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At DaVinci Medical Group,
our doctors perform
a thorough evaluation and then design an
individual treatment plan to rehabilitate a
patient’s injury or dysfunction. All treatment
plans are customized and may include patient
education to teach the individual about their
dysfunction, a plan of action to deal with the
current problem and guidance on how to prevent
the problem from recurring. At DaVinci Medical,
we offer a number of disciplines to help our
patients. “Hands on” techniques are used to
increase body awareness by addressing joint
restrictions, soft tissue restrictions, postural
education and movement retraining; therapeutic
exercises may be recommended to restore
flexibility, balance, strength and coordination;
functional retraining is utilized for work or
sports related injuries and treatment modalities
are used to decrease pain. The overall goal of
any physical therapy is to help our patients
lead more healthy, active and independent lives.
TREATMENT MODALITIES
DaVinci Medical
Group utilizes modern treatment modalities to
aid in healing patient injuries. The following
treatment modalities have been shown to promote
faster healing, aid in connective tissue repair,
decrease pain, reduce swelling and inflammation
and increase range of motion. These techniques
have long been recognized as standards in
treating patients who suffer from
strains/sprains, tears, disc herniations, carpel
tunnel syndrome and various other conditions.
The value in these treatment modalities is that
they can promote a faster return to normal
routines, increase efficiency and productivity,
decrease a patient’s lost workdays and
facilitate a healthy return to daily activities.
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Neurostimulator
stimulates means of increasing blood
flow to muscles, increasing range of
motion, increasing muscle strength, as
well as enhancing muscle endurance.
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Vasopneumatic
helps to bring blood and nutrients into
the injury site and helps to decrease
swelling and inflammation.
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Nerve block
decreases the amount of pain felt and
stimulates the muscle to decrease
swelling and pain.
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Therapeutic Ultrasound
helps by sending sound waves into the
tissue, which reduces inflammation,
pain, and brings blood and healing
nutrients back into the area.
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Heat/Hot Packs
draw blood from the interior to the
surface. Blood vessels in the area of
the application will dilate and
circulation increases.
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Cryotherapy
Cold water or ice will immediately chill
the skin, and surface blood vessels will
contract driving blood to the interior
of the body. Nerve sensitivity is also
reduced.
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Myofascial Release
is a very effective hands-on technique
that provides sustained pressure into
muscles and soft tissue restrictions to
eliminate pain and restore normal
motion.
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Microcurrent
is used over an injured area helps to
realign the body’s electrical current,
increase the production of ATP,
resulting in increased healing and
recovery, as well as blocking the pain
that is perceived.
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Electrical muscle stimulation
is used in pain management and physical
therapy protocols for rehabilitation. It
is a non-invasive procedure that uses
interferential current.
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TENS
was designed to relieve pain by sending
gentle electrical impulses through the
skin to the nerves. This suppresses pain
by blocking the pain signals before they
reach the brain. It reduces and often
even eliminates pain.
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Isometric
exercise
is used to develop strength, endurance,
range of motion, and flexibility. This
treatment helps to decrease pain and
improve range of motion. It helps to
prevent future reoccurrence of their
problems.
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Neuromuscular re-education
helps to
improve in normal muscle contraction,
develop movement patterns, balance,
coordination, kinesthetic sense,
posture, and proprioception and aids in
the proper rehabilitation of the
injury.
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Stretching
helps to increase range of motion,
decrease the chance of fibrotic scar
tissue formation in the injury site, and
increase the overall flexibility of the
muscle.
DIAGNOSTICS PROCEDURES,
the doctor will
perform an evaluation assessing muscle strength,
flexibility, joint motion, sensory evaluation
neurological tests, coordination and balance,
posture and movement analysis to determine the
underlying cause of your condition.
