Clinical Management of Neuromusculoskeletal Dysfunction of the Lower Quadrant
Objectives
General characterization
Code
MF16
Credits
8
Responsible teacher
Prof. Doutor Eduardo José Brazete Cruz
Hours
Weekly - Available soon
Total - Available soon
Teaching language
Portuguese / English
Prerequisites
Bibliography
Jones, M. and Rivett, D. (2004). Clinical Reasoning for Manual Therapists. Butterworth Heinemann.
Butler DS, Moseley GL. (2003) Explain Pain. Noigroup Publication. Adelaide City West, South Australia.
Petty, N.J. (2004) Principles of neuromusculoskeletal treatment and management: a guide for therapists. Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh.
McCarthy, C. (2010) "Combined Movement Theory". Churchill Livingstone. 2010.
Mulligan, B.R. (1995) "Manual Therapy "Nags", "Snags" and MwMs". New Zealand: Plant View services.
Richardson, C. Jull, G. Hodges, P. Hides, J. (1999)"Therapeutic Exercise for spinal Stabilization". Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone.
Teaching method
Evaluation method
Students are assessed by the presentation of a Patient Case Report (limited to 3500 words). The Patient Case Report is focused on the student's clinical reasoning process, including the aspects related with the patient's assessment, treatment selection, prognosis, treatment progression, the outcomes of the management process, and the criteria for discharge.
To complete this curricular unit the students must have a classification of a minimum of 50% in the assessment activity.
Subject matter
The content includes an integrated clinical approach using concepts and techniques from a variety of approaches to manual therapy, manipulation and exercise, underpinned by an understanding of clinical anatomy, medical specialties and other disciplines, in a clinical reasoning and decision-making framework.
· Clinical Reasoning and clinical decision-making: Diagnostic Reasoning and non diagnostic forms of reasoning; Practice of clinical reasoning with patient case clinical presentations;
· Mechanisms of pain and dysfunction in specific conditions. Application of the clinical sciences across integrated clinical cases;
· Neuromusculoskeletal assessment (subjective and objective) and treatment skills (joint, muscle and nerve) for the neuromusculoskeletal dysfunctions of the lower quadrant;
· Evidence of the effectiveness of physiotherapy interventions.