Beryl Arbuckle`s Cranial - American Academy of Osteopathy
Transcription
Beryl Arbuckle`s Cranial - American Academy of Osteopathy
Beryl Arbuckle’s Cranial “Controversy Controversy in Thought” By Kenneth Lossing D.O. 1 W.G. Sutherland D.O. • One morning in 1899, while still a student in Kirksville, on his way to class the idea for class, cranial mobility came from viewing Dr Dr. Still’s Still s Beauchene disarticulated skull in the North Hall. With Thinking Fingers, A. Sutherland 2 The First Thought • “As I stood looking and thinking in the channel of Dr. Still’s philosophy, my attention was called to the beveled articular surfaces of the sphenoid bone. Suddenly there came a thought; I call it a guiding thought-beveled thought beveled like the gills of a fish, indicating articular mobility for a respiratory mechanism” W.G. Sutherland With Thinking Fingers, A. Sutherland 3 Mobility y • “Mobility Mobility is the state of being in motion. • In physics, motion is a change in position of an object j with respect p to time. • Motion is typically described in terms of velocity, y, acceleration,, displacement, p , time and speed”. • Mobility, for some reason, is not defined in our Osteopathic Glossary. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 4 Motility • “Motility is a biological term which refers to the ability to move spontaneously and actively actively, consuming energy in the process”. • Again, Again this term is absent from our Osteopathic glossary • So, So the brain and fluids move with motility motility, and the container, the skull, needs to be able to accommodate to this, and thoracic respiration. p From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 5 Articular Mobility • “A “Articular ti l mobility bilit occurs iin th the b basilar il area, and that of the facial bones; such basilar mobility being accommodated through g compensatory p y expansile p and contractile service at the vault sutures” • So, So the question is: Is the mobility responsive to primary respiration, or th thoracic i respiration, i ti or b both? th? It’ It’s a question of distance and distensabilty. The Cranial Bowl, 1939, W.G. Sutherland 6 Mental Picture • “The formation of a “mental picture” of the articular surfaces of the cranial and facial bones, is the first necessity for recognizing the fact of cranial articular mobility”. y • “The picture should be like that of a watchmaker watchmaker” • So, we need to know the whole thing! The Cranial Bowl, 1939, W.G. Sutherland 7 So, what is “normal” normal mobility? • In his first book, “the Cranial Bowl”, published i 1939 in 1939, S Sutherland th l d used d ““position” iti ” and d “motion testing” to diagnose the bones and sutures of the skull skull. • The treatment techniques he describes are nearly all “direct direct techniques” techniques . • So he spent nearly 40 years doing direct ! • He also speaks about sutures that are “locked”, in that they do not move when motion tested. The Cranial Bowl, W.G. Sutherland 8 Why is this important ? • We know babies skulls are like a water b ll balloon, easy tto d deform, f and d th they spring i b back. k • Most of our patient’s skulls are somewhere b t between ab basketball, k tb ll and dab bowling li b ball. ll • Could he have possibly meant that an adult skull could be nearly as freely moveable as an infant skull? 9 The current biomechanical terminolog : Visco terminology Visco-elasticity elasticit of Sutures • S Stiffness: iff tensile il fforce/change / h iin llength h • Ultimate stress: tensile force at suture rupture/cross sectional area • “Sutures demonstrate classical viscoelastic behavior. During the elastic phase, they elongated approx 1 um for every 1g of force 104 N/m. The ultimate tensile stress was approx 4 MN/m2. The estimated mean elastic modulus d l was 10 megapixels”. i l ” • “The Load-Displacement Characteristics of Neonatal Rat Sutures Sutures” The Cleft PalatePalate Craniofacial Journal. Vol.37, McLaughlin 10 Stress Strain Graph Strain Stress loading unloading E • • E= elastic modulus The angle of the curve reflects the stiffness of the tissue. A tissue that is stiff will have a line to the left, and a tissue that is less stiff will have a line to the right. 1 Strain Fundamentals of Biomechanics,Ozkaya Modern science says • That the “mobility” or “viscoelasticity” of the sutures t is i specific, ifi nott arbitrary. bit • A specific amount of force will create a specific ifi amountt off distensability di t bilit and d movement, in a normally functioning suture. • In a suture that is malfunctioning malfunctioning, stuck stuck, or locked, the normal amount of distensability is reduced or lost. 12 Fronto-Occipital Fronto Occipital HoldHold Motion Test • This is how Sutherland taught up through at least 1946, according to Robert Fulford. • Thumbs on: • mastoid process and zygomatic process of frontal. • Hands and fingers to opposite side • Actively “motion test” the following strain patterns: Atlas of manipulative Techniques for the Cranium and Face, Alain Gehin 13 SBS • • • • • • • Flexion Extension Torsion Side-bending Vertical Lateral Compression p Osteopathy in the Cranial Field, Magoun 14 Beryl Arbuckle D.O. • She started studying with S th l d iin 1942 Sutherland 1942. • She assisted Sutherland i th in the early l courses, including the first course at a school school, Des Moines Moines, in 1944, where the Becker’s were students. • Remained on his teaching staff for some years. