Fixing Achy HipsErik Dalton, Ph.D.
Article as seen in Massage Today Magazine September 2009
Structurally-oriented therapists are
keenly aware of the crucial role proper iliosacral alignment
plays in preventing compensatory low back and SI joint pain.
During the 10-step screening evaluation, therapists usually
compare anatomical landmarks such as anterior and posterior
superior iliac spines and iliac crests. A commonly observed
pattern reveals an anterior/inferior right rotated ilium
accompanied by a high left posteriorly rotated ilium. Scientists
such as Zink, Previc, Geschwind, Rogers, Vallortigara and
Tommasi have developed fascinating theories (motor dominance,
cerebral lateralization and genetic potential) to shed light on
the possible origins of these frequently seen patterns. Although
most manual therapy clinicians agree that the foot’s
architecture plays a major role in iliosacral rotation, aside
from lengthening or shortening of a limb, many remain unsure of
the link between foot posture, pelvic obliquity and hip/back
pain.
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A Sham Case Study
For demo purposes, let’s ‘mock-up’ a postural
foot assessment with the client standing. Using the finger
pads of your right hand, palpate the medial arch of the left
foot. Contact the navicular bone and, with two fingers,
attempt to lift the
arch checking for joint play (Fig 1).
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If the navicular and cuneiforms
resist this spring test
and the mid-foot appears flat, the
arch is pronated. As we recall, the most common lower
extremity asymmetry is foot pronation. Weakness of tibialis
anterior, peroneus longus and the plantar aponeurosis
(Stirrup Spring System), results in a valgus subtalar joint
(STJ) accompanied by a dropped navicular bone (Fig.
2).
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When palpating the navicular on the
opposite foot, one discovers a
high rigid arch that feels stuck in a supinated position. By
viewing the Achilles tendon and calcaneus bone from behind, one
observes the subtalar ‘saddle-joint’ cocked in a varus position
with body weight shifting laterally and compressing the cuboid.
This is the precursor for such conditions as plantar fasciitis
and fibular stress fractures. Ideally, at heel strike, the foot
and ankle ligaments ‘give’ to the pressure allowing the arch to
flatten and the tibia to internally rotate. During toe-off, the
arch springs open and the tibia externally rotates. Stored
potential energy is released in a powerful pulse driving kinetic
energy back up through the system to help counter-rotate the
torso and pelvis to propel the legs forward.
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Recall that the
term
"kinetic chain" describes how we move our
bodies. We move in either in an open kinetic chain or closed
kinetic chain. The difference lies in whether the moving
part is loose in space or fixed against a hard, unrelenting
surface…such as the earth. Pronated and supinated feet are
an unstable platform and soon encounter resistance further
up the kinetic chain. Loss of antigravity spring leads to
compensations that torsion and compact the knees, hips, low
back, and trunk
(Fig.
3). |
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Femoral Positioning and Pelvic
Rotation
In my experience, the most
overlooked and least appreciated area of compensation arises
as the femoral heads become asymmetrically positioned in the
acetabula. For example, when the pronated left foot
internally rotates the thigh and the supinated right foot
externally rotates the thigh, one would be walking sideways
with each step (Fig. 4).
Of course, the body’s sensitive proprioceptors immediately
begin left rotating the trunk with the axis of rotation
primarily focused at the hips. As the femoral heads
reposition in the acetabula, a great amount of stress is
placed on the joint capsules, articular cartilages, and
supporting ligaments. |
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Use a plastic skeleton and pronate
the left foot noticing how it internally rotates the left
lower extremity causing the femoral neck to follow. This
closed chain movement crams the femoral head posteriorly
against the back of the acetabulum (Fig 5).
Conversely, supination of the
right foot externally (right) rotates the femoral neck
allowing the head to migrate into the anterior part of the
acetabulum. With the right femoral head pushing anteriorly
and the left pushing posteriorly, the bony pelvis is
forced to left rotate. In this scenario, the high
(left) femoral head becomes the axis of rotation as it
“drives” the anterior portion of the pelvis upward and
backward causing the pelvis to rotate to that side. Thus,
the right ilium reacts by dropping on the low femoral head
side resulting in an unleveling of the sacral base and a
buckling of the lumbar segments.
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During a screening evaluation, therapists
often stop their assessment and begin treating the right
anteriorly/inferiorly rotated ilium via hip flexor work
followed by QL lengthening techniques designed to drop the
elevated left ilium. The ‘fix it as you find it’ approach
defies sound structural integrative methodology and is
doomed if the torsioned pelvis has roots in foot
dysfunction. Notice in
figure 6
how combined pronation and supination not only torsion the
pelvic bowl, but initiate a functional lumbar scoliosis that
spreads its tentacles through the thoracic and cervical
spines.
