1 / 26

Method of Study for This Section

Method of Study for This Section. Read assigned readings of text Use Thompson Manual and the Dynamic Human CD-ROM to help review structure of bones, joints, and muscles as necessary. This is the purpose of lab.

idana
Download Presentation

Method of Study for This Section

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Method of Study for This Section • Read assigned readings of text • Use Thompson Manual and the Dynamic Human CD-ROM to help review structure of bones, joints, and muscles as necessary. This is the purpose of lab. • Complete labs conscientiously and study models of articulated skeleton, shoulder, spine, and knee • Lecture will only provide a selective review of structure, muscles & movements, and movement-related issues • For exams, review lecture notes and understanding questions in both lecture and labs

  2. Objectives • Explain how anatomical structure affects movement capabilities on upper extremity articulations. • Identify factors influencing the relative mobility and stability of upper extremity movements • Identify muscles that are active during specific upper extremity movements • Describe the biomechanical contributions to common injuries of the upper extremity.

  3. Sh Jt & Girdle Ant Musculature

  4. Sh Jt & Girdle Post Musculature

  5. Upper Extremity – Chapter 7 Shoulder Girdle Structure:

  6. Muscles and Movement of Shoulder Girdle • Illustrations on next three slides • Trapezius (large, superficial medial and sup to scapulae) • Upper portion - elevation, upward rotation • Middle portion - adduction, or retraction • Lower portion - depression, upward rotation • Rhomboids - • elevation, downward rotation, adduction, or retraction • Serratus anterior (underneath scapulae) • abduction, upward rotation • Pectoralis minor (underneath pectoralis major) • downward rotation, abduction, or protraction • Levator Scapulae (underneath upper trapezius) • elevation, downward rotation

  7. Elevation and Depression

  8. Upward & Downward Rotation

  9. Protraction & Retraction

  10. Shoulder Joint Structure

  11. Shoulder Joint Stabilizers • Stabilizers and rotators - Rotator cuff muscles – • Teres minor - external rotation • Infraspinatus - external rotation • Supraspinatus - abduction • Subscapularis - internal rotation

  12. Shoulder Joint Primary Movers • Anterior movers – Anterior deltoid, pectoralis major • Superior movers - middle deltoid • Posterior movers - posterior deltoid • Inferior movers - latissimus dorsi, teres major, lower pectoralis m. • Force vectors of muscles (see next slide)

  13. Shoulder Jt Muscles

  14. Movements of Shoulder Complex • Every movement of upper extremity involves either stabilizing or accomodating action of the shoulder girdle. • If carrying something in arms, scapular elevators are involved • Arm elevation – scapular protraction and/or upward rotation (first 30°,1/5th is scapular movement; then ½ scapular movement)

  15. Shoulder Joint Impingement Syndrome • What is it? Pain from shoulder area resulting from impingement of structures between humeral head, acromion, and coracromial arch. Three stages: • Stage I - edema and hemorrhage of subacromial structures • Stage II - tendon fibrosis and bursal thickening • Stage III - rotator cuff tears, biceps tendon ruptures, and bone spurs II: III: I:

  16. Causes of Sh Jt Impingement • Primary impingement: • Repeated movements requiring elevated and/or medially rotated humerus, compounded by weak rotator cuff muscles, causing: impingement of long head of biceps, supraspinatus • Secondary Impingement: • Decreased volume of subacromial space due to glenohumeral joint instability, and perhaps joint capsular tightness • Structural abnormalities: • hooked or curved acromion, calcium deposits, bone spurs, thickened bursa, thickened ligaments

  17. Shoulder Jt Impingement (3) • Treatment: • Related to the cause - may involve surgery, rotator cuff strengthening, and flexibility exercises. • Later, avoid humeral elevation and rotation movements. http://www.aafp.org/afp/980215ap/fongemie.html • Website for Shoulder JointImpingement Syndrome

  18. Elbow Joint Structure

  19. Elbow and Wrist Joint Muscles • True Flexor - Brachialis • Flexor-Supinator - Biceps brachii • Extensor - Triceps brachii • Wrist flexors (medial epicondyle of humerus) • Flexor carpi ulnaris and flexor carpi radialis • Wrist extensors (lateral epicondyle of humerus) • Extensor carpi ulnaris & extensor carpi radialis • Force vectors of muscles on next slide KIN 330 Biomechanics

  20. Muscles of elbow joint:

  21. Muscles and Movements of Radioulnar Joint • Elbow Flexion - • Forearm Supination - Biceps Brachii • Forearm Pronation - Pronator Teres • Elbow Extension - • Forearm Supination - Supinator • Forearm Pronation -Pronator Quadratus • Muscle force vectors on next slide • Epicondylitis • The most common cumulative trauma disorder (CTD), repetitive stress injury (RSI), repetitive motion disorder (RMD), or overuse syndrome (OS) is epicondylitis • Epicondylitis website

  22. Radioulnar Jt Muscles

  23. Bones of Wrist and Hand

  24. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome • Background Carpal tunnel includes median nerve and 9 flexor tendons ( 4 flex dig sup, 4 flex dig prof, 1 fl pol l)

  25. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (cont’d) • Symptoms • Pain in wrist area, or referred proximally or distally • Tingling of thumb, fingers, or palmar side of hand • Loss of control of muscles affected by median nerve blockage • Causes • Enlargement of tissues within tunnel • Decreased size of tunnel • Extraneous tissue in tunnel • Treatment • Related to cause • Website for prevention of repetitive stress injury at computer workstations: CUergo: Neutral Posture Typing KIN 330 Biomechanics

  26. Review & Homework Problems for Chapter 7 • Review problems: • Torque at shoulder with elbow flexed vs extended • Fig 7-15, 7-16 • Compressive force at shoulder jt • Fig 7-17, sample problem 1 p 197 • Elbow flexion force • Figure 7-25, sample problem 2 p 206 • Homework – due Wed October 13 • Introductory problems, p 217: # 8,9,10 • Additional problem, p 218: #10

More Related