Computerized
Functional Capacity Evaluation
has been
recognized as the industry standard for
functional evaluations and employee return to
work evaluations. This system helps us to
determine what physical demand level your
employee is functioning at as well as
deficiencies that he/she may have. This system
can be used as a post-offer of employment
screens, Functional Capacity Evaluations,
employee baselines in industrial medicine,
return-to-work determinations, Impairment and
disability evaluations, and job specific static
lifting, This test would enable Personal Injury
cases to reduce liability from the patient
returning back to work too soon and establish a
baseline for which to determine injury and
impairment.
EKG
is used to monitor the hearts function and
output to determine electrical or vascular
malfunction. Blood pressure check, EKG, and a
body fat analysis are done prior to an exercise
protocol to assess patient able to perform task.
X
ray is
used to determine the bone structure, alignment
and to locate pathology in the skeletal frame.
Serious health problems can be averted if early
evaluation and treatment can be made.
Bone Density Scans
are used to quantify bone loss and osteoporosis
in a patient. Significant changes in bone
structure and density can alter the body
function and quality of health.
Neurometer
is used to evaluate the full range of
neurological dysfunction (hyperesthesia through
hypoesthesia) in sensory nerve fibers at any
cutaneous site on the body. The Neurometer can
evaluate more than 90% of the fibers in a
typical sensory nerve.
Nerve
Conduction Velocity
tests the peripheral nervous system to the arms,
legs, and face. This test checks both sensory
and motor nerve fibers. NCV’s aid in the
evaluation of: entrapment neuropathies, such as
carpal/tarsal tunnel syndromes, as well as ulnar,
radial, peroneal, femoral, posterior tibial,
peripheral neuropathies, herniated discs,
numbness, tingling, and pain in the extremities.
Somatosensory Evoked Potential
test both sensory and motor nerve fibers in the
peripheral nervous system to the spinal cord.
Brachial plexus or central nervous system
medial, ulnar, and radial nerves can be tested
with this procedure. SEP’s aid in the
evaluation of abnormal skin sensation, nerve
root compression, thoracic outlet syndrome,
numbness, tingling, burning sensation, and
diabetes.
Dermatosensory Evoked Potential
test of specific nerve roots. This usually
includes C6, C7, C8, L4, L5, and S1 nerve roots.
This is a very valuable diagnostic procedure for
trauma patients where one suspects radiculopathy.
DEP’s aid in the evaluation of motor/sensory
deficits, carpal tunnel syndrome, thoracic
outlet syndrome, and plexus stretch injury.
Musculoskeletal
Spinal Ultrasound
is a diagnostic test that uses high-frequency
sound waves to image the body. Ultrasound is
used to image the soft tissue structures and
major blood vessels. Musculoskeletal spinal
ultrasound aid in the evaluation of ligament
strain/ inflammation, facet syndromes/injury,
myofascial irritation, musculoligamentous
injuries, fibrous scars, and nerve root area
inflammation.
Visual Evoked Potential
stimulates the visual pathway and records the
time it took to reach the visual cortex.
Clinical manifestations include post traumatic
loss of blurred vision, double vision (diploplia),
optic neuritis, papilledema, and space-occupying
lesions.
Brainstem Auditory Evoked Response
determines functionality of the 8th
cranial nerve along with the brainstem auditory
pathway. Traumatic injury to the head and neck,
acoustic neuromas, space-occupying lesions, can
functionally be diagnosed if affecting those
regions above.
P300
is an evoked response used to assess changes in
memory function. This procedure is commonly
performed with general memory loss, closed head
injuries, questionable CVA symptoms.
Thoracic Outlet Study
is used to assess the function of those pathways
commonly compressed by the first rib. This test
is useful because many other symptoms mimic
thoracic outlet, such as brachial plexus stretch
injuries and radiculopathies.
Blink Reflex
assesses the function of the facial nerve.
Clinical presentations include ptosis of the
facial musculature, with or without pain. This
is clinically important, for these presentations
can mimic CVA’s, and trigeminal neuralgias.
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