Experiment by doing the following: place
fingers under each ASIS, pronate your left foot, supinate
the right, and feel the right ASIS drop anterior/inferiorly
as body weight side-shifts over the left
posterior/superiorly rotated innominate. In the absence of
hip or lumbar pathology, you should feel the pelvic bowl
left rotate.
This mechanism of anteroposterior femoral
head positioning also helps explain other clinical findings.
For example, we often have clients presenting with bilateral
foot pronation (pes planus) complain of back pain. Bilateral
pronation increases lumbar lordosis and lumbosacral angle
causing excessive compressive force through the L4-5 and
L5-S1 facets and intervertebral discs. With these
individuals, both femoral heads are positioned posteriorly
allowing the pelvic contents to ‘dump’ forward and sway the
back. Conversely, bilateral supinated feet position the
femoral heads anteriorly in the acetabula resulting in
decreased lumbar lordosis, flat back, flat butt and loss of
kinetic energy into the ground during gait. Although various
aberrant combinations of femoral positioning exist, some are
considerably more detrimental than others.
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Femoral
Positioning and Hip Impingement
At the 15th Combined Open Meeting of the
Hip Society and American Association of Hip and Knee
Surgeons, held Feb. 28, 2008 in Las Vegas, the
‘godfather’ of femoral acetabular impingement (FAI) Reinhold
Ganz, MD, of Bern, Switzerland stated, “Surgical management of
hip impingement syndromes is one of the most exciting
developments in the entire field of hip pathology and hip
disease in the last decade. The key to
recognition of FAI is that even minor abnormalities in
positioning of the proximal end of the femur can lead to
difficult motion and possibly to impingement within the
well-constrained hip joint,”
During the physical examination, Ganz recommended checking the
hip’s internal rotation in flexion using the anterior
impingement test. If limited or highly painful when range of
motion is executed, this could indicate femoral acetabular hip
impingement. 8
Orthopedists
theorize FAI could serve as a major cause of damaged hip joints
in adults and the primary reason behind the escalation of hip
replacements. Treating FAI impingement should involve techniques
for balancing femoral head/neck positioning relative to the
acetabulum. Since FAI arises from bony or mechanical
abnormalities of femoral head placement in the acetabulum,
manual therapists often have the best shot in preventing or
correcting this anomaly and would
benefit greatly by attending workshops designed to assess and
treat this pervasive condition.
Summary
A prerequisite need for all pain
management, sports, and structural integration therapists should
involve a basic understanding of the relationship of iliosacral
unleveling and foot posture. Since most therapists are not privy
to radiographic measurements, we must develop keen palpatory and
visual skills to properly evaluate bony and soft tissue
landmarks. As Sir William Osler eloquently stated, “In order to
treat something, we must first be able to recognize it”. Any
attempt to tackle iliosacral rotational patterns armed with
inadequate assessment and treatment tools will undoubtedly end
in failure and frustration. From a functional standpoint, there
is strong evidence of an associated increase in the incidence of
low back pain and hip joint osteoarthritis if foot posture and
femoral rotational patterns are not addressed in a timely
manner.
In
my next “Toolbox of Touch” column, I’ll present theories on
“why” we encounter common compensatory patterns; discuss
cerebral lateralization and motor dominance, and share
Myoskeletal Techniques to address the strain patterns falling
within the FAI realm.
References
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Zink G J. AN Osteopathic Structural
Examination of the Soma. Osteopathic Annals 7:12-19,
1979
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Previc F., A General Theory Concerning the
Prenatal Origins of Cerebral Lateralizations in Humans. Psychological
Review, Volume 98, 1991
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Geschwind N. Cerebral Lateralization.
MIT Press, 1987
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Rogers L. et al, Advantages of Having a
Lateralized Brain, Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
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Vallortigara G. et al, Cerebral
Lateralization. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 4,
2005
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Tommasi L. et al., Mechanisms and
Functions of Brain and Behavioral Asymmetries, Proceedings
of the royal Society B, Vol. 364, 2009
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Dalton E. Don’t Get Married
http://massagetoday.com/mpacms/mt/article.php?id=13759
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Ganz R. Femoral acetabular impingement.
Presented at the 15th Combined Open Meeting of the Hip Society
and American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons. Feb.
28, 2008. Las Vegas.
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