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Lumbar Dysfunction in Short Leg Syndrome

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Title: Lumbar Dysfunction in Short Leg Syndrome


1
Lumbar Dysfunction in Short Leg Syndrome
Developed for OUCOM CORE
by the CORE Osteopathic Principles and Practices
Committee Session 1 - Series A
2
Case Study
  • A 23 year old college student presents to the
    office complaining of low back pain.
  • The pain is achy in nature, is located nearly
    midline and does not radiate.
  • She first noticed it about 6 months ago when she
    started an exercise program consisting of running
    and lifting weights. It seems to hurt more when
    she runs longer distances.
  • She has never had any injuries to her back.

3
Case Study - continued
  • On exam she has the following findings
  • Cervical spine neutral
  • Thoracic spine neutral, T5-T11SRRL
  • Lumbar spine neutral, L1-L5SLRR
  • Sacrum L on L, R ant rotated innominate
  • R medial malleolus superior to L

4
Treatment and Follow-up
  • You treat her and have a return of symmetry and
    good range of motion in all areas. However, you
    note a persistent positive standing flexion test
    on the right, though the seated flexion test is
    negative.
  • The patient returns in one month, she had relief
    of pain for about one week after her first
    treatment, but has experienced the same pain
    every since.
  • On exam you find all the same dysfunctions that
    you had on your first exam. You treat her again
    and the dysfunctions once again resolve.
  • At her next follow-up, all the same dysfunctions
    are present.

5
Diagnostics
  • What do you think the diagnosis is?
  • Short Leg Syndrome
  • What tests can you use to confirm this?
  • Postural X-ray series
  • This should be done shortly after the pelvis has
    been balanced with OMT, otherwise the x-rays may
    only reflect the innominate rotation.
  • This patient is found to have an 8 mm sacral base
    unleveling with the right side being lower than
    the left.

6
Anatomical Short Leg
  • Congenital
  • Birth defect e.g. Pes planus, cerebral palsy
  • Trauma
  • Fracture, burns and etc.
  • Infection
  • Polio, osteomyelitis and etc.
  • Apparent short leg (functional)

7
Biomechanics
  • When the sacral base is unlevel, the body
    compensates to try to keep the eyes level.
  • Early in the process the thoracic and lumbar
    spine form a long C-shaped curve that is concave
    away from the short leg.
  • With more time the compensatory mechanisms
    redistribute and an S-shaped curve forms with the
    lumbar concavity away from the short leg and the
    thoracic concavity towards the short leg.

8
Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine, 2nd Ed., p.
621
9
Musculature
  • Postural muscles - (made to support the body
    against gravity for long periods)
  • - Respond to stress by becoming tight.
  • Phasic muscles - (antagonist to the postural
    muscles)
  • - Respond to stress by becoming weak.

10
Foundations of Osteopathic Medicine, 2nd Ed., p.
620
11
Netter
12
Consequences
  • Ligaments (such as the iliolumbar ligament) will
    calcify if under prolonged stress.
  • Bone will remodel when under stress.
  • Within the compensatory curve wedging of the
    vertebrae will occur.
  • Joint degeneration will occur with arthritis of
    the hip on the long leg side.

13
  • Iliolumbar Ligaments
  • Note the attachments onto the ilium

Primal Pictures, Interactive Series
14
Diagnosis
  • After treatment a persistent standing flexion
    positive with seated flexion negative also points
    to a short leg.
  • Postural X-rays will show an unleveling of the
    sacral base. Anything above 5 mm may be
    significant. Above 10 mm of unleveling the
    likelihood of multiple compensatory curves
    forming is greatly increased.

15
Lumbosacral Implications
  • 33-35 of patients with short legs have a lumbar
    concavity away from the short leg side.
  • All other possible combinations of lumbar and
    thoracic concavities occur with much lesser
    frequency.

16
Treatment
  • If unleveling is significant, a heel lift is
    often needed.
  • Maximum of ¼ inch in the shoe.
  • Chronic Short leg, the goal may be only ½-¾ of
    total unleveling.
  • Normally the lift is put under the short side.
    Especially if the lumbar curve side-bends away
    from the short leg.

17
Guidelines for initial heel lift height
  • 1/3 - 1/2 total Sacral Base Difference
  • More patient factors to consider
  • Frail Patients - Start at 1/16 inch and increase
    by 1/16 every two weeks. (Frail elderly,
    osteoporotic, arthritic, acute pain)
  • Flexible spine with mild to moderate strain -
    Start 1/8 inch and increase by 1/8 every two
    weeks.
  • Sudden length difference (fracture, prosthesis)
    in a patient with previously equal sacral bases -
    entire height at once.

18
Treatment - continued
  • With OMM to address compensatory curves, lift
    therapy to create less than 1mm of sacral base
    unleveling will result in 80 reduction in pain.
  • OMM is necessary, or old patterns of compensation
    probably will not resolve even with lift therapy.

19
OMM for the Lumbar Spine in Short Leg Syndrome
  • Most segmental dysfunction will be neutral.
  • No type of treatment contraindicated in short leg
    syndrome.
  • Use a patient-by-patient approach to decide what
    treatments to use.

20
Kimberly Manual, Millennium Edition
21
Kimberly Manual, Millennium Edition
22
Kimberly Manual, Millennium Edition
23
Kimberly Manual, Millennium Edition
24
Kimberly Manual, Millennium Edition
25
Kimberly Manual, Millennium Edition
26
Kimberly Manual, Millennium Edition
27
References
  • American Osteopathic Association, Foundations for
    Osteopathic Medicine, 2nd ed. 2003.
  • Kimberly, Paul E. Outline of Osteopathic
    Manipulative Procedures, Millennium Edition.
    2000.
  • CORE OMM Curriculum
  • 1st Year
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