avoid the disabling effects of failed lower back surgeries. Many never recover as promised and others are worse. Fortunately, there are a small minority who praise the surgery and report life-changing improvement. If only those numbers were higher. Unfortunately, well over 50% of all back surgeries end up as failed and lead to further problems.

A neurosurgeon once told me when I was an adjuster, that there is no such thing as a one-time surgery. All backs that undergo surgery will need further and additional surgery in the future as the operated zone of the spine becomes weakened and other areas around it are damaged over time. Thus, by doing one surgery, the surgeon is ensuring his future surgeries as most people go to the same surgeon again since the surgeon “knows my back.”

Over the past 10 years, I have helped literally hundreds avoid surgery, get out of pain, and heal their lower back pain and lumbar disc problems. Even if patients have been recommended for surgery, the majority have no fully tried alternative therapies like chiropractic to help them. Chiropractic and physical therapy can help the disc heal and if a herniation has occurred, even help it to heal and get the patient back to normal life.

The research and medical community knows that starting with the least invasive therapy first makes sense. It’s cost effective, has less side effects, and respects the best wishes of the patient. Chiropractic is gentle and has virtually no possible side effects in these types of cases.

Unfortunately, when you can make $20,000 per day the best interest of the patient and their health becomes blurred.

Discover how to avoid back surgery through natural means and avoid failed low back syndrome and catastrophic problems associated with surgery. If you’d like to learn more about how to avoid back surgery visit our website.

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Use Of The Aircast Cryocuff By Physiotherapists

Jonathan Blood Smyth | January 21, 2010

Physiotherapy management of knee injuries and knee operations requires a good way of applying cryotherapy to counter the swelling and pain involved. The Aircast Cryocuff gives physiotherapists this option as traditional ways of applying cold are clumsy and not very effective.

Sports and energetic activities cause large numbers of knee injuries which need prompt and appropriate treatments from physiotherapists for the best and speediest outcome. Physios manage a wide variety of knee injuries and conditions including: meniscal (cartilage) injuries, medial ligament injury, lateral ligament injury, anterior cruciate rupture, knee replacement, dislocation of the patella and more general injuries to the knee capsule.

The knee is a large, synovial hinge joint which is vulnerable to mechanical injury and when injured it reacts with an inflammatory process. This increases the blood supply and metabolic rate of the knee and the synovial lining starts to secrete synovial fluid, a process which forms a knee effusion. This is “water on the knee”, a swollen knee with synovial fluid making the knee painful and tight, which can interfere with normal functioning of the knee muscles and cause slow recovery of joint function.

Physiotherapy methods of cooling tissues usually have some disadvantages:

* Providing cold and compression at the same time is very difficult/impossible

* Most ice based methods do not cool the knee effectively

* An ice burn can occur with ice by cooling the skin too profoundly

* Long periods of cooling are difficult to maintain

* Patients have difficulties keeping the cooling going for any length of time

* Cooling cannot easily be done whilst mobilizing.

Physiotherapy treatment priorities have always tended towards cooling the area to reduce the swelling, but prevention of the effusion by early compression may be more important. However, physios do need to provide cooling along with the compression.

The Aircast Cryocuff

The Aircast Cryocuff is a cryotherapy and compression device, designed to be easy to use and to be portable, used in managing post-injury and post-operative inflammation in knees and other joints. The Cryocuff has three parts:

* The Reservoir. This cylindrical bucket is plastic with a lid, is stable, light and holds the water and ice needed for the cuff. Level indicators inside the bucket guide the physio to the correct mixture of cold water and ice. Once full the lid is screwed on the bucket is watertight and can be turned upside down or fall over onto its side without leakage.

* The Hose. The insulated hose has a clipping system which allows it to be attached to the cuff easily and cleanly.

* The Cuff. This is the business end of the device. It is a wraparound cuff designed to fit the contours of the knee and comes in three sizes.