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle Life in Motion, Rollin Becker 15 Beryl Arbuckle • Since she wanted objective evidence of what she palpated while treating patients, she attended nearly every autopsy ( estimated at about 200) on cranial pathology at a hospital in Philadelphia over a many year time span span. • Observed fiber strands in specific directions, which she called stress bands. • Used positional and motion testing diagnosis. • As she treated mostly children, she used direct technique, with respiratory assistance when possible ( step breathing or holding of breath as long as possible) possible). The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 16 Beryl Arbuckle • Presented her finding of stress fibers to the study t d group off the th teachers t h around d Sutherland. • Sutherland S th l d h had d no problem bl with ith thi this, or with ith Arbuckle. • Shortly afterward, afterward she started teaching on her own, with the assistance of Paul Kimberly had been on Sutherland’s Sutherland s teaching staff, who also did direct cranial. Related by Ruby Day to James Jealous 17 Dr. Robert Fulford • Early student of Sutherland (1944 or 45) and Arbuckle (1953). Sutherland’s courses were 2 weeks long g at the time. • Stated many times that patients referred to him by other DO’s, because the patient ti t had h d nott gotten tt better, b tt that had years of cranial, had heads that were balanced balanced, but Dr.“locked Fulford’s Touchup”. of Life 18 Robert Fulford • Observed that Arbuckle came the closest to reproducing the clinical results that Sutherland did, so he went to study with her. • “We We tried to absorb his teaching (Sutherland), (Sutherland) but it didn’t take well. I left the Cranial academy, went to Philadelphia, studied with Dr. Arbuckle, and got a degree of understanding of stress bands of the dura mater and really understood th cranial the i l concept.” t” • Then, after years of practice, it started to work. Robert Fulford,D.O. and the Philosopher Physician, Zachary Comeaux 19 Unlocking technique • Facing the patient, place a hand on each side of the head head. Do layer palpation into the dural layer. Fuford-paraphrased: paraphrased: ”II place my hands on • Dr. Fuford the head, I feel the membranes wind up, until they bust themselves loose. Sometimes it is so strong t it knocks k k my hands h d clean l off ff the th head. Afterwards, you can do what you want with the head.” Lecture at Cranial Academy, about 1995 20 Variations • Pt supine, their hands connected to your arms. • Pt seated. • Pt seated, you stand or sit behind, make contact with posterior cranium. 21 Fulford’s Fulford s Face test A 1 2 3 • A) With your left hand stabilize the frontal bilaterally. • With your right hand translate laterally the: • 1) Upper nose/maxillatests ethmoid! • 2) Zygomas • 3) Lower maxillas 22 Posterior Skull Test • With the patient p supine, use your right hand on the sagittal suture compress suture, enough to catch the head,, and lift it until the occiput is unweighted. Use your left hand to translate the occiput left and right. 23 Earlyy Sutherland Diagnostic g Sequence • “There is a definite orderly sequence of cranial diagnosis as first taught by Sutherland, which for clear understanding cannot be improved upon. Start with the sphenobasilar and proceed as follows: the base of the skull skull, the back and sides ( all formed in cartilage), then vault and face” face . The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 24 Illustration of above sequence • Head anterior and to the left on atlas • Flexion of the sphenobasilar p with sidebending rotation to the left • Posterior divergence of condylar parts • A P crowding g of the condylar parts • Flexion of Occipital hinge • Occipital squama flattened and rotated left • Bilateral posterior and superior mastoid buckling • Overriding of coronal and lambdoid sutures • Parietals over both occipital and frontals • Depressed nasion The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 25 The question is: How can we get the cranial mechanism optimal function? • Answer: Get the container moving well, so the contents can express themselves. • Mobilize the sacrum, upper cervical spine, then unlock the bones/sutures then unlock the bones/sutures, membranes. q locked • The most frequent sutures are: Left occipitalpetrosal, right pterygo-palatine, left fronto-ethmoid fronto ethmoid . KL Osteopathy in The Cranial Field, Magoun 26 Occipitopetrosal Manipulation • Contacts: posterior to mastoid tip on the fixed side-W/R-anterolaterally • Anterior to the mastoid tip on the unaffected side-W1/4Rposterlaterally • Note: you can also use your 4th and 5th finger pads on the occiput to lift a low side side. Arbuckle Cranial Sutures, Marc Pick 27 Force, Pressure Codes • S=surface level= initial contact • W=working level= ½ way between surface and rejection level=pliable counter-resistance • R=Rejection level=major tissue resistance ( tissue hardens), pt discomfort. • So, S W1/3R means ttake k th the ti tissue tto working ki level force, then go 1/3 more of the way to rejection level level. 