Treatment of Idiopathic Posterior Pelvic Girdle Pain Utilizing a Global Movement Assessment.
Review
Overview
abstract
Treatment of posterior pelvic girdle pain, including pain generated from the sacroiliac joint [SIJ], can be challenging because the pain can become chronic. A treatment plan targeting only the painful area with isolated treatments such as injection, medication, modalities, or therapy is limited. Globally assessing the patient's kinetic chain is imperative. Identifying a patient's movement impairments within the context of the kinetic chain allows target areas leading to pain in the posterior pelvic region, including the SIJs, to be identified. Before starting an exercise program, the Movement Assessment Tests-7 (MAT-7) can be used to screen the spine, SIJs, and major joints of the extremities to identify movement impairments. Tests that comprise the MAT-7 are comprehensive yet efficient, requiring the patient to pass basic movements before progressing to more advanced movements. This allows the MAT-7 to be tailored to patients of any age or skill level. Using the MAT-7, the provider can identify the most difficult movement a patient does well, which is the starting point from which to progress a patient's therapeutic exercise program. Based on the MAT-7 screen, active therapeutic exercises are prescribed, targeting the movement impairments identified. As a patient advances through their exercise program, the MAT-7 can be applied to reassess a patient's success with the treatment plan and identify any additional target areas. This movement assessment treatment approach is reproducible, teachable, and applicable to not only posterior pelvic and SIJ pain, but also to pain in the spine and other major joints of the extremities.