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Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (OMT) Workshop

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Title: Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (OMT) Workshop


1
Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment (OMT) Workshop
  • Sean N. Martin, DO
  • Some Material Adapted, With Permission, From
    OMT for Allopaths Course by Shawn Kerger, DO

2
What Does Osteopathy Mean?
  • Comes from the Latin prefix of osteo, referring
    to bone and pathos, which later came to mean
    disease, but initially meant knowledge.
  • It is this latter definition to which osteopathy
    was termed by Andrew Taylor Still, MD.

3
4 Tenets of Osteopathic Philosophy
  • The body is a unit.
  • The body possesses self-regulatory, self-healing,
    and health maintenance mechanisms.
  • Structure and function are reciprocally
    interrelated.
  • Rational therapy is based on an understanding of
    body unity, self-regulatory mechanisms, and the
    interrelationship of structure and function.

4
What It Is
  • Todays Agenda, Were Going Lavorpa
  • Combination of Didactic and Tactile Assimilation
    of Basic OMT Concepts Into The Cerebral Cortices
    of Providers with Moderately Advanced Knowledge
    of Musculoskeletal Anatomy
  • In other words, a custom course built for Sports
    Medicine Fellows , Faculty, and Physical
    Therapists at Dewitt Army Community Hospital for
    Thursday Didactics

5
What It Is Not
  • Not on todays agenda
  • History of OMT
  • Spinal Mechanics/Dyfunction/Correction
  • Sacral Mechanics/Dysfunction/Correction
  • High Velocity Low Amplitude (HVLA) Techniques
  • A Discourse on Evidence (or Lack Thereof) Behind
    This Field

6
Disclaimers
  • This is not a standardized field of medicine
  • Learn a lot of techniques, get good at some,
    regularly use a few
  • When in doubt, shotgun!!

7
Plan
  • Foundation Principles
  • A Palpatory Warm Up
  • Tissue/Myofascial
  • Strain-Counterstrain
  • Muscle Energy
  • Approach to the Low Back Pain Patient

8
Some guidelines
  • Remember to explain what youre doing and why
    when treating a patient for the first time
  • Hygiene
  • Short, clean nails
  • Hand-washing
  • Your touch communicates as well as diagnoses and
    treats be careful what you say!
  • Match the treatment to the problem

9
Somatic dysfunctions Huh?
  • T.A.R.T.
  • Tenderness
  • Asymmetry
  • Range of Motion changes
  • Tissue texture changes
  • Like a syndrome not really defined, but
    described

10
Somatic Dysfunction
  • Impaired or altered function of related
    components of the somatic (body framework)
    system
  • skeletal, arthrodial, and myofascial structures
  • related vascular, lymphatic, and neural elements

11
Palpation
  • Information
  • Tissue changes
  • Will go more in depth in a moment
  • Communication
  • Patient
  • Physician
  • Treatment

12
Palpation - Information
  • Skin
  • Temperature
  • Fluid status
  • Oily/dry measure of autonomous nervous tone
  • Hyperesthesia

13
Palpation - Information
  • Muscular layers
  • Tension / Spasticity
  • Fresh injury
  • Softer
  • Hot
  • Edematous
  • Painful
  • Old injury
  • Hard
  • Cold
  • Ropy
  • Sore

14
Palpation - Information
  • Trigger Points
  • Usually located at or in muscular layers and
    reproduce a referred pain with pressure
  • Tender Points
  • As above without referred pain

15
Palpation
  • More of training your mind to listen to your
    hands.
  • Try to identify the sides of a coin (heads/tails)
  • Can you feel the date line? Try it with your
    eyes closed.
  • Could you distinguish between a human bone and a
    solid plastic replica? How?

16
Palpation Exercises
  • Touch the dorsum of the other hand
  • Test for temperature difference
  • Skin Drag
  • Calluses on palmar aspect
  • Veins vs. arteries vs. tendons
  • Check before and after squeezing your hand firmly
    several times
  • Shear stress in subcutaneous tissues

17
Palpation Exercises
  • Palpate Partners Forearm
  • Compare skin differences of volar and dorsal
    aspects (which is smoother, thicker, warmer, or
    drier?)
  • SubQ fascial layer just below the skin. How
    thick, plastic, loose? In which directions are
    ease vs. drag?
  • Deep fascia is next layer down. Can you identify
    / separate the different muscle bundles of the
    forearm?

