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With air splints in position to inhibit flexor tone in the forearm/hand and with a small inflatable boot to inhibit the extension of the ankle, Fitter is used to allow the client to push the arm forward in the required inhibiting position. Tension (or resistance) against this forward thrust is given by the weakest of the four tension cords hooked underneath Fitter. As weight is withdrawn from the forward thrust, Fitter’s resistance then assists the arm back into the starting position. This is a valuable exercise with ease of repetition.
2. Side to Side Thrust
With the legs in the inhibiting flexion pattern and keeping the trunk straight, laterally shift on Fitter from the knees to the trunk. This combines lateral trunk stretching with a useful shoulder exercise. The involved hand may require a stabilizing strap over Fitter’s platform to keep the hand in proper position.
3. Sitting Position
Sitting on Fitter offers several ways of presenting valuable exercise. As illustrated here pulling the body weight forward towards the heels brings in a useful hamstring exercise. The hamstrings are invariably very weak and must be reeducated to rehabilitate stability of the knee. Thrusting forward on the stabilized hand helps to exercise the whole affected side of the body in a total inhibiting pattern, providing the heels assist in the pull forwards.
4. Standing Position
Toward the end of rehabilitation, some clients may be ready to tackle exercise 4, but I would not attempt it with the elderly. The young man illustrated here was keen to get back to skiing, two years after a stroke. He took several weeks to master this exercise and it was obvious that his balance and motivation improved remarkably with the use of Fitter.
* Other books by Margaret Johnstone on stroke rehabilitation include:
Restoration of Motor Function in the Stroke Patient - A Physiotherapists’s Approach
The Stroke Patient - A Team Approach
Home Care for the Stroke Patient - Living in a Pattern
Restoration of Normal Movement After Stroke (ISBN) (More...)
All published by Churchill Livingstone; Margaret Johnstone FCSP
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