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Title: PRINCIPLES OF BOBATH APPROACH


1
PRINCIPLES OF BOBATH APPROACH
  • BY
  • GAJANAN BHALERAO

2
What is Bobath therapy?
  • Bobath therapy is an interdisciplinary approach
    to the management of cerebral palsy involving
    occupational therapy, physiotherapy and speech
    and language therapy. Bobath therapy is a
    holistic approach pioneered by Dr and Mrs Bobath.
    The basis of the approach is to give children an
    experience of normal movement by enabling the
    child to respond actively to specialised handling.

3
Who were the Bobaths?
  • Berta Bobath was a physiotherapist, who had
    initially trained in remedial gymnastics. She
    understood normal movement and posture, and
    together with her husband Karel, who was a
    pediatric neurologist, Berta developed an
    approach to the treatment of cerebral palsy that
    would encourage a child to move and function as
    normally as possible, while Karel researched the
    neurological implications of the Bobath approach.

4
Why is it used for strokes?
  • Because Bobath therapy is a useful treatment for
    neurological-based movement disorders. Having a
    stroke can cause cerebral palsy in babies and
    young children, but there is a major difference
    between children and adults who have had a
    stroke adults who have lost certain abilities
    can tap into their previous experiences to
    relearn skills, whereas young children will have
    no previous experience of a normal movement to
    tap into, and have to be taught.

5
What effect does it have?
  • Bobath therapy helps the child to gain more
    control of their bodies, to interact with their
    environment, and to achieve a greater level of
    independence. Bobath therapy also aims to reduce
    the problems that develop as the child gets
    older.

6
  • Nothing is more
  • powerful than a
  • idea

7
Basic idea of Bobath approach
  • sensation of movement are learned, not movement
    per se
  • Basic postural movement patterns are learned
    which are later elaborated on to become
    functional skills.
  • Every skilled activity takes place against a
    background of basic patterns of postural control,
    righting, equilibrium other protective
    reaction, reach, grasp release.

8
Basic idea of Bobath approach
  • When brain is damaged, abnormal patterns of
    posture movement develop which are incompatible
    with the performance of normal everyday
    activities.
  • The abnormal pattern develops because of
    sensation is shunted into these abnormal patterns.

9
The law of shunting
  • A phenomenon of efferent inflow being short
    circuited either temporarily ( the athetoid
    patient) or more permanently ( the spastic
    patient) into patterns of abnormal co ordination
    released from higher inhibitory control.
  • A patient with abnormal motor out put who moves
    abnormally in response to motivation normal
    sensory inputs will still only experiences
    memories the sensation of of his abnormal
    movement of excessive efforts lack of co
    ordination.
  • He will therefore be unable to develop lay down
    the memory of normal sensory motor patterns.

10
  • What
  • To
  • do?

11
Basic idea of Bobath approach
  • The abnormal patterns must be stopped not so much
    by modifying the sensory input, but by giving
    back to the patient the lost or undeveloped
    control over his out put in developmental
    sequence.
  • The basic patterns of posture movement , the
    righting reaction equilibrium responses are
    elicited by providing the appropriate stimuli
    while the abnormal patterns are inhibited.
  • In this way patient the patient is given the
    opportunity to experience normal movement.

12
Basic idea of Bobath approach
  • The sensory information of correct movement is
    absolutely necessary for the development of
    improved motor control.
  • Treatment therefore, concentrate on handling the
    patient in such a way as to inhibit abnormal
    distribution of tone abnormal postures while
    stimulating or encouraging the next level of
    motor control.
  • The abnormal postures tone are controlled at
    key point (proximal body parts, I.e. head neck
    trunk, sometimes distal parts I.e. thumb
    fingers), using reflex inhibiting movement or
    patterns called as RIPs.

13
Basic idea of Bobath approach
  • If the patient lack s tone, sensory stimulation
    or tapping is used while the RIPs is applied so
    the is sensory inflow will not shunt into
    abnormal patterns.
  • Bobath believes that once the patient can move in
    out of normal basic patterns of posture
    movement he will automatically be able to
    elaborate on these patterns to learn the more
    skilled activities required in daily living.

