1 / 48

Muscoloskeletal System

Muscoloskeletal System. Musculoskeletal System Consists of:. Bones Muscles Joints cartilage. function. Support to stand erect Movement Protect inner vital organs Hemopoiesis – Bone marrow produces white & red bld cells and platelets

marja
Download Presentation

Muscoloskeletal System

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. Muscoloskeletal System

  2. Musculoskeletal System Consists of: • Bones • Muscles • Joints • cartilage

  3. function • Support to stand erect • Movement • Protect inner vital organs • Hemopoiesis – Bone marrow produces white & red bld cells and platelets • Reservoir for storage of minerals & energy – Ca. & Phosphorus in the bones.

  4. Bones • 206 • Bones & cartilage are types of Connective tissue • Bone is hard and rigid and dense

  5. Joints • 2 or more bones connecting • Mobility • Nonsynovial = immovable, skull sutures • Synovial = movable • Synovial joints – ends of bones are covered with cartilage & enclosed in a joint cavity filled with synovial fld.

  6. Ligaments are fibrous bands – connect one bone to another. Strengthen joint & prevent movement in the wrong direction • Bursa – enclosed sac filled with synovial fld.& are located in areas of potential friction = shoulder, knee. Help muscles & tendons glide over bone.

  7. Muscles • 40 – 50 % body weight • Contract & produce movement • Skeletal muscle is voluntary • Composed of Bundles of muscle fibers or fasciculi • Muscle is attached to bones via tendons

  8. Skeletal muscles produce the following movements • Flexion – bending • Extension – straightening • Abduction – away from midline • Adduction – toward midline • Pronation – palm down • Supination – palm up • Circumduction - circular

  9. Skeletal muscles produce the following movements • Inversion – sole inward • Eversion – sole outward • Rotation – head around central axis • Protraction –forward movement parallel to ground (chin) • Retraction – backward parallel movement • Depression/elevation – Shoulders up & down

  10. Temporomandibular Joint (TMJ) • Articulation of temporal & mandible • Depression anterior to tragus of ear • Jaw function for chewing & speaking • Movements • Hinge – open/close • Gliding – protrusion/retraction • Gliding- side to side

  11. Spine • 33 Vertebrae • Spinous process posterior midline • 7 Cervical • 12 Thoracic • 5 Lumbar • 5 Sacral • 3 – 4 Coccygeal

  12. C7 & T1 prominent base of neck • Inferior angle of scapula in line with T7 & T8 • Highest point iliac crest at L4 • Curves Double S – lateral view • cervical & lumbar are concave;(inward) • Thoracic & sacrococcygeal are convex • Intervertebral discs cushion the spine = shock absorber

  13. Shoulder • Articulation of humerus & glenoid fossa of scapula • Ball & socket – enclosed by rotator cuff (4 muscles and tendons) • Acromion process – bump at top of shoulder

  14. Elbow • Articulation humerus, radius, & ulna • Landmarks are the Medial & lateral epicondyles of the humerus & large olecranon process of the ulna in between • Sensitive ulnar nerve

  15. Wrists and Carpals • Wrist –articulation of radius & carpal bones • Permits flexion, extension & side to side deviation • Metacarpophalangeal & interphalangeal joints – permit finger flexion and extension

  16. Hip • Acetabulum & femur • Ball & socket joint • Weight bearing function • Landmarks ( IM injections) • Anterior, superior iliac crest • Ischial tuberosity (↓ gluteus maximus, flex hip) • Greater trochanter of femur

  17. Knee • Femur, tibia & patella • Largest joint • Hinged joint & largest synovial membrane • 2 cartilages – medial & lateral menisci cushion the tibia & femur

  18. Ankle & Foot • Ankle joint is the articulation of Tibia, fibula & talus • Hinged joint • Dorsiflexion • Plantar flexion • Landmarks • Medial & lateral malleolus

  19. Aging adult • Loss of bone density = osteoporosis • Postural changes • ↓ height due to shortening of the vertebral column