Physiotherapy Use of the Cryocuff

The knee size of the patient 15 centimetres above the knee determines the size of the cuff needed and then the physio fits the cuff firmly to the patient’s knee with the Velcro. The cuff needs to be deflated and firmly attached to get the benefits of the compression, otherwise the cuff will inflate on the knee and but not squeeze the tissues.

Now the bucket is filled with cubed ice and cold water in the right proportions and the top screwed on firmly to prevent leakage. The hose is clipped to the cuff by pushing the connector into the cuff clip and then the bucket and hose assembly is held up above the knee, allowing the cold water to flow into the cuff by gravity. How high the physiotherapist holds the bucket and for how long has some effect on the tightness of the filled cuff.

The cuff stays cold for an hour or so and the patient can disconnect it from the hose and get on with normal life as able. To change the water the hose is reconnected to the cuff and the bucket put below cuff level to refill the bucket from the cuff, and then the bucket is turned over a few times to remix the water and ice. The process is repeated from the beginning, allowing the compression and cooling to be maintained continuously as the bucket water mixture remains cold enough for 6-8 hours before replenishment.

Jonathan Blood Smyth, editor of the Physiotherapy Site, writes articles about Physiotherapists, physiotherapy, physiotherapists in London, back pain, orthopaedic conditions, neck pain and injury management. Jonathan is a superintendant physiotherapist at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK.

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Gall Bladder Surgery or Cholecystectomy Surgery

Jonathan Blood Smyth | January 19, 2010

A rapid recovery from this operation is typical and patients are unlikely to experience any serious complications. Minor problems are very common after this intervention so patients should be aware of these as well about the more serious complications which occur much more rarely.

What is a Cholecystectomy?

The gall bladder is situated beneath the liver and holds bile in a small sac, bile which the liver secretes. Bile is releases in the gut to assist in the digestion of food fats whenever we have a meal. Gall stones can develop within the gallbladder and can be of various types and sizes. It is common for people in the middle of life or older to have gallstones which are not symptomatic and do not require surgery.

Gall bladder pain and inflammation can be the result of stones in some cases and stones may exit the gall bladder and lodge in the main bile duct which is the major connecting structure between the gall bladder and the liver. This can lead to jaundice, a yellow pigmentation of the skin, as the stones can block the bile duct and obstruct the flow of bile to the gut. This may be an example of where cholecystectomy may be necessary to correct the situation.

Is Cholecystectomy Harmful?

The gall bladder’s function is only to store bile so its removal allows patients to live an entirely normal life in its absence. Long-term complications should not occur after cholecystectomy.

How is a Cholecystectomy Performed?

The gall bladder can either be removed by laparoscopic (keyhole) surgery or by the traditional open operation. Almost all gall bladder operations are now performed laparoscopic ally but in some cases (approximately 5% or 1 in 20) the surgeon will decide at the time of the operation that is safer for the procedure to be completed by an open operation through an incision several inches long. This is most often necessary when the gall bladder is very stuck down with adhesions or too inflamed to allow it to be removed safely by the laparoscopic approach.

Even though laparoscopic cholecystectomy is the intended type of operation, patients should be aware that they may wake up to find that the surgeon had to convert the intended technique to an open operation.

Keyhole Surgery for Gall Bladder Removal

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy involves four small incisions through which special surgical instruments are passed into the body. The surgeon is able to see inside using an instrument called a laparoscope. This is a form of telescope with a powerful light to which a miniature video camera is attached. This projects a clear image onto a TV screen allowing the surgeon to see the inside the abdomen and to find and operate on the gall bladder.

Carbon dioxide gas is pumped into the abdomen to increase the viewable space for the surgeon. The laparoscope is introduced into the abdomen through an incision below the tummy button (umbilicus) and three small incisions are made on the right hand side under the ribcage for the other instruments to be used. The gallstones and the gallbladder are removed through the incision below the umbilicus.

Cholecystectomy via Open Operation

Removal of the gallbladder via open operation sometimes cannot be performed, meaning that an open operation will have to be done. The incision is about four to six inches long below the right cage to allow the surgeon to locate the gall bladder. Then the organ can be removed and a drain inserted to drain off any excess fluid from the abdomen.