14
  • Todays success today's defeat are just
    another step in the long journey of your life

15
INTRODUCTION
  • Bobath treatment has undergone many changes from
    the time of its inception, but the underlying
    concept has not changed.the main problem of
    patient with upper motor neuron lesion is that
    of abnormal co ordination of movement patterns
    combined with abnormal postural tonus.
  • Problems of the strength activity of individual
    muscles and muscle group is secondary to that of
    the co ordination of their action.

16
INTRODUCTION
  • Muscles are tools of nervous system and ,
    therefore, the activity of individual muscles
    muscle group is secondary to that of their
    coordination in patterns of activity.
  • Thus, the assessment treatment of patients
    motor patterns is the only way of leading
    directly to functional use.
  • In the hemiplegic patient, muscles are not
    paralyzed deficit of muscular activity can be
    remedied by their action in more normal
    functional patterns.

17
INTRODUCTION
  • This is still is a concept of treatment.
  • What has changed is that we have found new
    techniques.
  • We have discarded all static ways of treatment
    like reflex inhibiting postures, but have
    introduced a strong emphasis on movement on
    functional activity.
  • From beginning the concept has been, still is,
    a holistic approach, dealing with pattern of
    coordination not with problems of muscle
    function.
  • It involves the whole patient, his sensory,
    perceptual adaptive behavior, as well as his
    motor problems.

18
Nature of handicap of patient with brain lesions
19
Neurophysiological considerations.
  • The physical handicap resulting from a lesion of
    the upper motor neuron is seen in terms of an
    interference of normal postural control.
  • We are dealing with abnormal coordination of
    motor patterns.
  • If we speaks of patterns of coordination, we
    mean the pattern of normal abnormal postural
    control against gravity.

20
Neurophysiological considerations.
  • The fundamental problem
  • Abnormal patterns of coordination in posture
    movement.
  • Abnormal qualities of postural tone.
  • Reciprocal innervations.

21
Abnormal qualities of postural tone.
  • Sherringtone(1947) stated that normal movement
    need a background of normal tonus.
  • Tonus the coordination of movement are
    indivisible they depend on each other.
  • The abnormal types of postural tone the
    stereotyped total motor patterns we see in our
    patient are the result of disinhibition, I.e. of
    a release of lower pattern of activity from
    higher inhibitory control.
  • Such release does not only produce muscular
    signs, such as exaggerated stretch tendon
    reflexes, but abnormal patterns of coordination.

22
Abnormal qualities of postural tone.
  • Inhibition is very important factor in control of
    posture movement.
  • With increase of inhibitory control of the
    maturing brain, the organism increasingly gains
    more selective control of posture against
    gravity.
  • This process fallows cephalocaudal direction.
  • Although the limbs parts of body achieve a
    partial independence in this way, their
    emancipation from the total patterns is never
    complete.
  • The movement of a limb remains to some extent
    always subordinate to the control of the whole
    organism.

23
Abnormal qualities of postural tone.
  • The action of total pattern has to be inhibited
    prior to the inhibition of a localized action.
  • This means that normal functional skilled
    activity are largely a matter of inhibitory
    control.
  • The quality of coordination its development in
    early childhood depends, therefore, on increase
    of inhibitory control not on increase of muscle
    power.
  • Inhibition is a active at every level of the CNS.
  • The difference between lower higher levels of
    integrations only the matter of complexity.

24
Abnormal qualities of postural tone.
  • Selective movement of parts of body limbs need
    inhibition of those parts of patterns which
    unnecessary for specific function.
  • Inhibition doesn't only make selective movement
    possible, but plays a imp role in the grading of
    movement, I.e. it is an important factor in
    reciprocal innervations. It is the balanced
    activity of excitation inhibition during a
    movement which control speed, range direction.
  • Inhibition on excitation changes moulds it
    for the purpose of coordination. It modifies
    control action.one might say that inhibition is
    control.

