Kinesiology 2236A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 42: Plantar Fasciitis, Impingement Syndrome, Subungual Hematoma
Document Summary
Did you hear or feel a pop or crack: usually with fracture/significant ligament injury you will head pop or crack. How quickly: capsular vs. non capsular ligament. 7/10 gives us idea of how we can move them. Positions that make it worse: plantar flexion and inversion. Swelling, obvious deformity lower leg, ankle, foot. Weight bearing: static equal pressure front/back, side to side, dynamic guarded/painful movement. These give us ideas of how to handle them. Arom doesn"t tell us much contraction, stretch of muscles, stretch of inert tissue tells us quality of movement, how to handle them. Resisted: contractile, done isometric in neutral nothing getting stretched. End up with atfl, cfl, and peroneus longus as possible injuries. Structure specific test how bad each test is. Which muscle are we concerned about? peroneus longus. No just ones to specific ligaments: anterior drawer for atfl, talar tilt test for cfl, external rotation and ottawa ankle rules already done know its not fracture.