18
Palpation Exercises
  • Palpate Partners Forearm
  • How does the underlying muscle feel? Tight?
    Soft? Strained?
  • Have your partner open/close the hand slowly,
    then with more and more force. With sustained
    force, this muscle is what muscles feel like when
    associated with a somatic dysfunction.

19
Palpation Exercises
  • Palpate Partners Forearm
  • Move your hand down slowly toward the
    musculotendinous junction. Then move past this
    to the tendons notice the change as it becomes
    tendon.
  • Follow the tendons as they mesh with the
    transverse carpal ligament and palmar carpal
    ligament notice the fiber direction!

20
Soft Tissue/Myofascial
21
Soft Tissue
  • Can be classified as direct or indirect
  • Addresses the muscular and fascial structures of
    the body with their associated neural and
    vascular elements (especially lymphatics)
  • Most of us have applied these techniques to a
    friend or family member, but not a patient!

22
Soft Tissue
  • Relaxes hypertonic muscles
  • Stretches passive fascial structures
  • Enhances circulation
  • Improves local tissue nutrition, oxygenation, and
    removal of metabolic wastes

23
Soft Tissue
  • Improves local systemic
  • immune responsiveness
  • Identifies areas of somatic dysfunction
  • Observes tissue response to application of
    manipulative technique
  • Improves abnormal somatosomatic and
    somatovisceral reflex activity

24
Soft Tissue
  • Provides a general state of relaxation
  • Provides a general state of tonic stimulation
  • Way of introducing confidence with a new patient
  • Evaluate patients response to physical contact

25
Soft Tissue
  • Various applications
  • Rapid, short massage maneuvers (like a boxer
    before the fight)
  • Long, slow stretches
  • Longitudinal to fibers
  • Perpendicular to fibers

26
Soft Tissue
  • Tractional technique
  • Stretching
  • Origin and insertion of a myofascial structure is
    separated longitudinally
  • Can be both therapeutic and diagnostic

27
Soft Tissue
  • Kneading
  • A rhythmic, lateral stretching of a myofascial
    structure, in which the origin and insertion are
    held stationary and the central portion is
    stretched like a bowstring

28
Soft Tissue
  • Inhibition
  • Sustained deep pressure over a hypertonic
    myofascial structure
  • Can be gentleor not!!

29
Thoracic Prone Traction
  • Anatomy
  • Great for
  • Kyphosis
  • General massage
  • Prep for HVLA
  • Treat hypertonicity of thoracic visceral disease
    (asthma, COPD, HTN, CAD)

30
Thoracic Prone Traction
  • Pt Prone
  • Place thumbs of both hands just lateral to the
    spinous processes, on the paravertebral muscles,
    with your fingers fanned out. Dont lock out
    elbows!
  • Exert an anterior pressure, allowing muscle to
    relax and stretch, finishing with a lateral
    sweeping motion
  • A kneading motion or inhibitory pressure may also
    be used
  • Repeat as needed

31
Lumbar Prone Traction
  • Anatomy
  • Great for
  • Low back pain
  • Lumbago
  • Rotated pelvis
  • Prep for another technique
  • General starting technique
  • Treat pelvis and abdominal viscerosomatic tone
    (constipation, dysmenorrhea, IBS, hemorrhoids,
    etc)

32
Lumbar Prone Traction
  • Pt prone
  • Use the heel of your cephalad hand to contact
    the opposite paravertebral musculature
  • Gently grasp the ASIS with your caudad hand and
    pull upward, inducing rotation
  • Apply a counterforce with your cephalad hand
  • May use a kneading motion, or deep inhibitory
    pressure
  • Repeat as needed

33
Strain-Counterstrain
34
Strain-Counterstrain
  • Developed by Lawrence H. Jones, DO, FAAO in 1955
  • relieving spinal or other joint pain by
    passively putting the joint into its position of
    greatest comfort.
  • Relieving pain by reduction and arrest of the
    continuing inappropriate proprioceptor activity.

