Physiotherapy exercise Reviews-2020 [Fully Updated]
What is physiotherapy?
Today we learn about physiotherapy exercise. Why we used physiotherapy exercise for a patient how to it’s working. How to used this treatment. So Let’s go.
Physiotherapy exercise is a mean of accelerating the patients recovery from injuries and diseases which have altered his normal way of living.
History of Physiotherapy:
A New Zealand health worker began using physiotherapy for the first time in medical care at 1. Then in the mid-twentieth century, physiotherapy was replaced by the treatment of paralysis and paralysis in the advanced world. Then, in step-by-step physiotherapy treatment, hydrotherapy, cryotherapy and kinesiology were added. At the beginning of the 5th, electrotherapy was added to the physiotherapy treatment. Thus, physiotherapy has become one of the branches of medical science in rehabilitation of persons with disabilities including paralysis, paralysis, sports injuries.
Classification of physiotherapy exercise:
It’s mainly two types:
A. Active physiotherapy exercise:
1. Voluntary:
Free active exercise.
Assisted active exercise.
Assisted resisted active exercise.
Resisted active exercise.
2. Involuntary:
a. Reflex
B. Passive physiotherapy exercise:
Relaxed passive movement.
Passive manual mobilization.
Techniques of passive manual Mobilization:
Mobilization of joint.
Manipulation of joint.
Controlled sustained stretching of tightened structure.
The principal of physiotherapy exercise:
The functional exercise: program follows a linear path from basic mobility to basic stability to movement patterns.
Corrective exercise: falls into one of the three basic categories mobility stability and retraining of movement patterns.
Mobility exercise: focus on joint ROM(range of motion) tissue length and muscle flexibility.
Stability exercise: focus on the basic sequencing of the movement.
Retraining movement patterns: incorporates the use of fundamental mobility and stability into specific movement patterns to reinforce Continue reading