Administering the Anaesthetic

The anaesthetic is usually administered by injecting it into one of the arm or hand veins. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy typically takes about an hour and a long-acting painkiller is placed in the wound sites to reduce the pain experienced by the patient when they come round.

To give some long acting pain relieving cover after the operation the surgeon may use a suppository in the rectum towards the end of the operation. For 6-8 hours before the operation patients are instructed not to eat anything, and not to drink for 2-3 hours prior to the event. Mobilisation of the patient can occur whenever they feel well enough to get up and about and with help initially.

Jonathan Blood Smyth, editor of the Physiotherapy Site, writes articles about Physiotherapist, back pain, orthopaedic conditions, neck pain, injury management and physiothrapists in Southampton. Jonathan is a superintendant physiotherapist at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK.

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Explanation Of The Wrist

Jonathan Blood Smyth | January 16, 2010

The wrist has a large, three hundred and sixty degree cone of movement facing forwards at the end of the arm, a consequence of the close arrangement of the small carpal bones. Group movements or individual ones between the bones can occur and this allows precise control of the hand, thumb and fingers. The rows are arranged irregularly but in general two of the bones line up with the end of each of the metacarpals. This allows the creation of a line of several joints leading to each finger which enables the separate and flexible movements of the hand.

The wrist joint is placed between the hand and the forearm bones and is made up of a group of eight small bones which occur in two rows with articulations on one side with the radius and ulna and on the other side with the metacarpals. The metacarpals, the long bones in the palm of the hand, run from the further row of carpal bones down to the knuckles where they join the fingers. The metacarpals are arranged in an almost parallel pattern and are long and slim bones, giving them the ability to rotate around each other to some degree and improve grip.The Human Wrist Joint

This tight grouping of carpal bones endows the wrist with a large range of movement of 360 degrees in a conical shape facing forward. They are able to make individual and group movements to improve the precise positioning of the hand, fingers and thumb. Even though the arrangement is a little untidy the two rows of bones do line up with more or less two bones at the end of each metacarpal separating this from the forearm. The large number of in-line joints created with this arrangement allows a high degree of adaptability and precision of movement.

The manoeuvrability of the thumb is one of the most amazing parts of the function of the hand. The “opposable thumb” that humans possess and which apes do not is one of the defining characteristics of precision movement and control. The metacarpal of the thumb on the outside of the hand is not inline with all the others but rotated inwards, having the ability to rotate further inwards to allow the end of the thumb to participate in grasping with one of the fingers. The thumb has a very specialised joint at the junction of the metacarpal and carpal, allowing the specialised movement.

The movements of the carpal bones can be in unison in small amounts as they move together to allow a movement to occur. As the hands move small amplitudes of movement occur between the individual carpal bones and the carpal rows. The metacarpals are able to rotate around their long axes which allows the palm to be curled into a cupped position. As the palm moulds round to assist gripping it also allows the fingers to align so that they can effectively grip at the correct angle. Any loss of the accessory movements of the carpals and metacarpals can reduce the ability of the hand to function adequately.

The heavy use of the hands in manual work such as lifting and moving large objects, manipulating heavy machines and pulling ropes can damage the function of the wrist. High mechanical forces are generated when the hand grips something hard, squeezing the wrist bones between the metacarpal bones and the radius and ulna of the forearm. This can allow a reduction of the accessory movements between the individual wrist bones. The lunate bone can be moved from its position with painful consequences if the wrist is extended with force.

A forced extension movement is most commonly caused by a fall on the outstretched hand (FOOSH), which if severe enough can cause a fracture of the end of the radius and ulna, a so-called Colles fracture. The major injury, typically seen in older women, is the fracture but the fall also sprains the wrist, causing significant soft tissue injury to the carpal region. The bones typically heal well in five to six weeks but the hand may be painful, weak and difficult to use for much longer, secondary to the disruption of the subtle relationship between the carpal bones.

Jonathan Blood Smyth, editor of the Physiotherapy Site, writes articles about Physiotherapist, back pain, orthopaedic conditions, neck pain, injury management and physiothrapists in Southampton. Jonathan is a superintendant physiotherapist at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK.

