Arthrogenic Inhibition

More thoughts on arthrogenic inhibition and muscle weakness. Here is some of the nuts and bolts of it. 

from the post: “The authors found that any pressure increase within the joint capsule depressed the H reflex and inhibited the action of the quadriceps. They hypothesize that this may contribute to pathological weakness after joint injury.

So how does all this apply to us?

As we all know, lots of patients have joint dysfunction. Joint dysfunction leads to cartilage irritation, which leads to joint effusion. This will inhibit the muscles that cross the joint. This causes the person to become unable to stabilize that joint and develop a compensation pattern. Next the stress is transferred to the connective tissue structures surrounding the joint which, if the force is sufficient, will fail. Now we have a sprain and some of the protective reflexes can take over. Abnormal forces can now be translated to the cartilage. This, if it goes on long enough, can perpetuate degeneration, which causes further joint dysfunction. The cycle repeats and if someone doesn’t intervene and control the effects of inflammation, restore normal joint motion and rehabilitate the surrounding musculature, the patient’s condition will continue its downward spiral, becoming another statistic contributing to the tremendous economic and physical costs of an injury.”

Want more :  read our entire blog post on this topic here , link below
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More on Clamshells and the Gluteus medius. Great article written by one of our Facebook followers: Andy Du BoisHe talks about specificity of exercise:“In simple terms it says that the strength gained in a particular exercise is only relevant …
More on Clamshells and the Gluteus medius. Great article written by one of our Facebook followers: Andy Du Bois

He talks about specificity of exercise:
“In simple terms it says that the strength gained in a particular exercise is only relevant to other exercises that look and feel similar to the original exercise. For example the strength gained in doing a bench press will make you better at push ups but wont improve your ability to throw a cricket ball, or the strength gained in doing small range squats will help skiing but wont help you to kick a ball further.
If the body positions, loads, speed of movement and range of movement aren’t similar then the body wont transfer the gains from one exercise to the next.”

Nice job and a good, quick read:

http://www.mile27.com.au/strengthening-your-gluteus-medius-2/
  • Reader: Thanks for posting this. So, focusing on GM muscle activation is an incomplete, spot-weld patch. It’s really all about the whole ship. The captain needs to get data on joint position, velocity, speed, and load to integrate glute med into the whole syst
  • The Gait Guys you now are seeing the whole picture. Perfect!
  • The Gait Guys we are not saying clams have no merit; we are saying the research shows they do not effectively strengthen the g med
  • Reader:  Local and global Stability muscles respond to low load activities not strengthening activities. Also their primary function, especially the global stability muscles, is eccentric control of motion. As a result classic concentric activities are ineffective. These exercises work the global mobilizers reinforcing a already faulty movement pattern. The clam shell is not about gaining glute strength. it is about improving control and then applying that control to more functional exercises. We start with the clam because it allows for activation without substation if done correctly. And that is the key. They most be done correctly with the appropriate focus.
  • The Gait Guys surface EMG can be a valuable tool here, to see what and hhow much you are activating
    Reader: I am not an expert but what I think this article means is you need to RELATIVELY get the glut med working more than the TFL. Not just get your glut-med to work. You want it to grow stronger than TFL if you have those problems, so dont do exercise that strengthens your TFL as much as glut med 
  • Reader: The issue with EMG is crosstalk and if not placed correctly you will pick up other muscles. An example is picking up levator scap when testing upper trap.
  • Reader:  it is not about leg position:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22488226, it is about the muscles the exercise really activates..? (I still agree: it should be more specific also. what about a single leg deadlift?)
    Hip muscle activity during 3 side-lying hip-strengthening exercises… - PubMed - NCBI  J Athl Train. 2012 Jan-Feb;47(1):15-23. NCBI.NLM.NIH.GOV|BY MCBETH JM , ET AL.
  • The Gait Guys how about a single leg squat with weight? deadlifts tend to create increased shear in the lumbar spine (when performed improperly) and that creates other issues
    Reader: You cannot lift that much with one leg i think. At least not very soon after starting. Squats with single leg are probably just as good, you cant load too much so easily. With pistol squats, need to take care of technique (pelvic control). Squats for concentric and (romanian, single leg) deadlifts for eccentric strength i would suggest. Those two different types of muscle contractions need different training for optimal performance…
Look carefully at the graphs. Flip flops seem to allow for less peak dorsiflexion of the foot (plantar flexion needed to hold the flip flop on?) and more inversion and eversion of the foot. Makes sense since there is no heel counter to stopthe calca…

Look carefully at the graphs. Flip flops seem to allow for less peak dorsiflexion of the foot (plantar flexion needed to hold the flip flop on?) and more inversion and eversion of the foot. Makes sense since there is no heel counter to stopthe calcaneus from inverting or everting. 