35
Strain-Counterstrain
  • Works utilizing the neuroanatomy and
    neurophysiology of the gamma efferent loop
  • Involves the gamma efferent fibers, the
    intrafusal fibers, the alpha motor neurons, and
    the small anterior horn cells which terminate on
    the intrafusal muscle fibers within the spindles.

36
Gamma Loop
  • Tendon stretches the spindle muscle fibers
  • This activates the afferent nerve fibers which
    synapse in the anterior horn (Im skipping the
    numerous interneurons for simplicity) on the
    alpha motor neurons in the same and adjacent
    spinal segments, simultaneously inhibiting the
    antagonists.

()
(-)
37
Strain-Counterstrain
  • Find the specific tender point (TP)
  • Place the patient in the position of optimal
    comfort (POC)
  • Maintain the POC for 90 seconds
  • Slowly ( passively on the patients part) return
    to neutral position
  • Recheck

38
Strain-Counterstrain
  • Key points
  • Find the MOST painful tender point (TP) and treat
    that one first
  • You (the doc) need to be comfortable and
    supported
  • Go for 90 improvement in TP
  • Wait at least 90 seconds
  • These four tips will greatly improve your success
    rate!!

39
Suboccipital Release
  • Anatomy
  • Great for
  • MT headaches
  • Sinus congestion
  • Upper cervical pain
  • Opening technique
  • Stress relief
  • Pt can do at home safely with two tennis
    balls taped together or tied off in the end of an
    athletic sock

40
Suboccipital Release
  • Suboccipital Release
  • Pt. Supine
  • Place the pads of your fingers just inferior to
    the superior nuchal line in the suboccipital
    muscles.
  • Lift the head so that the pts weight is
    supported on the pads of your fingers (not the
    palms!)
  • Maintain position until you feel the desired
    relaxation in the soft tissues

41
3 Examples of Techniques Commonly Employed in
Sports Medicine
42
Levator Scapula Strain
  • Pt prone with head turned away
  • Internally rotate arm and apply LARGE amount of
    traction
  • Fine tune with degrees of extension, adduction
    and abduction
  • Hold for 90 secs
  • Return patient passively and slowly to neutral
    position

43
Lateral Epicondylitis
  • Better for subacute injuries/shorter duration of
    symptoms
  • Extension at the wrist with a mild amount of
    valgus positioning with lesser degrees of
    internal or external rotation (although external
    rotation is more frequently necessary)
  • Hold for 90 secs
  • Return patient passively and slowly to neutral
    position

44
Rhomboid lesion
  • Tender point above T6
  • Externally rotate the humerus at 90 degrees
    abduction and hold for 90 seconds
  • May need a little more compression, distraction,
    abduction or adduction through the glenohumeral
    joint
  • Return patient passively and slowly to neutral
    position

45
Muscle Energy
46
Active range of motion
Physiologic barrier
Anatomic barrier
47
Motion Loss
Active range of motion
Pathologic barrier
Physiologic barrier
Anatomic barrier
48
Shift of midline
Active range of motion
Pathologic barrier
Loss of motion
49
Muscle Energy
  • Utilize the patients active cooperation to
    correct a dysfunction
  • Cannot be used in
  • Too young
  • Uncooperative
  • Unconscious
  • Fresh muscular injury
  • Relatively contraindicated in low vitality
    patients who might be compromised by muscular
    exertion
  • Postop
  • Post-MI

50
Muscle Energy
  • Works via reestablishing a new tone in the
    slow-twitch/tonic musculature via the ?-efferent
    and extrafusal fiber systems.
  • This is why you dont need to use too much force
    the slow-twitch fibers are earlier in the
    recruitment selection. Too much force and youll
    reset the wrong motor units.