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Physiotherapy Management of Total Knee Replacement

Jonathan Blood Smyth | January 15, 2010

Osteoarthritis is the most common and disabling joint condition in the world, occurring significantly more for each decade of life that passes and being almost universal in old people. OA develops in many joints but large joint OA typically affects the knees and the hips, causing problems with mobility and independence. As the degenerative process proceeds the joint surfaces become roughened and cause loss of motion, crepitus, pain and loss of muscle strength. Conservative measures are painkillers, a stick, physiotherapy and weight loss, and once these are exhausted then knee replacement is likely.

Medical technology developed in the late twentieth century to the stage that joint replacement has become a common and predictable treatment for severely arthritic joints, proving to give the highest quality of life of all medical interventions. Total knee replacement is now a predictable and very successful intervention with good ten year results and beyond. Knee replacement is becoming a more popular operation than hip replacement and as western populations get older the demand will increase.

Metal and plastic components are inserted to replace the degenerative joint surfaces of the knee. In knee replacement these consist of four items:

* Femoral component. This is a steel alloy and replaces the arthritic end of the thigh bone.

* The metal tibial insert to replace the tibial surfaces, the lower half of the knee.

* The plastic insert, made of ultra high density polyethylene, is placed between the femoral and tibial inserts.

* Patellar button. This is also plastic and replaces the back surfaces of the kneecap. If this is not replaced then persistent anterior knee pain can be a problem.

Cement is used as a grout to fix the components but a precise and tight fit is more important in keeping them in place.

The physiotherapist then gets the patient up, checking the operative record, reviewing the patient’s medical status and assessing the patient and their leg status. Muscular control of the knee must keep the knee stable while mobilising and epidurals can delay this by knocking out the muscular strength and feelings in the legs. A physio and an assistant gets the patient up walking for a short distance with a walking frame if they are older and with crutches if they are more stable. Operation instructions usually allow weight-bearing to facilitate normal muscle activity patterns and promote venous circulation.

Mobilisation of the patient is the next process in rehabilitation. The physiotherapist assesses the patient’s medical status and examines the legs to decide whether mobilisation is appropriate and safe. The quadriceps must be working well enough to provide some knee stability and epidurals can interfere with this for long enough to delay getting up until the effects have worn off. The physio and an assistant get the patient up and establish a good walking pattern with crutches, or a frame for much older people. Normal weight-bearing is usual and this re-establishes normal stresses through the knee, encouraging circulatory return from the leg and normal muscular activation.

Resisted knee flexion is used to increase range via reciprocal inhibition, the resisted movement causing the opposite muscle, the knee extensors, to relax and allow more knee bend. Resistance is provided by manual technique and by using resistance bands. The scar is best mobilised and freed up by tissue massage daily. After individual work patients move on to gym based work, often in groups, to continue with strengthening muscles using gym balls or resisted rubber bands and dynamic activities such as standing up/sitting down and step-ups. Static bicycling and resisted exercises can be used to increase flexion further and training in joint position sense or proprioception is added.

Further rehabilitation is more likely to take place in the gym, concentrating on functional activities such as moving from sitting to standing and step ups and strengthening work with Theraband and the gymnastic ball. Work on range of motion will continue using resisted exercises and static bicycling and patients can usefully work on proprioception using the wobble board and other balance related activities. Proprioception is the normal ability of a joint to sense its position in space and this is very important for normal activity and safe walking. Normal gait patterns are encouraged and abnormal patterns corrected.

Jonathan Blood Smyth is the Superintendent of Physiotherapists at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK. He writes articles about back pain, neck pain, and injury management. If you are looking for physiotherapists in Oxford visit his website.

