Lecture 25 Flashcards

1
Q

Upper limb as a system is made up of

A

Shoulder complex

Elbow

Wrist

Hand

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2
Q

What is the DOF in the shoulder complex

A

Flexion/Extension
Abduction/adduction
Internal/external rotation

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3
Q

What is the DOF in the elbow

A

Flexion/extension

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4
Q

What is the DOF in the wrist

A

Flexion/extension, radial/ulnar deviation

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5
Q

What are the functions of upper limbs

A

Mobility

Dexterity

Object manipulation

Daily life activities

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6
Q

Lower limb system is made up of

A

Hip

Knee

Ankle

Foot

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7
Q

What is the DOF in the Hip

A

Flexion/extension

Abduction/adduction

Internal/external rotation

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8
Q

What is the DOF in the Knee

A

Flexion/extension

Internal/external rotation

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9
Q

What is the DOF in the ankle

A

Plantar flexion/Dorsi flexion

Eversion/inversion

Medial/lateral rotation

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10
Q

What are the lower limb functions

A

Load carriage

Stability

Locomotion

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11
Q

Upper vs lower limb risk if something goes wrong:

Upper

A

Dropped object

Crushed objects

Poorly maneuvered object

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12
Q

Upper vs lower limb risk if something goes wrong:

Lower

A

Relative immobility

Fat risk

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13
Q

What is the incidence of limb amputation

A

2/3 of the amputations are lower limb

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14
Q

What are the causes of limb amputation

A

Dysvascular disease 54%

Trauma 45%

Cancer

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15
Q

What is the functional mobility in limb amputation

A

Lack of muscles and sensory feedback (unilateral amputees)

Gait asymmetries and increase use of intact limb

Results in some degenerative changes, secondary impairments such as Knee Osteoarthritis in intact limb

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16
Q

What is the severity in limb amputation

A

Distal to proximal

Unilateral
Bilateral
Leg/arm

17
Q

Walking gait in someone who has an amputated leg

A

Whole body COM is moving downward to upward direction

18
Q

If the trailing limb positive work decreases, it results in

A

Increase leading limb share of COM redirection

Increase ground reaction force loading in leading limb

Which causes secondary impairment such as Knee OA

19
Q

What do passive prosthesis do

A

Store and return small amounts of energy

Incapable of emulating normal ankle function

20
Q

What do power prosthesis do

A

Uses a series elastic actuator and a motor to emulate ankle foot functions

21
Q

What is the difference between power and passive prosthesis

A

Power prosthesis significantly decreases intact leg peak resultant force during walking

Power prosthesis decrease metabolic cost in walking

22
Q

Running is a

A

Spring like behaviour

23
Q

What do Carbon fiber prosthetic do

A

Compressed by body weight and return to its original shape as push off

Compression and decompression of the blade enable the release of energy at push off, and reduce metabolic cost of running

24
Q

What are the two types of running prosthesis

A

C shaped

J shaped

25
Q

What are C shaped prosthesis

A

More commonly used for jogging and distance running

More effective at storing and releasing energy over time

26
Q

What are J shaped prosthesis

A

More commonly used for sprinting

Allows for a quick return of energy to achieve higher speeds