by Erica and Susan | May 16, 2022 | Uncategorized
How do you design a sound, clinically reasoned exercise progression? Taking into account multiple drivers? If someone has low back pain, do you give them core stability exercises? I hope not, unless they have an abdominal wall deficit! In this episode Susan and Erica...
by Erica and Susan | May 16, 2022 | Uncategorized
10-20% of women with pelvic girdle pain in pregnancy will persist into the post-partum era. Join us as we share a discussion on the history that led to the eventual battery of relevant tests/measures and interventions that were not only meaningful to the client, but...
by Erica and Susan | May 16, 2022 | Uncategorized
A fall on an outstretched elbow (FOOSH) with resulting elbow pain. Not your typical overuse or mechanical injury common to this region of the body. What happens when your differential diagnosis leads you somewhere else? Susan and Erica discuss the backbone of the...
by Erica and Susan | May 16, 2022 | Uncategorized
Consideration of lateral hip pain requires a thoughtful clinical reasoning process to discover the physiology/movement patterns as well as neural contributions required to make a diagnosis and successfully build an intervention that lasts. One size does not fit...
by Erica and Susan | May 16, 2022 | Uncategorized
After listening to Part 1 of this case (episode 109), how would you design an exercise progression? Remember you need to find the driver first. Designing a movement program based on this patient’s symptoms would NOT work, as his driver(s) lie elsewhere. Once you...
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