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How Would You Like To Avoid Surgery With Spinal Decompression Therapy

Russ Campanella | January 10, 2010

Your spine is one of the most important parts of your body. If you think about it, your spine is formed right after your central nervous system has begun. This should let you know how important the spine actually is. It is wonderful piece of workmanship, and can withstand a fair amount of weight, and still be flexible. The brain uses the spinal cord within the spine to keep all of the parts of the body working in harmony. If the spine happens to suffer from disease or damage, it can wreak havoc on all other parts of the body. For those individuals who have been injured or suffered from disease, spinal decomrpession therapy can help alleviate their pain and speed healing to the affected area.

The spine is made up of bones called vertebra, and cushiony discs which helps separate them and protect them. The discs between each vertebra are very important, and if they should suffer damage it can cause the individual significant pain. A slipped disc can also cause the spine to become misaligned which can cause other problems. Any misalignment in the back or slippage of the discs can cause the owner an intense amount of pain.

Until the last few years, most back problems were solved using surgery. The surgery involved placing metal rods into the spine to hold it in alignment. Back surgery is not something you would want to rush into, as it can be quite painful and the recovery period does not pass very quickly. It is understandable that many who suffer from back problems would try to seek a nonsurgical solution to their problem

Most individuals will try to find a treatment which does not include a surgical option. No matter what type of surgery you have, there is always a recovery period, and back surgery can take a considerable amount of time to heal properly. Most people think of chiropractic care when talking about treating spinal disorders. This is because chiropractors have been manipulating the spines of individuals for many years.

During spinal decompression, the vertebrae are slowly pulled against each other to allow everything to come into place. Herniated discs are one of the conditions which can be treated successfully using decompression. When the spine is put into traction, it will elongate which will take the strain and pressure off of injured areas.

The elongation of the spine and allows pressure to be relieved from the herniated disc. This treatment is referred to as negative pressure. The negative pressure promotes the healing of an injured area, and makes it quicker to recover from injury.

People who have suffered from chronic back pain for years could possibly find relief using spinal decomrpession therapy. The treatments usually start off being given multiple times in the first week, with sessions and then being scheduled further apart as follow-ups. Many back pain sufferers have found significant relief from back pain using this procedure.

Suffering with sciatica? Let spinal decompression rochester center help! Find information and resources for fast relief of back pain, herniated disc & sciatica at spinal decompression therapy rochester. Visit the Uber Article Directory to get a totally unique version of this article for reprint.

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Shoulder Instability in Multiple Directions

Jonathan Blood Smyth | January 6, 2010

Instability of the shoulder in multiple directions is moderately often encountered, occurring normally on both sides of the body and is not related to accident or injury. The underlying difficulty is the laxity of the capsule of the shoulder and the deficiencies of these stabilising ligamentous structures. This ligament laxity shows itself in excessive joint mobility in all anatomical directions. Patients may describe joint instability as the shoulder may sublux (partial dislocation) or wholly dislocate from time to time. However, the patient may not suffer such obvious symptoms and complain only of pain.

Conservative treatment is the first line of management for this condition, with physiotherapy treatment consisting of strengthening of the muscular parts of the scapular stability and rotator cuff systems. Once conservative treatment has been attempted and not been successful then consideration can be given to surgery. Surgery can tighten up the shoulder capsule, increasing the strength of the static stabilisers. Typically surgery has been done in open technique but arthroscopic technique is become more prevalent.

The incidence of this instability problem in the general public is not obvious and shoulder instability from accidents is much more common as a secondary effect from shoulder dislocation. The shoulder instability types are classified in various ways and TUBS stands for:

* Trauma involved in the cause

* Unidirectional instability (only unstable in one direction)

* Bankart lesion presence – this is injury to the cartilage rim around the socket

* Surgery – which is often required

TUBS summarises the typical shoulder picture which results from single or multiple episodes of shoulder dislocation.

The instability type which is multidirectional is given the acronym AMBRI which stands for:

* Atraumatic onset (no injury or accident to explain the onset)

* Multidirectional – the shoulder is lax in all directions

* Bilateral (both sided) shoulder involvement

* Rehabilitation used as the initial management

* I stands for the technical types of operative surgery needed for this problem.

The shoulder is designed for maximum mobility to allow the hands to be placed in a myriad of useful positions, usually in front of the eyes so we can see what we are doing. This mobility is extreme and at the expense of the stability of the joint, leading to instability problems under certain physical stresses.

