the lumbar spine. anatomy prevention of injuries to the spine lumbar spine –avoiding stress...

Post on 25-Dec-2015

235 Views

Category:

Documents

7 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

The Lumbar Spine

Anatomy

Prevention of Injuries to the Spine

• Lumbar spine– Avoiding stress– Correction of biomechanical abnormalities– Using correct lifting techniques– Core stabilization

Recognition and Management of Lumbar Spine Injuries

Low back muscle strainsCause: sudden extension with trunk rotation, chronic

strains, faulty posture

S&S: diffuse or localized pain, pain with active extension and passive flexion

Care: cold pack initially, abdominal support, stretching and strengthening; focus on hamstring flexibility; core strengthening

Recognition and Management of Lumbar Spine Injuries

• Lumbar Sprains

Cause: forward bending and twisting while lifting an object, acute or chronic

S&S: localized pain just lateral to the spinous process, pain becomes sharper with certain movements or postures, extension and rotational movements increase pain

Care: RICE initially, brace, stretching, strengthening, NSAIDs

• Myofascial Pain Syndrome

Cause: mechanical stress to muscles, strains or postural positions; regional pain with referred pain to a specific area that occurs with pressure of tender spots or trigger points

S&S: point tenderness on a specific spot that radiates pain; sharp, achy pain

Care: stretching, strengthening, deep tissue massage, modalities

• Sciatica

Cause: inflammatory condition of the sciatic nerve that can accompany recurrent or chronic back pain, particularly vulnerable to torsion or direct blows.

S&S: abruptly or gradually; sharp, shooting pain, that follows the nerve pathway along the medial and posterior thigh; tingling and numbness, sensitive to palpation

Care: rest, lumbar traction with disk protrusion, stretching, NSAIDs

• Herniated lumbar disk

Cause: faulty body mechanics, trauma, or both, usually forward bending and twisting - most often L4-L5

S&S: centrally localized pain that radiates unilaterally to buttocks and down back of leg, or pain that spreads across the back; worse in am, onset is sudden or gradual, pain may increase after sitting, decrease with extension

Care: goal = reduce protrusion and restore normal posture, rest and ice,

manual traction, back extensor and abdominal strengthening

• Spondylolysis

Cause: degeneration of the vertebrae or defect in the pars interarticularis of the articular process; often attributed to a congenital weakness and occurs as a stress fracture

• Spondylolisthesis

– Slippage of one vertebrae on the one below it, a complication of spondylolysis that often results in hypermobility of a vertebral segment, highest incidence is L5 slipping on S1, “scotty dog deformity”

• S&S: persistent mild to moderate aching pain across the low back (LB) or stiffness in LB with increased pain after but not usually during activity; the need to change positions frequently or the need to self manipulate the LB to reduce pain, localized tenderness, possible neurological symptoms

• Care: bracing, bed rest for 1-3 days, rehab directed towards exercises that control or stabilize the hypermobility segment, abdominal strengthening is key

• Sacroiliac sprain

Cause: twisting with both feet on the ground, stumbling forward, backwards fall, bending forward with knees locked, landing heavily on one leg

S&S: palpable pain and tenderness directly over the joint, muscle guarding, radiating pain, pain increased with single leg stance

Care: bracing, mobilizations, strengthening, modalities

• Coccyx injuries (tailbone contusion)

Cause: direct impact which results in sprains, subluxations or fractures

S&S: pain in the coccygeal region is often prolonged and at times chronic

Care: xray to rule out fracture, analgesics, ring seat, padding

• Rehabilitation– 3 main components to work on:

1. Hamstring flexibility

2. Abdominal strength

3. Flexible and strong back musculature

top related