“The results from this study indicate that barefoot, flip-flops and sandals produced different peak GRF variables and ankle moment compared to shoes while all footwear yield different COP and ankle and knee kinematics compared to barefoot.”

J Foot Ankle Res. 2013 Nov 6;6(1):45. doi: 10.1186/1757-1146-6-45.

A comparison of gait biomechanics of flip-flops, sandals, barefoot and shoes.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24196492

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Trying to strengthen the gluteus medius? Using clamshells? That may not be such a great idea. 

“Conclusions:

The ABD exercise is preferred if targeted activation of the GMed is a goal. Activation of the other muscles in the ABD-ER and CLAM exercises exceeded that of GMed, which might indicate the exercises are less appropriate when the primary goal is the GMed activation and strengthening.”

J Athl Train. 2012 Jan-Feb; 47(1): 15–23.
Hip Muscle Activity During 3 Side-Lying Hip-Strengthening Exercises in Distance Runners
Joseph M. McBeth, MS, ATC,* Jennifer E. Earl-Boehm, PhD, ATC,† Stephen C. Cobb, PhD, ATC,† and Wendy E. Huddleston, PhD, PT‡
Commentary from our Social media sites:
  • I have done a side-lying leg lift with my heel against a wall for a more effective glute med exercise. IMHO, I think clamshells can work if your hip position is good (balancing on the isis), squeeze thrust at the end of the motion - the problem is, it is really easy to revert to a compensation pattern & rely on the tfl to accomplish the move.
  • The Gait Guys We have not used that one. We usually do weight bearing, 1 legged balance work and mini squats
  • The Gait Guys remember the g med is paired with the contralateral QL. Is she firing there? How does she do with fewer reps/ longer hold times to build endurance?
  • Andy: I’ve been saying this for years - move away from concentric activation in non functional positions and move towards strengthening muscles how they work in function - for runners loading the glute med eccentrically in an upright position makes far more sense.
  • Reader: Interesting. I use window wipers. Basically clamshells with hip extension so that your heel is pressed against a wall. Gmed takes on a stabilizing role and an active role as the primary mover.
  • Found this little video a long time ago and have been using it ever since. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7y_TnADXS4
this one is called windshield wipers and will really blast your glute med and work glute max and…
  • Reader: The glute med is a low load stability muscle. It does not respond to classic high load strengthening exercises. It makes sense that as you increase the load on the glute med the outer moving muscles take over at the expense of the Glute med reinforcing the faulty movement pattern you are trying to correct.
  • Reader: In terms of gait, why is activating the G-Med important? Does the G-Med control internal rotation of the femur, or does it contribute to external rotation of the femur?
  • The Gait Guys It maintains pelvic stability during stance phase.
  • Reader: I have done a side-lying leg lift with my heel against a wall for a more effective glute med exercise. IMHO, I think clamshells can work if your hip position is good (balancing on the isis), squeeze thrust at the end of the motion - the problem is, it is really easy to revert to a compensation pattern & rely on the tfl to accomplish the move.
  • The Gait Guys: We have not used that one. We usually do weight bearing, 1 legged balance work and mini squats
  • The Gait Guys remember the g med is paired with the contralateral QL. Is she firing there? How does she do with fewer reps/ longer hold times to build endurance?
  • Reader: I’ve been saying this for years - move away from concentric activation in non functional positions and move towards strengthening muscles how they work in function - for runners loading the glute med eccentrically in an upright position makes far more sense.
  • Reader: Ive always had a hard time understanding how one can transfer clamshells to functional movement. 
  • Reader: I’ve heard people say that the clamshells get the muscle firing again so it can then be integrated into regular functional patterns, but it never made sense.
  • Andy:Totally agree - I wrote this article 5 years ago which may be of interest http://www.mile27.com.au/strengthening-your-gluteus…/
  • The point is to establish the ability to activate the glute med in isolation. Once that is achieved then one can begin functional exercises to continue to improve glute med function.
  • Reader: Thanks for sharing. I’ve seen and experienced remarkable resolution of patellofemoral syndrome symptoms using functional squat and lunge exercises (a la P90X3, but with great attention to proper form over ROM or reps) that strengthened the glutes far out of proportion to the quadriceps. For sidelying I recommend folks keep the thigh in line with their trunk (i.e., in slight hip extension) as clinically this seems to activate glut med most effectively while preventing hip flexor substitution. Glad there is now evidence demonstrating this.
Reader: To start an activation of Glut med I like this one too - static, but functional (for the standing side, not the flexed one!!)http://www.damiangriffin.org/rehab/stage1/vmowall.htm
We have talked about the muscles being “turned off” when there is joint effusion or injury. But what happens to the motor system that drives the muscles (ie the cortex)? It seems the brain actually becomes MORE excited and it contributes…

We have talked about the muscles being “turned off” when there is joint effusion or injury. But what happens to the motor system that drives the muscles (ie the cortex)? 