Thinking about the stability of the shoulder it is helpful to concentrate on a few concepts. The idea of balance is related to the way the head of the humerus centres itself on the socket accurately. The main muscles responsible for maintaining this anatomical alignment are those of the rotator cuff, keeping the joint in line as the larger movement muscles do their actions. If an imbalance or weakness develops in the muscles of the scapula or the rotator cuff then the balance can be disturbed. A cartilage rim around the socket, the glenoid labrum, deepens the socket and the muscles compress the two parts together, enhancing stability.

An upward movement of the humeral head on the socket is undesirable and this tendency is resisted by the compressive force of the rotator cuff and by the curve of the upper socket area. The joint surfaces have some adhesion as they are wetted by the synovial fluid, with air being pressed out of the joint by the tight fit of the rounded ball and the depth of the socket, creating a degree of suction effect to enhance stability. Some amount of negative pressure which develops in a tight joint also adds to the effect. The stability which is improved by these effects is in the mid-range of the joint’s movement, where there is least stability from the ligaments.

The capsule of the joint is a passive structure which keeps the shoulder movement within certain limits, with the shoulder ligaments being thickenings of the capsule at important areas to resist the forces applied. The most important ligamentous restraint is the inferior glenohumeral ligament; however the dynamic parts of the stability system, the muscles, are also of great importance. Physiotherapists concentrate on rehabilitating scapular stability and the function of the rotator cuff to improve shoulder stability.

Jonathan Blood Smyth, editor of the Physiotherapy Site, writes articles about Physiotherapist, back pain, orthopaedic conditions, neck pain, injury management and physiotherapists in Edinburgh. Jonathan is a superintendant physiotherapist at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK.

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The Foot

Jonathan Blood Smyth |

The complicated anatomy of the foot is targeted at generating propulsive force for running and walking and at coping with the body weight. The ankle mortise holds the talus firmly and it sits at the top of the main long ways arch of the foot. The medial or longitudinal foot arch is the biggest one, this takes the standing, and moving loads of the body with the spring ligament absorbing and releasing some of the energy involved. The outside, lateral arch is much smaller as is the arch across the front of the foot between the fifth and first metatarsal heads.

The foot arches have a very important role in the function of the foot and without them it would not be the dynamic propulsion system that it is. They absorb the energy and forces involved when body weight is applied to the ground, store it to some degree and release it as the next step is taken. If you watch someone walk with very flat feet and no spring you will be struck by the lack of dynamic movement, the slowness of gait and the lack of balance. Maintaining the health of the foot arches should be an important part of keeping fit and able as we age.

The foot has two functions to perform: to cope with and distribute the weight of the body which is often multiplied by movement and to generate propulsive forces to push off in walking. The foot arches are partly maintained by the calf muscles previously mentioned in an article about the ankle, but also by the muscles controlling the toes. The long flexor muscles of the toes also start in the calf and run under the sole to the forefoot and toes, curling the toes or gripping the ground. The short flexor muscles, which start in the feet and again go to the toes, are known as the intrinsic muscles and work by pressing the toes down into the surface but without bending them.

If the foot hits the ground in a person with a highly functional foot the heel will contact the surface first and slightly on the lateral side. The foot rolls forward as the talus rocks inside the ankle mortise and weight begins to be taken by the arches with the joints and ligaments absorbing the stresses. The weight transfers gradually over to the inside and through the first and second metatarsal heads until the foot pushes off partly with the power of the toes muscles.

Each moving joint in our body has a degree of accessory movements in it, which are limited and subtle internal movements between joint surfaces which cannot be exhibited in isolation. A normal joint depends to some degree on the accessory movements present within the joint and if these are lost or reduced the joint’s function is compromised. A high number of intricately designed foot bones are packed into a small area, creating the arches, and all these bones have highly functional accessory movements between them.