()
(-)
51
Muscle Energy
  • Engage barrier
  • Isometric contraction in opposite direction with
    3-5 of force for 5-7 seconds
  • Relax for 2-3 seconds
  • Move to new barrier
  • Repeat until finished!

52
Pelvic Exam
53
Standing flexion test
  • Pt is standing
  • Place your hands on the iliac crests bilaterally,
    and your thumbs should fall right into the area
    of the PSIS. Move your thumbs to the inferior
    notch of the PSIS
  • As patient bends forward, monitor thumbs
    whichever side moves cephalad first (and usually
    the farthest) is dysfunctional.

54
Seated flexion test
  • Pt is seated, with feet flat on floor, knees
    spread a bit, so hands can pass freely in middle.
  • Place hands as in standing flexion test, pt bends
    forward at waist.
  • Interpretation of results same as in standing
    flexion test.

55
Functional Biomechanical Exam
  • Tests of Pelvic Dysfunction
  • Tests functioning of pelvis
  • Standing / Seated Flexion Test
  • () Standing FT (StFT) iliosacral dysfunction.
    Address Pelvis first.
  • () Seated FT (SeFT) sacroiliac dysfunction.
    Address Sacrum first.
  • (-) StFT / SeFT either no dysfunction or
    bilateral lesion (extremely rare)

56
Hip Drop Test Lumbar
  • Pt is standing
  • Hands are on top of iliac crests, parallel to
    floor. Note starting position of hands.
  • Pt bends one knee without lifting heel. Do not
    allow rotation or flexion/extension!
  • Positive hip drop
  • drop of less than 20-25
  • a flat lumbar curve
  • a rough, uneven lumbar curve

57
Supine Examination
  • Leg, Hip, and Pelvis Asymmetry
  • Talus/Subtalar joint
  • Medial malleoli
  • Tibial tuberosities
  • ASIS
  • Pubic Symphysis
  • Int/Ext ROM at hip
  • Costal Cage Motion

58
Anterior Innominate Rotations
  • Pull of musculature is such that one hemipelvis
    is rotated anteriorly and is resistant to
    posterior motion, especially rotation. Usually
    due to tight hip flexors ipsilaterally.
  • Findings
  • ASIS is inferior PSIS is superior on
    ipsilateral side, but rami are symmetric
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side

59
Anterior Innominate Rotations
60
Posterior Innominate Rotations
  • Pull of musculature is such that one hemipelvis
    is rotated posteriorly and is resistant to
    anterior motion, especially rotation. Usually
    due to hypertonic hip extensors ipsilaterally.
  • Findings
  • ASIS is superior PSIS is inferior on
    ipsilateral side, but rami are symmetric
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side

61
Posterior Innominate Rotations
62
Inferior Pubic Shears
  • Pull of musculature is such that one hemipelvis
    is rotated anteriorly and is resistant to
    posterior motion. Usually due to tight hip
    flexors ipsilaterally prior to an injury. Often
    recalcitrant to OMT d/t improper Dx.
  • Findings
  • ASIS is inferior, PSIS is superior, and pubic
    ramus is inferior on ipsilateral side,
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side

63
Inferior Pubic Shears
64
Superior Pubic Shears
  • Pull of musculature is such that one hemipelvis
    is rotated posteriorly and is resistant to
    anterior motion. Usually due to tight hip
    extensors ipsilaterally prior to an injury. Often
    recalcitrant to OMT d/t improper Dx.
  • Findings
  • ASIS is superior, PSIS is inferior, and pubic
    ramus is superior on ipsilateral side.
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side

65
Superior Pubic Shears
66
Inflared Innominate
  • Pull of musculature is such that one hemipelvis
    is rotated medially and is resistant to lateral
    motion. Usually due to tight hip flexors and
    adductors ipsilaterally.
  • Findings
  • ASIS is medial on ipsilateral side, but rami and
    PSIS are symmetric.
  • Umbilicus-ASIS distance is shorter on ipsilateral
    side.
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side

67
Outflared Innominate
  • Pull of musculature is such that one hemipelvis
    is rotated laterally and is resistant to medial
    motion. Usually due to tight hip extensors and
    abductors ipsilaterally.
  • Findings
  • ASIS is lateral on ipsilateral side, but rami and
    PSIS are symmetric.
  • Umbilicus-ASIS distance is longer on ipsilateral
    side.
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side

68
Upslipped Innominates
  • Unusual dysfunction. Usually due to trauma in an
    upward fashion on an unsupported pelvis like
    stepping into a hole or off a curb unknowingly.
  • Findings
  • ASIS, PSIS, and pubic rami are superior on
    ipsilateral side.
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side
  • May be confused with an anatomically short leg.

