Down Syndrome
Myelodysplasia (Spina Bifida)
Brachial Plexus Injuries
Autism
Developmental Coordination Disorder
100

Physical Features of Down Syndrome

Hypotonia, small head, epicanthal folds (eyelids), and flat nasal bridge, brushfield spots (white sports on iris), short 5th finger with clindodactyl (webbing) and wide spacing, deep plantar groove between first and second toes

100

Definition and Causes of Spina Bifida

Definition: incomplete closure of =lower segments of the spine

Causes: nutritional deficiencies (lack of folic acid), teratogens (alcohol, valproic acid, drug abuse), genetics (often associated with chromosomal abnormalities  

100

Types of Nerve Injury and Classifications

Neurotmesis: complete rupture, NO or limited recovery

Axonotmesis: Axon disrupted, sheath intact, regrowth 1 mm/day

Neurapraxia: stretch injury with intact axon and sheath, full recovery

Type 1/Erb's Palsy: C5-C6 -- weakness/paralysis of levator scap, rhomboids, delts, serratus anterior, supraspinatus, infraspinatus, biceps, brachioradialis, forearm supinators/extensors, fingers, and thumb

Type 2/Extended Erb's Palsy: C5, C6, C7 -- similar to type 1 but also involves elbow, wrist, and finger extension impairments

Type 3/Global Palsy: C5-T1 -- mixed presentation, might involve Horner's Syndrome (one-sided: constricted pupil (miosis), drooping eyelid (ptosis), and reduced sweating (anhidrosis), flaccid paralysis  

Type 4/Klumpke Palsy: C8-T1 -- definitely involves Horner's Syndrome, distal weakness/paralysis of wrist/finger flexors and extensors, and intrinsic muscles of hand (may include entire brachial plexus)

100

Early Signs of Autism

Eye contact 

Joint Attention (1 year-18 months) -- sharing enjoyment 

Responding to their name 

Limited gestures 

Dual tasks are challenging 

Imitation is limited 

Repetitive movements/interests

Social/communication challenges 

100

Diagnosis and Etiology 

Diagnosis: Motor performance deficits, Appears in early childhood, Participation and ADL deficits, No exclusionary conditions 

Etiology: Prevalence 5-6%, 2-3x more likely in boys, possible involvement of cerebellum

Risk Factors: Prematurity and coexisting disorders 

200

Hypotonia

low muscle tone -- decreased ability to generate voluntary muscle force

200

Types

Spina Bifida Occulta: tuft of hair/indent you don't really see

Spina Bifida with Meningocele: NOT protruding through skin 

Spina Bifida with Meningomyocele: Protruding with sac

Spina Bifida with Myeloschisis: Most involved; open with NO sac, spinal cord 

200
How to Accurately Assess Strength, ROM, and Pain

Active Movement Scale: children < 1 year old

Mallet Scale: children 3-4 years old 

MMT/Dynamometry: As young as 3-4 years old 

FLACC and Faces for pain

200

Severity Levels of ASD

Level 1 -- Requiring Support: Average Traits: Awkward, NOT disabled, often lonely, but can build relationships with non-autistic peers, prefer routine, fidgeting

Level 2 -- Requiring Substantial Support: Average Traits: People notice disability, social life limited or non-existent, change is hard, repetitive behaviors noticeably unusual, significant developmental delays, will meet milestones late

Level 3 -- Requiring Very Substantial Support: Average Traits: one-on-one support, disability is very obvious, usually only communicate to express needs or answer questions, change is unbearably difficult, intense repetitive behavior is calming and important for them, large developmental delays, may NOT meet every milestone

200

Common Presentation 

Difficulty with planning and organizing a motor task and adjusting to changes in movement

Approach to learning is random/ disorganized 

More facial reactions --> effortful

300

Interventions to Treat Hypotonia

Massage, orthotics to improve alignment, treadmill training (for children with DS)

(Do NOT use orthotics BEFORE independent walking)

300

Presentation of Spina Bifida

LE paraplegia 

UE weakness due to progressive neurologic dysfunction 

Muscle tone may be mixed presentation (flaccid, normal, spastic)