The foot arches begin to flatten as the weight of the body is passed through the foot and the tension and elasticity of the foot ligaments counteracts this with the strength of the calf and foot muscles. In moving towards push off the foot is aided by the calf muscles contracting as a sling to maintain the arch, the gripping of the ground by the toe muscles and by the energy recoil of the ligaments. The arch varies in height as the walking cycle continues and this means accessory movements between the many arch bones are constantly occurring so that the bones can slide and glide into the required positions.

The individual foot bones need to be able to all move independently, opening out underneath as the pressure is applied and closing up in the upper surfaces. The bones must be able to adjust themselves as the foot spreads to accommodate itself to the surface, allowing a dynamic readjustment to constant changing ground conditions. If some of the accessory movement range is lost the foot loses some of its plastic adaptability as it becomes a rigid prop for bearing body weight and gives up its comfortable propulsive role.

Jonathan Blood Smyth, editor of the Physiotherapy Site, writes articles about Physiotherapists, physiotherapy, physiotherapists in Birmingham, back pain, orthopaedic conditions, neck pain and injury management. Jonathan is a superintendant physiotherapist at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK.

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Cervical Pain and Disability – Part Three

Jonathan Blood Smyth | January 4, 2010

The pain and other symptoms which are involved in neck problems typically cause functional difficulties which show themselves in complicated limitations of movement and activity. However, the pain and neurological aspects cannot be considered on their own as psychological factors are also involved in the generation and maintenance of neck pain conditions. Physiotherapists need to be able to identify important psychological disturbance so that appropriate onward referral can be made and so that the assessment and treatment can be adjusted in the light of these factors. Psychological factors may in some cases be of crucial importance in how the patient is behaving in response to neck pain.

While there is a relationship between psychological factors, pain and disability this is by no means clear and likely to be very complex. These factors have been investigated much more completely for lower back pain and it is likely that the factors which relate to neck pain are individual to that anatomical area to some degree. Chronic neck pain is well known to be associated with psychological distress, with whiplash patients exhibiting mood changes such as depression and anxiety, changes in behaviour and degrees of post-traumatic stress disorder.

Neck pain syndromes and factors of a psychological nature are known to be linked in some way but there is little agreement over how this occurs in practice. It is a natural conclusion that the pain and disability resulting from ongoing neck pain would foster psychological distress but could the relationship run the other way? The levels of pain and long term nature of chronic whiplash do look like the triggers for the psychological distress which is evident in this group. The likelihood of pain and disability becoming chronic has not been connected with personality traits or other individual psychological variables.

If the functional restrictions and the pain levels persist then there is some indication that this also maintains the levels of psychological distress. A poor outcome in whiplash associated disorder has not been shown to be linked to mental ability, self rating of well being, depression or anxiety. Fear-avoidance has been investigated in regard to lower back pain problems and has relevance in the prediction of longer term disability. The idea of fear-avoidance is that the fear of pain and potential bodily damage from an activity impels the sufferer to limit their activities and withdraw from physical situations.

Fear-avoidance and pain are likely to have a looser relationship in neck pain syndromes than in lower back pain. Patients with whiplash associated disorder have been shown to have intermediate levels of fear avoidance but that this does not predict how well they do over time as both long term disabled and good recoveries show similar amounts. A whiplash injury is usually the result of a sudden incident such as a road accident and levels of post-traumatic stress disorder have been found in these patients. Within a month of the injury if a patient has a moderate level of this stress disorder then they are likely to do poorly in the long term.

As at least a proportion of whiplash patients exhibit post-traumatic stress disorder so physiotherapists need to be aware of assessment and treatment methods for post-traumatic stress. In the biopsychosocial model disability and pain are linked to the interaction of a large number of physical, biological and psychological factors but it is not wholly understood how this interaction of so many varying factors works. The complicated alterations in the sensory reactions which occur in whiplash patients are present in the early stages both in patients who have chronic pain and disability and in those who do not.

In painful syndromes there appear to be biological changes in the neurological system which are responsible for the hypersensitivity which develops in the sensory systems, although some workers attribute these changes to malingering or psychological changes. However, these factors have been shown not to be of great relevance in the generation of heightened sensitivity in neck pain syndromes. The large amounts of pain stimuli entering from the periphery into the central nervous system is recognised as the trigger for the hyperalgesia present in neck pain, with a more limited role for psychological factors.