69
Downslipped Innominates
  • Extremely rare dysfunction. Usually due to
    trauma in a downward fashion on an unsupported
    pelvis like falling off a horse with foot
    trapped in stirrup.
  • Findings
  • ASIS, PSIS, and pubic rami are inferior on
    ipsilateral side.
  • () StFT, (-) SeFT on ipsilateral side
  • May be confused with an anatomically long leg.

70
Anterior Innominate Rotations
  • Dx - () StFT on same side as Ant/Inf ASIS,
    Sup/Ant PSIS. Pubes stable. (-) SeFT.
  • Tx
  • Pt supine with ipsilateral knee hip flexed as
    far as comfortable.
  • Pt then extends hip isometrically with 3-5 of
    force for 5-7 seconds.
  • Relax for 1 second
  • Take up the newly created slack to flexion and
    repeat.
  • Recheck!

71
Posterior Innominate Rotations
  • Dx - () StFT on same side as Sup/Post ASIS,
    Post/Inf PSIS. Pubes stable. (-) SeFT.
  • Tx - Pt supine w/ ipsil. leg hanging off table
    and hip extended as far as comfortable.
  • Pt then flexes hip isometrically with 3-5 of
    force for 5-7 seconds.
  • Relax for 1 second
  • Take up the newly created slack to extension
    and repeat.
  • Recheck

72
Superior and Inferior Pubic Shears
  • Dx - () StFT on affected side with uneven pubic
    rami (sup/ant or inf/post)
  • Tx - Symphysis spread technique
  • Pt is supine with bent knees adducted and hips
    ext flexed.
  • Isometric abduction contraction of 5-10 of
    pressure is maintained for 5-7 seconds.
  • Proceed to part two. May be repeated if needed.

73
Superior and Inferior Pubic Shears
  • Dx - () StFT on affected side with uneven pubic
    rami (sup/ant or inf/post)
  • Tx - Symphysis spread technique
  • pt is supine with bent knees abducted and hips
    flexed and ext rotated.
  • Isometric contraction of 3-5 of pressure is
    maintained for 5-7 seconds.
  • Recheck and repeat as needed.

74
Approach To Treatment of the Low Back Pain Patient
  • Step 1- Prone Traction
  • Step 2- Correct any Innominate Anomalies
  • Step 3- Shotgun Pubic Symphysis
  • Step 4- Muscle Energy/Traction To Lower Lumbar
    Spine and/or SI Joint
  • Step 5- Lumbar Roll
  • Step 6- Strain-Counterstrain To Any Tenderpoints

75
Miscellaneous Techniques
76
Piriformis lesion
  • Dx - () TTP over piriformis () SeFT on
    affected side. (/-) Sciatic Sx.
  • Tx
  • Pt supine and LE flexed to 90º, then taken to
    end-ROM in external rotation
  • Iometric contraction toward external rotation
    with 3-5 of pressure is maintained for 5-7
    seconds.
  • Relax for 1 second
  • Take up the newly created slack to internal
    rotation and repeat as needed.
  • Recheck.

77
Obturator lesion
  • Dx - () TTP over muscle (inf. to piriformis).
    Decreased internal or rotation c/w contralateral
    LE.
  • Tx
  • Pt prone and LE taken to end-ROM into internal
    rotation..
  • Isometric contraction of 3-5 of pressure is
    maintained for 5-7 seconds in opposite direction.
  • Relax for 1 second.
  • Take up the newly created slack to extension
    and repeat.
  • Recheck.

78
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