Orthopaedic Manual Therapy Certificate (OMTC)
OMTC Program Overview
The program will answer important clinical questions using a clinical reasoning framework and emphasis on practical element. Different assessment, differential diagnosis and treatment strategies will be used, including:
- Exercise therapy
- Manual therapy
- Motor control strategies
- Patient education
Key Clinical Questions. These are only few examples of what we cover in the program.
- How can you use the subjective examination as a treatment tool?
- How can you screen and exclude red flags to keep patients safe?
- What are the essential physical examination steps that every clinician must follow?
- What is central sensitivity and is it different from psychological pain
Upper Quadrant
(Cervical Spine – Thoracic Spine – Shoulder – Elbow)
This section focuses on differential diagnosis, manual therapy, and exercise therapy.
- Cervical Spine
- Safe manual therapy strategies for patients with cervical disc bulge and myelopathy
- Assessment of cervical instability with stabilization exercise and manual therapy
- Assessment of cervicogenic headache with manual therapy and motor control exercise
- Role of sensory training in managing neck pain
- Thoracic Spine
- Thoracic spine pain and movement limitation – differential diagnosis, manual therapy and exercise therapy
- T4 syndrome, costovertebral and costotransverse joint dysfunction – manual therapy and exercise therapy
- Shoulder
- Shoulder pain of spinal origin – differential diagnosis, manual therapy and exercise therapy
- Shoulder differential diagnosis (Frozen shoulder – soft tissue or articular)
- Shoulder mobility strategies
- Shoulder motor control strategies with movement retraining and exercise therapy
- Shoulder tendon pathology – differential diagnosis and effective loading exercise with supportive manual therapy
- Wrist and Elbow
- Four common sources of lateral and medial elbow pain:
- Tendon pathology
- Cervical spine referral
- Radioulnar joint dysfunction
- Radial / Ulnar nerve involvement or scapular dyskinesis
Lower Quadrant
(Lumbar Spine – SIJ – Hip – Knee – Ankle)
This section focuses on differential diagnosis, manual therapy, and exercise therapy.
- Lumbar Spine
- Lumbar spine instability – assessment, stabilization exercise and manual therapy.
- Lumbar radicular symptoms – differential diagnosis, neural mobility exercise and manual therapy.
- Lumbar spinal stenosis and disc sequestration – clinical reasoning, exercise therapy and safe manual therapy.
- Lumbar spine motor control and mobility strategies – movement retraining and manual therapy.
- Pain Patterns – Differential Diagnosis
- Sciatic pain – possible causes: Lumbar spine origin
- Piriformis involvement.
- Hamstring-related pain.
- Neural mobility dysfunction.
- Anterior thigh pain – possible causes: Lumbar spine referral
- Femoral nerve involvement.
- Soft tissue dysfunction.
- Sciatic pain – possible causes: Lumbar spine origin
- SI Joint (SIJ)
- SIJ and hip differential diagnosis
- SIJ mobility dysfunction – manual therapy and mobility exercise.
- SIJ motor control strategies – stabilization exercises.
- Hip
- Hip mobility restriction – manual therapy and mobility exercise.
- Hip motor control strategies with motor control exercise and functional movement.
- Differential Diagnosis.
- Greater Trochanter Pain – Differential Diagnosis
- Lumbar spine referral.
- Gluteus medius tendon pathology.
- Lateral Thigh Pain
- Lumbar spine referral.
- Iliotibial band dysfunction.
- Lateral femoral cutaneous nerve involvement.
- Fascial restrictions.
- Femoral Impingement (FAI)
- Lumbar spine referral.
- Muscle tightness around hip (flexors, adductors).
- Greater Trochanter Pain – Differential Diagnosis
- Managed strategies:
- Manual therapy to improve hip joint mobility and soft tissue flexibility.
- Motor control exercise for hip control and functional movement.
- Load modification strategies to reduce impingement pain.
- Knee
- Mechanical knee problems:
- Knee osteoarthritis
- Patellofemoral pain syndrome
- Meniscal-related knee pain
- Differential diagnosis with manual therapy, motor control exercise, and movement retraining.
- Emphasis on the role of proximal motor control (hip and trunk) in knee pain and injury prevention.
- Mechanical knee problems:
- Lateral Lower Limb Pain
- Iliotibial band pain syndrome – possible sources: Lumbar spine referral
- ITB dysfunction.
- Lateral femoral cutaneous nerve involvement.
- Fascial restriction.
- Managed with manual therapy, motor control exercise, and movement correction.
- Iliotibial band pain syndrome – possible sources: Lumbar spine referral
- Ankle and Foot
- Ankle mobility limitation – manual therapy and mobility exercise.
- Ankle instability – proprioception, motor control exercise, and supportive manual therapy.
- Rehabilitation strategies for recurrent ankle sprain and mechanical dysfunction.
Flexibility and Motor Control Concepts (Upper and Lower Quadrant)
- Different types of flexibility training (static, dynamic, functional)
- Role of active inhibitory re-stabilisation
- Exercise strategies to improve flexibility in over-protective or hyper-mobile patients
- Manual therapy as an adjunct to improve movement and reduce guarding
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