Jonathan Blood Smyth, editor of the Physiotherapy Site, writes articles about physiotherapy, physiotherapy, physiotherapists in London, back pain, orthopaedic conditions, neck pain and injury management. Jonathan is a superintendant physiotherapist at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK.

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Fractures of the Tibial Plateau

Jonathan Blood Smyth |

The tibial plateau is the flat, expanded top of the shin bone or tibia which makes up the lower half of the knee joint. It is a very important part of the body for load bearing and any disruption of this area can cause abnormalities in alignment of the knee, knee stability and movement especially weight bearing and walking. Early recognition and treatment of this injury is vital to avoid the potential disability which could ensue and the longer term consequences of knee arthritis. More than half the sufferers from this fracture are over fifty years of age.

A large group which suffer this type of fracture is older women who already have some degrees of osteoporotic change in the area. Younger people with this presentation more likely result from more high energy events. The usual way these fractures occur is for a sideways force to be applied to the knee (often in a knock knee direction) while the knee is weight bearing with a downward force also applied. The lateral condyle (most commonly) is then squashed down by the large femoral condyle on that side. Sports injuries and falling from a height can result in this injury but it is much more common secondary to a road accident.

Pedestrians who are hit by the bumper of a car in slow speed events make up about a quarter of this patient group as the bumper is at the right height to apply the required forces. Sporting events such as horse riding or falls from a height can also cause this type of fracture. The levels of energy involved in the precipitating events can make a significant difference to the types of fracture which result. Lower energy events more typically cause depression fractures whilst the result of a higher energy occurrence is more likely to be a splitting fracture. The complex nature of these fractures has resulted in many efforts at classification, with Schatzker and co-workers’ now accepted.

Assessment of the patient will not only include the state of the bone but the condition of the soft tissues which can also be damaged, the blood vessels, nerves and muscles. Tibial plateau fractures are accompanied in about 50% of cases by damage to the knee menisci (cartilages) and the cruciate ligaments which may require surgery. The medial collateral ligament, the ligament on the inside of the knee, is more vulnerable to damage due to the incident forces being more typically on the outside of the knee in a knock knee direction. Medial plateau fractures result from bigger events as the bone is stronger on that side, with more frequent soft tissue problems.

Surgeons may be happy to accept a range of fracture displacement and pursue conservative or non-operative management in these cases. Lifting the depressed plateau and securing bone graft underneath it may be required if depression exceeds 5mm in depth. Open fractures, where a wound is continuous with the fracture, mean that surgery will be needed, as it is also if the blood supply has been compromised by vessel damage or if compartment syndrome has developed in the lower leg. Less severe fractures can be conservatively managed and if there is severe soft tissue compromise then surgery may have to be postponed.

On establishing the diagnoses the management plan can begin and this includes treatments aimed at limiting swelling and inflammation such as keeping the part still, resting, elevating the leg and compression of the area. Debridement, the surgical removal of any dying or dead tissue, is essential to ensure the well being of the remaining healthy tissue. Compartment syndrome, where higher and higher pressures develop in the leg compartments, is an emergency for which fasciotomy (surgical release of the tissues) is indicated.

Treatment of fractures of the tibial plateau is aimed at restoring the stability of the knee joint, its correct alignment and anatomical relationships of the joint along with full movement in the knee so the knee will function well, is painless and will not suffer arthritic change. If the joint is unstable then surgery will have to be performed, holding the fragments with as little movement as possible. In younger patients with good bone quality then internal fixation may be successful, however older patients with poor bone quality may need to be functionally braced or have total knee replacement.

Jonathan Blood Smyth, editor of the Physiotherapy Site, writes articles about Physiotherapist, back pain, orthopaedic conditions, neck pain, injury management and physiotherapists in halifax. Jonathan is a superintendant physiotherapist at an NHS hospital in the South-West of the UK.

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