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Interaction of nerves, Transverse Abdominis and Serratus Anterior. this complexity highlighting the need for clinical reasoning
Torques and the Muscular System
Stability
The stabilising component of the muscle force is the one which acts through the long axis of the bone, and therefore cannot contribute to the rotary torque.
Summation of torques
The effect of equal parallel forces acting in opposite directions is called a force couple eg the hands on a steering wheel of a car, Scapular motion, Internal and External Oblique and Transverse Abdominus.
Resultant torques of a force system must be equal to the sum of the torques of the individual forces of the system about the same point, therefore rotation will be absent when the sum of the torques of all forces about any point or axis equals zero.
Levers
Used to either overcome a resistance larger than the magnitude of the effort applied to or increase the speed and range of motion through which resistance is moved eg a crowbar uses power at the expense of ROM, the golf club uses ROM at the expense of force.
Anatomical Levers
The bone serves as a rigid bar, the joint as the fuclrum, and the contracting muscles as the force.
Newtons third law : "for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction" suggests that movements in one part of the body must be stabilised by an equal and opposite force in that plane of motion. Therefore, the global stabilisers must be activated in anticipation or else the specific stabilisers must react in that plane of motion. Reactions after the movement has already occurred leave the possibility of injury.
First Class Levers
The axis lies between the effort and the resistance eg triceps dip, head nodding
Second Class Levers
The resistance lies between the axis and the effort.
This arrangement has the advantage of magnifying the effects of the effort so that it takes less force to move the resistance. Its disadvantage is thats its ROM is sacrificied eg Wheelbarrow, door, nutcracker, foot raising in PF
Eccentric muscle contractions against gravity eg brachialis during elbow extension
Third Class Levers
The effort lies between the axis and the resistance.
A very small motion by the effort will produce a large motion in resistance
The advantage of a third class lever is speed and ROM eg biceps during flexion, however poorer control of motion
Global stabilizers
Muscles which stabilise regardless of the direction of movement eg Transverse abdominus uring arm movement, the contralateral upper and lower trapezius during arm movement
Usually multisegmental
Specific stabilizers
Muscles which stabilise specific to the direction of movement
Generally cross one joint in the periphery (cross 2 joints in spine), deep and close to the joint.
May serve a proprioceptive function eg multifidus
Generally endurance, 'shunt' muscles eg: Brachioradialis, brachialis, rotator cuff
Specific Mobilisers
Generally 'spurt' muscles and direction dependent eg Pectoralis Major
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