25
Abnormal qualities of postural tone.
  • The brain damaged patient suffers from a lack of
    inhibitory control over his movements.
  • This itself show release of tonic reflex
    activity, i.e. spasticity in abnormal total
    patterns.
  • Spasticity will increases, producing
    deterioration of his movements. Movements become
    slowed down, laboured, or he may become too stiff
    to move altogether.

26
Abnormal qualities of postural tone
  • When observing a spastic patient one is struck
    by the fact that spasticity shows itself in
    definite pattern of abnormal coordination that
    is not confined to a few isolated muscles.
  • The patients posture movement are stereotyped
    typical, he is more or less fixed in few
    abnormal pattern of spasticity which he cannot
    change or can do so only with excessive effort.

27
Abnormal qualities of postural tone
  • Therefore, movements, which need a coastally
    changing background of postural control
    adjustment, are prevented.
  • To think to posture as separate from movement is
    highly artificial, for posture is in fact, in
    constant flux should be regarded as
    temporarily arrested movement.

28
Reciprocal innervation
  • In intact organism, spinal inhibition becomes
    modified by higher central nervous influences
    allows reciprocal innervation, a more adequate
    response to the multitude of stimuli which enters
    the central nervous system in normal condition of
    life.
  • Agonist, antagonist synergists are pitted
    against each other in finely graded way giving
    necessary interplay of muscles group for fixation
    with mobility optimal mechanical conditions for
    muscle power.

29
Reciprocal innervation
  • In normal circumstances all the required degrees
    of reciprocal interaction in various parts of the
    body and limbs necessary for postural fixation,
    grading of movement for the maintenance of
    equilibrium are present.
  • Disturbed reciprocal innervation described above
    are responsible for the way in which a patient is
    fixed n few abnormal patterns, for the
    difficulty in coordinating movement their
    grading.

30
Reciprocal innervation
  • The degrees of fixation in stereotyped postural
    patterns depends on the severity of spasticity in
    individuals case are the result of the release
    of abnormal postural reflexes which interact with
    each other.
  • Treatment aims at inhibition of abnormally
    release patterns of coordination the
    facilitation of the higher integrated automatic
    reactions of normal postural control of those
    of more voluntary activity.

31
Reciprocal innervation
  • Treatment helps the patient to develop increase
    his control over the disinhibited action of tonic
    reflex activity by use of patterns which inhibit
    spasticity.
  • Through inhibition his movement are channeled
    into more normal patterns of function.
  • With the helps of therapist, the patient gains
    control over the released abnormal non-functional
    motor patterns

32
  • THANK YOU

33
NORMAL AUTOMATIC POSTURAL CONTROL
34
NORMAL AUTOMATIC POSTURAL CONTROL
  • Normal postural activity forms the necessary
    background for normal movement for functional
    skills.
  • The basic patterns of coordination which underly
    make possible voluntary skilled activities
    are those of normal postural reactions against
    gravity.

35
NORMAL AUTOMATIC POSTURAL CONTROL
  • This normal postural reflex mechanism consist of
    a great number of dynamic postural reactions
    which work together, reinforce each other
    interact for the purpose of protection against
    falling against injury to muscles joints.
  • They are active during before a movement is
    performed, they give us the ability to
    counteract gravity, without fatigue, to adjust
    our posture when we are in an uncomfortable
    position.

36
NORMAL AUTOMATIC POSTURAL CONTROL
  • They make us able to move in spite of having to
    keep up against gravity, for ex walking up down
    the stairs.
  • They make us change our posture automatically
    before we move inn order to make the intended
    movement possible easy.
  • Such postural adjustment called as postural
    sets
  • They are postural changes in anticipation of, as
    well as accompanying any movement.

37
NORMAL AUTOMATIC POSTURAL CONTROL
  • They make us able to move in spite of having to
    keep up against gravity, for ex walking up down
    the stairs.
  • They make us change our posture automatically
    before we move inn order to make the intended
    movement possible easy.
  • Such postural adjustment called as postural
    sets
  • They are postural changes in anticipation of, as
    well as accompanying any movement.

