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Physical therapy helps people to help themselves. It aims to restore movement and function, relieve pain, and prevent further injury. By teaching people about their body, their disorder and their health, it helps them lead more active and independent lives. A physical therapist will perform an evaluation of your problem or difficulty. This includes taking a history of a problem and then evaluating your problem by performing tests and measures to assess the problem. These tests include muscle strength tests, joint motion tests, sensory and neurological tests, coordination tests, balance tests, observation, palpation, flexibility tests, postural screening, movement analysis, and special tests designed for a particular problem. The physical therapist will then develop a treatment plan and goals and then administer the appropriate treatment to aid in recovery of a problem or dysfunction.
Treatment includes patient education to teach them how deal with a current problem and how to prevent this problem from recurring in the future. It aids in postural reconstruction and movement awareness. Therapeutic exercise instructions will help restore strength, movement, balance or coordination as a guide towards full functional recovery. It can include the teaching (re-learning) of basic mobility skills such as simply moving and get out of bed, transferring to a chair, walking with crutches or special devices on stairs or varied terrain. Physical therapy often involves the use of modalities which include properties of heat, cold, air, light, water, electricity, ultrasound and traction. These modalities are used to help decrease pain and increase movement and function.
Examples include: hotpacks, coldpacks, whirlpools, TENS (Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation), ultrasound, traction, electrical stimulation, intermittent compression pumps and myofascial release. |
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