  20. Subjective Data • Joints • Pain • Stiffness • Swelling, heat, redness • Muscles • Pain, cramps • weakness

  21. Subjective Data • Bones • Pain • Deformity • Trauma • Functional Assessment ( ADL’s ) • Self – care behaviors

  22. Objective AssessmentPhysical Exam Musculoskeletal • Purpose • To assess function for ADL’s • Screen for abnormalities

  23. Screening Exams • Inspection • Palpation • ROM with movement active or passive if apparent limitations • Age Specific

  24. Important to : • Client comfort • Systemic approach • Support joints • Bilateral exam

  25. Equipment • Tape measure • Goniometer • Skin marking pen

  26. Inspection • Size & contour of joint • Color, swelling, masses, deformity

  27. Palpation • Each joint • Temperature • Muscles • Bony articulations joint capsule • Tenderness, swelling, masses

  28. ROM • Active ROM • Limitation – try passive motion • or in ROM, use a goniometer to measure angles

  29. Muscle Testing • Repeat movements for Active ROM • Client flexes & holds against opposing force • = bilaterally, resists opposing force

  30. Grade muscle strength (pg. 616) • Values 0- 5 • Grade 5= Normal –Full ROM against gravity, full resistance

  31. TMJ • Swelling, tenderness, crepitation • Crepitation = audible & palpable crunching or grating with movement

  32. Cervical Spine • Inspection • Head & neck alignment • Spine • Palpation • Spinous processes, Trapezius, Paravertebral muscles • ROM, flexion, extension, hyperextension, lateral flexion, rotation, circumduction • Repeat applying opposing force

  33. Shoulders • Inspect • Bilateral comparison • Palpate • Bilaterally for muscle spasms, atrophy, swelling, heat, tenderness • Clavicle to acromioclavicular joint, scapula, greater tubercle of humerus, subacromal bursa, biceps groove & anterior aspect glenohumeral joint

  34. Test for Shoulder ROM • Flexion • Extension • Internal rotation • External rotation • Abduction • Adduction • Circumduction Test for strength; shrug shoulders, flex forward, up & abduct against resistance

  35. Elbow • Inspect • Size & contour with flexion, extension • Deformity, redness, swelling • Olecranon bursa • Palpate • Flexed 70 degrees • Olecranon process, medial & lateral epicondyles of humerus • Olecronon bursa for heat, swelling, tenderness, nodules

  36. ROM of Elbow • Flexion • Extension • pronation • supination

  37. Muscle Strength of Elbow • Flex elbow – then extend against resistance applied just proximal to the wrist

  38. Wrist and Hand • Inspect • Palmar & dorsal surface • Position, contour and shape • Swelling, redness, deformity or nodules

  39. Wrist and Hand • Palpate • Wrist and hand joints • Support hand, use both thumbs to palpate • Metacarpophanlangeal joints • Use thumb and index finger in a pinching motion to palpate interphalangeal joints

  40. ROM of Wrists and Hands • Hyperextension • Palmar flexion • Flexion of fingers • Abduction for fingers • Opposition • Ulnar deviation, Radial deviation

  41. Muscle Strength for Wrist and Hands • Flex wrist against palm resistance • Phalen’s test – both hands flexed & back to back for 60 secs. Normally no symp. Carpel tunnel syndrome will give a + result of numbness & burning • Tinel’s Sign – direct percussion @ median nerve of wrist. In carpel tunnel + result = burning & tingling

  42. Hip • Inspect hip joint with spine when client is standing • Client is supine, palpate the hip joints • ROM

  43. Knee • Supine with legs extended ( knees can be flexed or dangling for inspection) • Swelling = ? Soft tissue or ↑ fld in the joint • Bulge Sign – stroke up medial aspect 2-3x. Tap lateral aspect. Watch for a bulge in the medial hollow. • Ballottement of the Patella – lger amt of flds

  44. Ankle & foot • Inspect while nonweight- bearing, then standing & walking • ROM • Muscle strength

  45. Spine • Standing • Inspect • Palpate spinous processes • ROM of spine is checked by asking to touch toes

  46. Leg measurement • True leg length = measure b/t fixed points, the anterior iliac spine cross the medial side of the knee to the medial malleolus

More Related