It seems the brain actually becomes MORE excited and it contributes little, if any to the “muscle inhibition” that is occurring in the injured or swollen joint (ie; it is a spinal cord segmental reflex). 

Take home message? 

When a joint is injured, the muscles crossing the joint become “turned off” (or defacilitated/weak) when the joint is swollen 

The “turing off” that occurs is a local or spinal segmental (read spinal cord) phenomenon. This is great because we all work with these reflexes on a daily basis

The lack of muscle activity appears due to decreased inhibition (which causes increased excitation) of the cortex. So the brain is working hard to figure out a way around the problem!

“The results of this study provide no evidence for a supraspinal contribution to quadriceps Arthrogenic Muscle Inhibition. Paradoxically, but consistent with previous observations in patients with chronic knee joint pathology, quadriceps corticomotor excitability increased after experimental knee joint effusion. The increase in quadriceps corticomotor excitability may be at least partly mediated by a decrease in gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic inhibition within the motor cortex.”

Arthritis Res Ther. 2014 Dec 10;16(6):502. [Epub ahead of print]

Quadriceps arthrogenic muscle inhibition: the effects of experimental knee joint effusion on motor cortex excitability.


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25497133

The Gait Guys: The National Shoe Fit Certification program.

Do not take our word for it … . see what these experts in their fields think about our online certification course.

http://twinbridgesphysiotherapy.com/course-reviews/the-national-shoe-fit-certification-the-gait-guys/

Can there be a higher recommendation for our National Shoe Fit certification program ? Thank you Dr. Religioso ! We are grateful for your amazing work on your end ! 
http://www.themanualtherapist.com/2014/08/review-shoe-fit-course-via-gait-guys.html

More on the the peroneus:


It seems that too much of a good thing (ie pronation or supination) slows down the peroneus. A slower contraction time as the foot moves from midstance to terminal stance (when the peroneus longus contracts to assist in descending the 1st ray) appears to biomechanical consuquences…

“RESULTS: Participants with pronated or supinated foot structures had slower peroneus longus reaction times than participants with neutral feet (P = .01 and P = .04, respectively). We found no differences for the tibialis anterior or gluteus medius.

CONCLUSIONS: Foot structure influenced peroneus longus reaction time. Further research is required to establish the consequences of slower peroneal reaction times in pronated and supinated foot structures. Researchers investigating lower limb muscle reaction time should control for foot structure because it may influence results.”

J Athl Train. 2013 May-Jun;48(3):326-30. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-48.2.15. Epub 2013 Feb 20.
Foot structure and muscle reaction time to a simulated ankle sprain.
Denyer JR1, Hewitt NL, Mitchell AC.

#gait
#thegaitguys

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Thinking on your feet. You have less than 20 minutes with this gentleman, as he has to leave to catch a plane. See how you did. 

Lateral foot pain and cowboy boots?

A 55 YO male patient presents with pain in his left foot area of the cuboid and tail of the fifth metatarsal.  He was told that he had a “locked cuboid” on this side by his chiropractor, who provided some treatment and temporary relief. There has been  no history of trauma and Most recently, he has been wearing cowboy boots and doing “a lot of walking” particularly when he was over in Europe and feels this was a precipitating factor.

Watching him walk in his cowboy boots, the rear foot and heel plate of the cowboy boot is worn into varus. Gait evaluation reveals his left foot to remain in supination (and thus in varus) throughout the entire gait cycle. 

Examination of the foot revealed loss of long axis extension at the metatarsophalangeal and interphalangeal articulations. The cuboid appeared to be moving appropriately. (to see why cuboid function is integral, see this post here. ) There was weakness in the peroneus brevis and peroneus longus musculature with reactive trigger points in the belly of each.  There is tenderness over the tail of the fifth metatarsal and the groove where the peroneal muscle travels through as well as in the peroneal tendon as it travels through here. 

So, what’s up?

