Predictive Model of Upper Body Dysfunction (UBD): Signs of upper body postural dysfunction; muscle, joint, fascia, nervous system, neuromuscular recruitment, subsystems, and core muscle contribution. Exercise selection related to upper crossed syndrome, rounded shoulder posture, forward head, and neck pain.
Predictive Model of Upper Body Dysfunction (UBD): Signs of upper body postural dysfunction; muscle, joint, fascia, nervous system, neuromuscular recruitment, subsystems, and core muscle contribution. Exercise selection related to upper crossed syndrome, rounded shoulder posture, forward head, and neck pain.
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Upper Body Dysfunction (UBD) is an edit and update of previous postural dysfunction models (e.g. Upper-crossed Syndrome, Rounded Shoulder Posture, Protracted Shoulder Girdle, etc.). It is important to recognize that in these models the term "posture" is being used as an analogy for "ideal alignment". Similarly, when movement professionals refer to upper body posture, good posture, poor posture, better posture, etc. they are referring to this analogy of ideal alignment; not the rigid positioning implied by the colloquial use of the term "posture."
Postural dysfunction and movement impairment syndromes are likely the beginning of "modeling". Modeling has significant potential to aid in refining clinical decision-making, intervention selection, program design, and improve the reliability and effect size of outcomes. It is particularly helpful for aiding in the interpretation of multi-variant problems, which is how all clients and patients present. The Brookbush Institute recommends that all sports medicine professionals (personal trainers, fitness instructors, physical therapists, massage therapists, chiropractors, occupational therapists, athletic trainers, etc.) consider these models to aid in refining decision-making in practice.
Additional Models:
Overactive (Release and Stretch):
Underactive (Activate and Integrate):
Fascia (Reduction in Extensibility)
Arthrokinematics
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