38
NORMAL AUTOMATIC POSTURAL CONTROL
  • Postural adjustment occur not only as a result
    of sensory feedback in response to unexpected
    perturbations, but also as a result of feed
    forward in anticipation of expected, self
    generated perturbations

39
Postural reactions
  • They are Active movement
  • Although Sub cortically controlled Automatic
  • Give head trunk control
  • Maintain or restore normal alignment of body
  • Maintain regain balance

40
Posture
  • There is no dividing line between posture
    movement, but fluid transition from one to the
    other.
  • Posture is a part of every movement, and if a
    movement is arrested at any stage, it becomes a
    posture.

41
Postural reactions
  • The development of coordination in early
    childhood goes step by step with the development
    of postural reaction with their appearance,
    modifications disappearance when more complex
    more voluntary skilled activities are acquired.
  • The development of automatic postural control of
    movement has been called principle mobility by
    schaltenbrand (1927).
  • The knowledge of development of coordination is
    necessary for the treatment of all patient with
    upper motor neuron lesions.

42
RIGHTING REACTIONS
  • The righting reactions are automatic reactions
    which serve to maintain restore the normal
    position of head in space its normal
    relationship with the trunk, together with normal
    alignment of trunk limbs.
  • They develop in childhood are well advanced at
    age of 5 months of age.
  • Rotation around the body axis plays an important
    role in these activities.

43
RIGHTING REACTIONS
  • Gradually modifies become integrated into more
    complex activities, such as the equilibrium
    reactions voluntary movement.
  • There are essential in the building up of motor
    patterns for adult life.
  • Throughout life they are necessary for getting up
    from the floor, for getting out of the bed, for
    sitting up, for kneeling down, etc.

44
EQUILIBRIUM REACTIONS
  • Equilibrium reactions are automatic reactions
    which serve to maintain restore balance during
    all our activities, especially when we are in
    danger of falling.
  • All equilibrium reactions reactions, tonus
    changes movement changes have to be well
    coordinated, quick, adequate in range well
    timed (Rademaker, 1935, Weisz1938)
  • Tested either by the body moving body against a
    fixed support such as the ground, or by means of
    a movable platform or tilting table.

45
AUTOMATIC ADAPTATION OF MUSCLES TO CHANGE OF
POSTURE
  • These automatic reactions can be observed in
    trunk limbs, and they overlap to some extent
    with the equilibrium reactions.
  • In a normal person, the central postural control
    mechanism governs the weight of a limb during
    movement both into against gravity.
  • This mechanism may be called postural adaptation
    to gravity.

46
AUTOMATIC ADAPTATION OF MUSCLES TO CHANGE OF
POSTURE
  • A normal person is active when being moved
    against gravity.
  • Relaxation, unless full support is given, is a
    voluntary learned ability.
  • Normal person controls every stage of movement
    actively automatically.
  • We cal this manoeuvre placing.

47
Normal postural control provides 3 prerequisites
fro voluntary functional activity
  • Normal postural tonus of moderate intensity.
    Postural tone must be high enough to resist
    gravity, but should be enough to give way to
    movement.
  • Normal reciprocal interaction for-
  • Synergic fixation proximally to allow for
    selective mobility of more distal segment.
  • Automatic adaptation of muscles to postural
    changes.m

48
Normal postural control provides 3 prerequisites
fro voluntary functional activity
  • c. Graded control of agonist antagonist
    integrate with that of synergists for the timing
    direction of movement.
  • 3. The automatic movement patterns of the
    righting equilibrium reactions which are the
    background against which voluntary functional
    activity takes place.

49
Disturbance of Normal postural control
  • The effect of UMN lesion is described as
    Disturbance of Normal postural control mechanism.
  • Interference with normal motor ability is caused
    by pathological deviation from the fundamental
    prerequisites motioned above.
  • Instead of normal postural tone we find
    spasticity.
  • Instead of normal coordination of righting,
    equilibrium other protective reactions we find
    few static stereotyped postural reflex patterns.

50
ABNORMAL POSTURAL REFLEX ACTIVITY
51
FACTORS INTERFERING WITH NORMAL MOVEMENT
  1. Associated reactions
  2. The effect of released asymmetrical tonic neck
    reflex activity.
  3. The effect of released positive supporting
    reaction.

