The useful tool is a test of pelvic angles using the landmarks of ASIS to ASIS, PSIS to PSIS and ASIS to PSIS (R&L) with hip abduction directly lateral in the coronal plane.
This reveals obvious and major distortions of the innominate bones into anterior or posterior rotations.
The practitioner does not have to guess.
The results change the treatment protocol in the majority of cases.
The following results are fairly consistent group to group.
No Back pain: No pelvic difference from anatomical neutral or ASIS and PSIS level to the horizontal plane.
Low back pain:
Only 10% have bilaterally equal pelvic angles that remain the same or very similar to each other throughout the hip abduction but increase equally thriought the hip abduction.
The remaining 90% have the following per centages:
60% anterior rotation of right innominate bone left posterior rotation
20% anterior rotation of the right innominate bone left remains close to level with the horizontal plane
20% anterior rotation of the right innominate bone and a lesser rotation of the left in the anterior direction
Most have not considered that the pelvic angles are of significance.
However, present success rates for low back pain are dismall( Archieve of Internal Medicine Septembet 24, 2007, etc., etc.,)
This leads to a protocol of treatment that can bring about a 90% success rate in change of pain by 90% and greated ROM.
Best regards,
Neuromuscular.
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