300

What to Monitor During Childhood

Close monitoring of PROM 

Rheab following orthopedic reconstruction

Bimanual Training 

CIMT (constraint-induced movement therapy)

K Tape for scap stabilization

NMES

300

Coexisting Conditions 

ADHD

Communication Disorders 

Epilepsy

Intellectual Disability

Learning Disability 

GI disorders 

Motor Planning Disorders 

Obesity

Psychiatric Disorders 

Sensory Processing Disorders 

Sleep Disorders 

Toe Walking 

300

Presentation in Older Kids

Likelihood of poor fitness and obesity

Likelihood of anxiety/depression 

Lower ratings of QOL 

Lower likelihood of employment/job satisfaction

400

Comorbidities of Down Syndrome

Neurological: cognitive disability, language delays (receptive > expressive), psychiatric conditions (Autism/ADHD), vision/hearing impairments, seizure disorders

Musculoskeletal: hypotonia, ligamentous laxity, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, atlantoaxial instability (somersaults very risky)

Cardiopulmonary: congenital heart defects (septal common)

Gastrointestinal

Integumentary: Skin

Endocrine: hypothyroidism

Leukemia

400

Associated Conditions -- RED FLAGS

Tethered Cord Syndrome: loss of sensation, strength, gait abnormalities, function from baseline --> refer for surgery --> back pain, leg weakness/numbness, foot deformities

Chiari Shunt Malformation: brain presses into spinal canal --> headache, neck pain, difficulty swallowing, vision changes, balance/walking problems, hearing problems, etc

400

Medical Management 

Microsurgery (between 3-9 months old; earlier = better) -- nerve transfers, nerve grafting, neuroma dissection/removal, neurolysis, anastomosis of nerve endings 

PT post-op management -- ROM, muscle activation, NMES, functional mobility (CIMT)

Orthopedic surgery: Goal --> PROM and AROM for ADLs (tendon transfers, tendon lengthening, osteotomies)


400

Potential Motor Challenges 

Gross Motor Delay 

Motor Planning 

Coordination 

Postural Control 

Gait (toe-walking

400

Gold Standard Outcome Measure for DCD

 Movement Assessment Battery for Children-2 (MABC-2)

500

Gross Motor Expectations for kids with Down Syndrome

Rolling: 6 months

Sitting: 12 months 

Crawling: 24 months 

Standing: 24 months

Walking: 30 months

Running: 72 months

Climbing Steps: 72 months

Jumping Forward: 60 months

500

Function at Different Spinal Levels

Thoracic: No volitional LE movement -- may use parapodium for exercise bouts, wheelchair for all functional mobility

High Lumbar (L1-L2): Weak hip flexion, short-distance household ambulation with KAFO/RGO, wheelchair for community mobility

L3: Strong hip flexion and adduction, weak hip rotation, antigravity knee extension, household/short-distance community ambulation with KAFO/Lofstrands, wheelchair for longer community distances 

L4: Antigravity knee flexion and grade 3-4 DF with inversion, medial hamstring, knee extension, functional ambulation with AFO/Lofstrands, wheelchair for longer distances

L5: Lateral hamstrings intact, some glutes, posterior tib, good knee flexion, weak hip extension and abduction, weak plantarflexion, ambulate without orthoses, but usually use them for foot positioning and push-off, UE support with Lofstrand

S1: May have PF and hip extension of grade 2 or 3, ambulate without orthoses, no UE support

S2-S3: PF at least grade 3, glutes grade 4, still have decreased push off and decreased stride length when running, bowel and bladder function is normal and Le strength is normal

500

Interventions for Infancy


Support sensory and motor recovery, optimize comfort, promote development, prevent secondary complications

PROM of cervical spine

Therapeutic play 

Positioning/splinting to prevent contractures 

500

What Strategies a PT Should Use to Improve Success

Task Analysis 

Visual Supports 

Sensory Supports 

Self-Determination 

Encouragement 

500

Interventions to Treat DCD

Task-specific 

Body structure and function 

Small group or individual sessions 

Supplementary activities 

Exercise and home activity programs

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