52
ASSOCIATED REACTIONS
  • WALSHE (1923) described associated reactions as
    tonic reflexes, i.e. postural reactions in
    muscles deprived of voluntary control.
  • In hemi associated reactions produces widespread
    increase of spasticity throughout the hole of the
    affected side.this accentuate the hemiplegic
    attitude.

53
ASSOCIATED REACTIONS
  • Higher the spasticity, more forceful longer
    lasting will be the associated reactions.
  • The duration of associated reactions is roughly
    that of the movement or contraction evoking it,
    but there is in some instances a prolonged
    after-contraction or tonic prolongation of the
    spasm, which last for several seconds.
  • More spastic the limb, longer the latency after
    contraction.
  • Antagonistic muscles groups, flexor extensors,
    are to be observed in simultaneous contraction.

54
ASSOCIATED REACTIONS
  • After-contractions is due to lack of inhibition
    plays a detrimental role in the performance of
    repetitive movements(i.e walking).
  • With increasing spasticity co-contraction of
    opposing muscle group, the movements are slowed
    down, smaller in range performed with
    increasing effort.
  • The reinforcement strengthening of spastic
    pattern through associated reactions can lead to
    contractures deformities.

55
  • Facts to consider to reduce detrimental effect of
    associated reactions-
  • There less spasticity after contraction if
    movement are done slowly.
  • The spread of excitation into total spastic
    patterns can be counteracted by inhibiting parts
    of these patterns.
  • The therapist should inhibit spasticity
    immediately the movement begins to deteriorate.
  • At the start of treatment, excitation effort
    are kept to a minimum, then it is gradually
    increased.
  • Therapist helps the patient to learn to inhibit
    this spasticity by the use of selective movements.

56
Effect of released positive supporting reaction
  • Adequate stimulus for positive supporting
    reaction is twofold
  • A proprioceptive stimulus by stretch of the
    intrinsic muscles of the foot.
  • An exteroceptive evoked by the contact of the
    pads of the foot with the ground.the antagonists
    don't relax, but contract, exerting a synergic
    function, which result in the fixation of the
    joints (co contractions).

57
Effect of released positive supporting reaction
  • The normal positive supporting reaction allows
    for moderate degree of co contraction with
    necessary mobility for balance, for movement of
    the body forward over the standing foot, for
    mobility of the hip knee to the leg for the
    next step, for walking up down the stairs.
  • In the spastic patient , the positive supporting
    reaction is released from higher control
    combined with extensor spasticity of the leg,
    becomes an exaggerated spastic response.

58
Sensory perceptual disturbances
  • They are serious handicap to effective treatment
    adversely influence the chances of recovery
    from functional disability.
  • Margeret Reinhold has stressed that
  • voluntary movement is partly dependent upon
  • The perception of superficial deep sensation
  • Motor power coordination.
  • In normally functioning organism cerebral cortex
    acts as a whole we should, therefore, think of
    the sensory-motor areas as one functional unit.

59
Application of shunting rule in treatment
  • Magnus stated that at any movement during a
    movement , the central nervous system mirrors the
    state of elongation contraction of the
    musculature.
  • It is therefore, the body musculature which
    controls the opening closing of synaptic
    connections within the central nervous system
    determines the subsequent outflow.
  • The greatest effect of shunting is obtained from
    the proximal parts of the body.

60
Application of shunting rule in treatment
  • In accepting the role of shunting, it is clear
    that we have a means of influencing and changing
    motor out put from periphery, i. e. from
    proprioceptive system, beginning usually with
    proximal parts of the body.
  • By changing the relative positions of the parts
    of the body limbs when handling a hemiplegic
    patient, we can change his abnormal postural
    pattern stop (inhibit)the outflow of excitation
    in to established shunts of spastic patterns.

61
Application of shunting rule in treatment
  • We can at the same time direct patients active
    responses into the channels of higher integrated
    complex pattern of more normal coordination.
  • In this way, spasticity becomes reduced by
    inhibition of its patterns, while more normal
    postural reactions movement are facilitated.
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