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Manual Therapy for Musculoskeletal Pain Syndromes. an evidence- and clinical-informed approach

  • Book

  • June 2015
  • Elsevier Health Science
  • ID: 3687909

A pioneering, one-stop manual which harvests the best proven approaches from physiotherapy research and practice to assist the busy clinician in real-life screening, diagnosis and management of patients with musculoskeletal pain across the whole body. Led by an experienced editorial team, the chapter authors have integrated both their clinical experience and expertise with reasoning based on a neurophysiologic rationale with the most updated evidence.

The textbook is divided into eleven sections, covering the top evidence-informed techniques in massage, trigger points, neural muscle energy, manipulations, dry needling, myofascial release, therapeutic exercise and psychological approaches. In the General Introduction, several authors review the epidemiology of upper and lower extremity pain syndromes and the process of taking a comprehensive history in patients affected by pain. In Chapter 5, the basic principles of the physical examination are covered, while Chapter 6 places the field of manual therapy within the context of contemporary pain neurosciences and therapeutic neuroscience education.

For the remaining sections, the textbook alternates the upper and lower quadrants. Sections 2 and 3 provide state-of-the-art updates on mechanical neck pain, whiplash, thoracic outlet syndrome, myelopathy, radiculopathy, peri-partum pelvic pain, joint mobilizations and manipulations and therapeutic exercises, among others. Sections 4 to 9 review pertinent and updated aspects of the shoulder, hip, elbow, knee, the wrist and hand, and finally the ankle and foot. The last two sections of the book are devoted to muscle referred pain and neurodynamics.

  • The only one-stop manual detailing examination and treatment of the most commonly seen pain syndromes supported by accurate scientific and clinical data
  • Over 800 illustrations demonstrating examination procedures and techniques
  • Led by an expert editorial team and contributed by internationally-renowned researchers, educators and clinicians
  • Covers epidemiology and history-taking
  • Highly practical with a constant clinical emphasis

Table of Contents

PART 1: GENERAL INTRODUCTION

1. Epidemiology of upper extremity pain syndromes Louise Thwaites and Karen Walker-Bone

2. Epidemiology of lower extremity pain syndromes Adam Goode and Sean Rundell

3. History taking Peter A. Huijbregts

4. History taking for patients with lower extremity syndromes Megan Burrowbridge Donaldson and Kristina Averell

5. Physical examination Shane Koppenhaver, Timothy Flynn and Jennifer Crane

6. Treating the brain in chronic pain Adriaan Louw

7. Mechanical diagnosis and therapy for the spine: McKenzie method Stephen May and Richard Rosedale

8. Mechanical diagnosis and therapy for the extremity: McKenzie method Stephen May and Grant Richard Burges Watson

PART 2: CERVICOTHORACIC SPINE IN UPPER EXTREMITY PAIN SYNDROMES

9. Mechanical neck pain Bryan S. Dennison and Michael H. Leal

10. Whiplash-associated disorders Michele Sterling

11. Differential diagnosis and treatment of cervical myelopathy, cervical radiculopathy and cervical myeloradiculopathy Chad Cook and Amy Cook

12. Thoracic outlet syndrome Susan W. Stralka

13. Thoracic spine manipulation William Egan, Paul E. Glynn and Joshua A. Cleland

14. Joint mobilization and manipulation of the cervical spine John R. Krauss, Douglas S. Creighton, Joshua A. Cleland and César Fernández-de-las-Peñas

