I’m going back through the model 101 course while in UHP plus. Starting to understand, the typical adaptations and narrow and wide, would make on their first and second move. I treat patients with scoliosis a fair amount and often see a left pelvis elevated (with or without anterior orientation) in a narrow with an ER spine at thoracic or thoracolumbar region. If narrows typically have a flatter turn to the right, would you see this above representation more because the ER spine is turning them outside of their basis support and the pelvis gets pulled down on the right side to stay within? In these instances, if you offload the right side, wouldn’t they just fall to the right further? In the above described representation, would they be in a late pelvic orientation on the right? Would the idea here be to train them in early right hip positions to offload the right side and push them from forward/right to back/left?
@ΈναςαπλόςΈλληνας8 ай бұрын
Bill, the right oblique on Wides, is the beginning of the anterior orientation of the pelvis but only on the left side 6:06 , and then right side does the same thing to form the representation we call anterior orientation of the pelvis?
@smartfitness52713 жыл бұрын
@Bill Hartman The lower posterior compression strategy for a narrow is related to the mechanics that happened during late propulsion. Is there a part of the gait cycle that we can relate the oblique pelvis orientation that is typical for a wide? Middle?
@BillHartmanPT3 жыл бұрын
Wide ISA bias is IR/middle propulsion
11 ай бұрын
I can't find any of your videos dealing with exercises for a flat turn. Did I miss one? Also, in case of a narrow ISA, would you deal with bilateral restrictions (ant. & post. compression) or with a right turn first?
@BillHartmanPT11 ай бұрын
Look at the narrow vs. wide comparisons
@prashantsoni8203 жыл бұрын
Compression at base of sacrum and compression below level of trochentor both can push pelvis forward causing loss of hip IR OR only posterior lower compression push pelvis forward and compression at base of sacrum causes anterior orientation of pelvis lead to gain of IR
@BillHartmanPT3 жыл бұрын
Both but for different reasons and to different degrees.
@prashantsoni8203 жыл бұрын
@@BillHartmanPT so if we think about wide ISA to gain ER they push pelvis and in narrow ISA to gain IR they anterior orient pelvis
@BillHartmanPT3 жыл бұрын
@@prashantsoni820 strategies are correct but they are not limited to archetype.