This patient has peroneal tendonitis at the point around the foot as it goes around the tail of the fifth metatarsal. Discomfort is dull and achy in this area.  The cowboy boot is putting his foot in some degree of supination (plantar flexion, inversion adduction); this combined with the rear foot varus (from wear on the heel) is creating excessive load on the peroneus longus, which is trying to descend the 1st ray and create a stable medial tripod. Look at the pictures above and check out this post here

What did we do?

Temporarily, we created a valgus post on an insole for him.  This will push him onto his 1st metatarsal as he goes through  midstance into termiinal stance. He was asked to discontinue using the boot until we could get the heel resoled with a very slight valgus cant. We also treated with neuromuscular acupuncture over the peroneal group (GB 34, GB 35, GB 36 and a few Ashi points between GB34 and 35) circle the Dragon about the tail of fifth metatarsal, GB41 as well as the insertion of peroneus onto the base of the first metatarsal (approximately SP4).   We K-taped the peroneus longus to facilitate function of peroneus longus.  He was given peroneus longus (plantarflexion and eversion) and peroneus brevis (dorsiflexion and eversion) theraband exercises. 

How did you do? Easy peasy, right? If they were all only this straight forward….

 

The Gait Guys. teaching you to think on your feet and increasing your gait literacy with each and every post. 

 

Foot Clearance: We don't think about it until we are face down in the mud, and we have all been there.

How many times have you tripped over something so small and insignificant you can barely believe it ? We have all tripped over a small elevation in a cracked sidewalk or a curled up rug corner.  But sometimes we look back and there is no evidence of a culprit, not even a Hobbit or an elf.  How can this happen ?
Minimum foot clearance (MFC) is defined as the minimum vertical distance between the lowest point of the foot of the swing leg and the walking surface during the swing phase of the gait cycle. In other simpler words, the minimum height all parts of the foot need to clear the ground to progress through the swing phase of the limb without contacting the ground. One could justify that getting as close to this minimal amount without catching the foot is most mechanically advantageous.  But, how close to vulnerability are you willing to get ? And as you age, do you even want to enter the danger zone ? Obviously, insufficient clearance is linked to tripping and falling, which is most concerning in the elderly. 
Trips or falls from insufficient foot clearance can be related to insufficient hallux and toe(s) dorsiflexion (extension), ankle dorsiflexion, knee flexion and/or hip flexion, failure to maintain ipsilateral pelvis neutral ( anterior/posterior pelvis posture shifting), even insufficient hip hike generated by the contralateral hip abductors, namely the gluteus medius in most people’s minds. It can also be from an obvious failed concerted effort of all of the above. Note that some of these biomechanical events are sagittal and some are frontal plane.  However, do not ever forget that the swing leg is moving through the axial plane, supported in part by the abdominal wall, starting from a posteriorly obliqued pelvis at swing initiation into an anteriorly obliqued position at terminal swing. We would be remiss as well if we did not ask the reader to consider the “inverted pendulum theory” effect of controlling the dynamically moving torso over the fixed stance phase leg (yes, we could have said “core stability” but that is so flippantly used these days that many lose appreciation for really what is happening dynamically in human locomotion).  If each component is even slightly insufficient, a summation can lead to failed foot clearance.  This is why a total body examination is necessary, every time, and its why the exclusive use of video gait analysis alone will fail every time in finding the culprit(s). 
When we examine people we all tend to look for biomechanical issues unless one grasps the greater global picture of how the body must work as a whole. When one trips we first tend to look for an external source as the cause such as a turned up rug or an object, but there are plentiful internal causes as well. For example, we have this blog post on people tripping on subway stairs.  In this case, there was a change in the perceptual height of the stairs because of a subconscious, learned and engaged sensory-motor behavior of prior steps upward.  However, do not discount direct, peripheral and lower fields of view vision changes or challenges when it comes to trips and falls. Do not forget to consider vestibular components, illumination and gait speed variables as well.  Even the most subtle change in the environment (transitions from tile to carpet, transitions from treadmill to ground walking etc) can cause a trip or fall if it is subtle enough to avoid detection, especially if one is skirting the edge of MFC (minimal foot clearance) already. And, remember this, gait has components of both anticipatory and reactive adjustments, any sensory-motor adaptive changes that impair the speed, calculation and timely integration of these adjustments can change gait behaviors. Sometimes even perceived fall or trip risk in a client can easily slip them into a shorter step/stride length to encourage less single leg stance phase and more double support phase gait. This occurs often in the elderly. This can be met with a reduced minimal foot clearance by design which in itself can increase risk, especially at the moment of transition from a larger step length to a shorter one. Understanding all age-related and non-age related effects on lower limb trajectory variables as described above and only help the clinician become more competent in gait analysis of your client and in understanding the critical variables that are challenging them. 
Many studies indicate that variability and consistency in a motor pattern such as those necessary for foot clearance are huge keys for predictable patterns and injury prevention, and in this case a predictor for trips and falls.  Barrett’s study concluded that “greater MFC variability was observed in older compared to younger adults and older fallers compared to older non-fallers in the majority of studies. Greater MFC variability may contribute to increased risk of trips and associated falls in older compared to young adults and older fallers compared to older non-fallers.”
Once again we outline our mission, to enlighten everyone into the complexities of gait and how gait is all encompassing.  There are so many variables to gait, many of which will never be noted, detected or reflected on a gait analysis and a camera.  Don’t be a minimalist when it comes to evaluating your client’s gait, simply using a treadmill, a camera and some elaborate computer software are not often going to cut the mustard when it really counts.  A knowledgeable and engaged brain are arguably your best gait analysis tools.  
Remember, what you see in someone’s gait is not their problem, it is their adaptive strategy(s).  That is all you are seeing on your camera and computer screen, compensations, not the source of the problem(s).
Shawn and Ivo
the gait guys

