Materi Postural Ontogenesis
Materi Postural Ontogenesis
Materi Postural Ontogenesis
FCM CONCEPT
Neuro
System
Fluid Musculo -
System BALANCE skeletal
System
the
SYSTEMS
Awareness Fascial
System
Body System
(Calibration)
2. SPINE
IAP regulation
3. PELVIC
4. SCAPULA
5. FEET
DIAFRAGMA
FIVE FLOOR
BREATHING
IAP DISTRIBUTION
1. Mouth Floor WITH
2. Thoracic Inlet Floor CORRECT ACTIVATION OF
DIAPHRAGM
IAP regulation
3. Ribcage Floor
• Physiological movement of the diaphragm should
4. Pelvic Floor be part of all movement and exercise
5. Feet Floor • (feedforward mechanism)
• Central tendon descends
• (abdominals hold the ribs tocreate the fixing point)
• Lower ribs spread apart
• IAP equally increases in all directions
REFLEXTIVE STABILIZATION : BREATHING PRINCIPLESS
Main Principles:
1. Developmental Kinesiology.
Provides framework for regional interdependance &
interlinking of skeleton,muscle,joints..etc during movement.
STABILIZATION Function is as important as DYNAMIC/MOVEMENT
function
2. Functional Joint Centration
Implies the best possible distribution of the load at the
articular surfaces during each position/posture in a course of
Movement.
If CNS Control is adequate – ideal balanced activation of
muscle synergies will automatically bring all the joints into
Functional Centration during Movement.
3 Levels of Motor Control
Spinal (total reflex)
Subcortical (subconscious/automatic)
Cortical (intentional)
www.rehabps.com
OVERVIEW
The assessment is based on the comparison
of the patient´s stabilizing pattern to that of a
healthy infant.
DEVELOPMENTAL KINESIOLOGY-POSTURAL ONTOGENESIS USE IN THERAPY DEVELOPMENTAL KINESIOLOGY-POSTURAL ONTOGENESIS USE IN THERAPY
DEVELOPMENTAL KINESIOLOGY DEVELOPMENTAL KINESIOLOGY - STABILIZING SYSTEM
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THE GOAL OF PHYSIOTHERAPY APPROACH - DNS DEVELOPMENT OF POSTURE
(Neumann, 2002)
Diagram by DNS instructor
Richard Ulm, DC. Rintala M, Ulm R, Jezkova M, Kobesova A. Czech
Get-up. NSCA Coach. 2016;3(2):30-8.ISSN 2376-0982 Online. https://www.nsca.com/publications/reports-and-
journals/nsca-coach/
(Neumann, 2002)
3 LEVEL OF SENSORIMOTOR CONTROL IN ASSESMENT AND TREATMENT 3 LEVEL OF MOTOR CONTROL
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Primitive reflexes become inhibited and ! This level of the CNS motor control emerges
integrated into higher levels of motor control. and matures mainly during the first year of life.
“Immaturity“ Functional and Structur ! This allows for basic trunk stabilization, a
Maturation of postural-locomotion patterns
prerequisite for any phasic movement and for the
locomotor function of the extremities.
No Balance, no Postural function ! Stabilization
! Equilibrium
! At the subcortical level, orofacial muscles and
! Muscle co-contraction
afferent information are automatically
! Stepping forward & supporting function
Primitive reflex + integrated into postural-locomotor patterns.
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Right leg, left arm : supporting; left leg, right armh : steping forward
based on optimal core stabilization : bottom extrimities serve for
recahing
www.rehabps.com support, top extrimities are stepping forward/reaching
It incorporates
! Gnostic function (multisensory integration)
! Motor function
! Ideal-motor function
CORTICAL LEVEL DYNAMIC NEUROMUSCULAR STABILIZATION (DNS)
! Human ontogenetic
models (i.e.,
! Should not be ignored developmental motor
patterns) can be used in
! A child with impaired cortical both DIAGNOSIS and
motor control may be diagnosed with TREATMENT of locomotor
system dysfunction.
TERIMA KASIH