15. Therapeutic exercise for mechanical neck pain Carol Kennedy

PART 3: LUMBAR SPINE PAIN SYNDROMES

16. Mechanical low back pain Scott Burns, Edward Foresman, Stephenie Kraycsir, and Joshua A. Cleland

17. Lumbar radiculopathy Chad Cook and Mark Wilhelm

18. Lumbar spine instability Bryan S. Dennison and Michael Leal

19. Lumbar spine in lower extremity pain syndromes Scott Burns, Paul E. Glynn, Edgar Savidge and Joshua A. Cleland

20. The contribution of the pelvic floor muscles to pelvic pain Ruth Lovegrove Jones

21. Chronic low back pain Mark D. Bishop, Joel E. Bialosky and Charles W. Gay

22. Joint mobilization and manipulation of the lumbar spine Emilio J. Puentedura

23. Therapeutic exercise for mechanical low back pain Carol Kennedy and Lenerdene Levesque

24. Sacroiliac joint as source of pain: diagnosis and management Kenneth E. Learman

PART 4: THE SHOULDER REGION IN UPPER EXTREMITY PAIN SYNDROMES

25. Acromioclavicular joint Janette W. Powell, Ian Shrier, Peter A. Huijbregts

26. Sternoclavicular joint Erland Pettman

27. Rotator cuff lesions shoulder impingement Peter A Huijbregts and Carel Bron

28. Glenohumeral instability Steven C. Allen, Russell S. VanderWilde and Peter A. Huijbregts

29. Superior labrum anterior-to-posterior (SLAP) lesions Janette W. Powell and Peter A. Huijbregts

30. Frozen shoulder Carel Bron, Arthur de Gast and Jo L. M. Franssen

31. Joint mobilization of the shoulder Wayne Hing, Jack Miller and César Fernández-de-las-Peñas

32. Motor control of the shoulder region Mary E. Magarey, Mark A. Jones and Samuel R. Baida

33. Therapeutic exercises for the shoulder region Johnson McEvoy, Kieran O'Sullivan and Carel Bron

PART 5: THE HIP REGION IN LOWER EXTREMITY PAIN SYNDROMES

34. Hip osteoarthritis Alexis A. Wright

35. Other hip disorders: muscle, labrum and bursa John Dewitt and David Kohlrieser

36. Postoperative management of hip disorders Robert C. Manske and Erik Meira

37. Joint mobilization and manipulation of the hip Jack Miller and Wayne Hing

38. Therapeutic exercises for the lower quadrant Carol Kennedy and Lenerdene Levesque

PART 6: THE ELBOW REGION IN UPPER EXTREMITY PAIN SYNDROMES

39. Elbow tendinopathy: lateral epicondylalgia Bill Vicenzino

40. Other elbow disorders: elbow instability, arthritic conditions Chris A. Sebelski

41. Joint mobilization and manipulation of the elbow Helen Slater and César Fernández-de-las-Peñas

PART 7: THE KNEE REGION IN LOWER EXTREMITY PAIN SYNDROMES

42. Ligamentous and meniscal injuries of the knee Carol A. Courtney and Craig P. Hensley

43. Knee osteoarthritis Lars Arendt-Nielsen and César Fernández-de-las-Peñas

44. Patellofemoral pain syndrome Johnson McEvoy and Caroline MacManus

45. Postoperative management of the knee: ligamentous, meniscal and total joint replacement Jodi Young and Ellen Pong

46. Joint mobilization and manipulation of the knee Cody Weisbach, William Egan, Paul E. Glynn and Joshua A. Cleland

47. Tendinopathy for the knee Ellen Pong

PART 8: THE WRIST AND HAND REGIONS IN UPPER EXTREMITY PAIN SYNDROMES

48. Tendinopathies of the wrist and hand C. Joseph Yelvington and Ellen Pong

49. Carpal instability Ellen Pong

50. Carpal tunnel syndrome Luca Padua, Daniele Coraci and César Fernández-de-las-Peñas

51. Other entrapment neuropathies Joy C. MacDermid and David M. Walton

52. Joint mobilization and manipulation Peter A. Huijbregts, Freddy M. Kaltenborn and Traudi Baldauf Kaltenborn

53. Finger and thumb pathology Joy C. MacDermid, Ruby Grewal and B. Jane Freure

PART 9: THE FOOT AND ANKLE IN LOWER EXTREMITY PAIN SYNDROMES

54. Ankle sprains Thomas Denninger and Gary Austin

55. Plantar heel pain Matthew P. Cotchett

56. Postoperative management of foot and ankle disorders 623 Stephanie Albin, Mark W. Cornwall and Thomas G. McPoil

57. Manipulation of the foot and ankle William Egan, Wayne Hing, Jack Miller and Joshua A. Cleland

58. Tendinopathy for the foot and ankle Ellen Pong

PART 10: SOFT TISSUES IN THE UPPER AND LOWER QUADRANT

59. Referred pain from myofascial trigger points César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Hong-You Ge, Lars Arendt-Nielsen and Jan Dommerholt

60. Manual treatment of myofascial trigger points César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Jaime Salom-Moreno, Hong-You Ge and Jan Dommerholt

61. Dry needling of trigger points Jan Dommerholt and Erik H. Wijtmans

62. Muscle energy approaches Gary Fryer

63. Myofascial induction approaches Andrzej Pilat

PART 11: NEURODYNAMICS IN THE UPPER AND LOWER QUADRANTS

64. Peripheral nerve mechanisms of chronic upper limb pain: nerve dynamics, inflammation and neurophysiology Jane Greening and Andrew Dilley

65. Clinical neurodynamics in the upper and lower quadrants Emilio J. Puentedura, Paul E. Mintken and Adriaan Louw

Authors

César Fernández-de-las-Peñas Professor, Dept of PT, OT, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Madrid. He has published around 450 peer-reviewed publications and he is first author of approximately 200. His research activities are concentrated on biomedical sciences within neuroscience. The specific research areas have been on pain and assessment of pain in volunteers and chronic pain patients. His main focus is on human clinical chronic pain research. He is the main editor of 10 textbooks on manual therapy for chronic musculoskeletal pain syndromes. Joshua Cleland Professor, Franklin Pierce University, Physical Therapy Program, Manchester, NH, USA. Joshua Cleland, PT, DPT, PhD, Professor, Physical Therapy Program, Franklin Pierce University, Manchester, New Hampshire, USA Jan Dommerholt Myopain Seminars, LLC, Bethesda, MD, USA; Bethesda Physiocare, Inc, Bethesda, MD, USA.. Dr Dommerholt is a physiotherapist and Diplomate of the Academy for Integrative Pain Management. He owns two physical therapy clinics in Maryland specializing in the management of individuals with chronic pain conditions including myofascial pain. In addition, Dr Dommerholt is owner of Myopain Seminars, a post-graduate continuing education company offering a wide variety of myofascial pain courses, dry needling courses, TMD and pelvic pain management courses, among others.