References (some of them): 

1. Gait Posture. 2010 Oct;32(4):429-35. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2010.07.010. Epub 2010 Aug 7.

A systematic review of the effect of ageing and falls history on minimum foot clearance characteristics during level walking. Barrett RS1, Mills PM, Begg RK.

2. Gait Posture. 2007 Feb;25(2):191-8. Epub 2006 May 4. Minimum foot clearance during walking: strategies for the minimisation of trip-related falls. Begg R1, Best R, Dell’Oro L, Taylor S.

3. Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon). 2011 Nov;26(9):962-8. doi: 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2011.05.013. Epub 2011 Jun 29. Ageing and limb dominance effects on foot-ground clearance during treadmill and overground walking. Nagano H1, Begg RK, Sparrow WA, Taylor S.

4. Acta Bioeng Biomech. 2014;16(1):3-9. Differences in gait pattern between the elderly and the young during level walking under low illumination. Choi JS, Kang DW, Shin YH, Tack GR.
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When the big guy heads medially….Game Changer

Lately we have been seeing a lot of bunions (hallux valgus). While doing some research on intermetatarsal angles (that’s for another post) we came across the nifty diagram you see above. 

Regardless of the cause, as the 1st metatarsal moves medially, there are biomechanical consequences. Lets look at each in turn. 

  • the EHB (extensor hallucis brevis) axis shifts medially. this muscle, normally an extensor of the proximal phalanyx, now becomes more of an abductor of the hallux. It’s secondary action of assisting the descent of the head of the 1st metatarsal no longer happens and it actually moves the base of the proximal phalanyx posteriorly, altering the axis of centration of the joint, contributing to a lack of dorsiflexion of the joint and a hallux limitus
  • Abductor hallucis becomes more of a flexor, as it moves to the plantar surface of the foot. Remember, a large percentage of people already have this muscle inserting more on the plantar surface of the foot (along with the medial aspect of the flexor hallucis brevis), so in these folks, it moves even more laterally, distorting the proximal phalanx along its long axis (ie medially) see this post here for more info
  • Flexor hallucis brevis moves more laterally. Remember this muscle houses the sesamoid bones before inserting onto the base of the proximal phalannx; the medial blending with the abductor hallucis and the lateral with the adductor hallucis. Because the sesamoid bones have moved laterally, they no longer afford this muscle the mechanical advantage they did previously and the axis of motion of the 1st metatarsal phalangeal joint moves dorsally and posterior, contributing to limited dorsiflexion of that joint and a resultant hallux limitis. The lateral movement of the sesamoids also tips the long axis of the 1st metatarsal and proximal phalanyx into eversion. In addition, the metatarsal head is exposed and is subject to the ground reactive forces normally tranmittted through the sesamoids; often leading to metatarsalgia. 
  • Adductor hallucis: this muscle now has a greater mechanical advantage  and because the head of the 1st ray is not anchored, acts to abduct the hallux to a greater degree. The now everted position of the hallux contributes to this as well

As you can see, there is more to the whole than the sum of the parts. Bunions have many biomechanical consequences, and these are only a small part of the big picture. Take you time, learn your anatomy and examine everything that has a foot!

See you in the shoe isle…

Ivo and Shawn

pictures from: http://www.orthobullets.com/foot-and-ankle/7008/hallux-valgus and http://www.stepbystepfootcare.com/faqs/nakedfeet/

Why you should follow us on social media. Not just here on our blog.

Hi Gang. 

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