28 Cranial Sutures, Marc Pick Sphenopalatine Manipulation • Contacts: • Bilateral maxilla’s, inside of mouth near last molars molars-W-medial W medial • Pterygoid process, anterior tip-W1/4Rtip W1/4R posteromedial. • Note: the most common side is the right, but I treat both. KL Cranial Sutures, Marc Pick 29 Frontoethmoid Manipulation • To release lateral surfaces and close the anterior surfaces• Frontal’s metopic suture, e tending laterall extending laterally over o er supercilliary arches and maxilla’s-W1/3R-posterior • Occiput-W/R anterior Note: you are done when the ethmoid is rocking well, and the “upper face translation test” is normal. Cranial Sutures, Marc Pick 30 The SacrumSacrum from Arbuckle • The upper limb of the L shaped sacroiliac articulation is convergent anteriorly. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 31 Sacrum, Arbuckle • The lower limbs of the L shaped sacroiliac articulation is divergent anteriorly. • The upper and lower limbs meet at S2, the axis of rotation is here Below this the here. lateral articulations converge inferiorly inferiorly. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 32 Sacrum, Arbuckle • Use thumb on base and apex of the same side. C Compress b base ttoward d th the greater trochanter, then apex toward the ASIS, compare distensabilty. distensabilty • Then check other side the same way. • On the most moveable quadrant, placed a thumb, other thumb behind for reinforcement Exaggerate reinforcement. the strain. Have Pt take deep breath and hold. Sacrum should release with a jerk. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 33 Stress Fibers • “There are white fibrous strands, known as stress fibers fibers, throughout the otherwise yellow elastic tissue.” Theses stress fibers which follow a very • “Theses definitely consistent pattern, are arranged in horizontal, vertical, transverse, circular, and spinal i l groups.”” • “There is no definite break in these fibers but an intermingling or continuation of one group with another so that forces may be directed and controlled throughout this mechanism.” The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 34 Stress fibers • “For descriptive purposes origin and termination of the various groups of fibers is given but it must be remembered that these fibers are continuous and their firm boney attachments must be thoroughly understood with all possible movements thereof in order to change the planes and tensities of these various diverging fans of fibers throughout the dura to achieve th necessary forces the f in i the th desired d i d di directions.” ti ” The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 35 Intracranial Dura • “The torcular mass is quite an extensive dense fibrous mass about the confluence of sinuses. From this mass diverge four horizontal groups of fibers, namely:• Inferior horizontal fibers of falx cerebri • Horizontal fibers of the falx cerebelli • Horizontal group in the under layer of each side of the tent tent.” The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 36 Primal Pictures 37 Horizontal Falx Cerebri Superior p • The superior p horizontal fibers of the falx in either side of the falx cerebri diverge somewhat from the metopic p area to the lambda, and margins of the superior part of the sagittal sulcus of the occiput. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 38 Half a world away, Dr. Erich Blecshmidt’s dissections show : Dural Girdles • These are areas where the dura is thickened, thought to be due to a reaction to the brain growing, a restraining function. f • 1-retromesencephalic dural girdle i dl • 6-premesencephalic dural girdle • 12- falx ( Arbuckle called this the falx ceribri anterior vertical fibers) The Stages of Human Development before Birth, 1960, Erich Blechschmidt 39 Dural girdles-thickened girdles thickened dura • 3,8, right g frontal dural girdle, anlagen of coronal and sagital sutures sutures, and part of falx. 4-right right parietal dural • 4 girdle • 6,11- occipital dural girdle, connective tissue analgen of lambdoidal suture The Stages of Human Development before Birth, 1960, Erich Blechschmidt 40 • The dura forms a “restraining f function” ti ” to t the th more rapid growth of the brain. • Symposium on the Development p of the Basicranium The Biokinetics of the Basicranium, Blechschmidt 41 FIBROUS TISSUE FORMATION (STRETCHED MESENCHYME) Retension Field: the sick figures pull apart on a tough material. The rapid growth of the brain stretches the precursor of the dura, forming a horizontally directed thickening in the falx. Biokinetics and Biodynamics of Human Differentiation 42 Has anyone y else thought g about this? • “Quantification Quantification of the Collagen fiber architecture of human cranial i l dura d mater”. t ” • Done at tissue mechanics lab, dept. of biomedical engineering, U of Miami. • Endocranial dura • Most regular arrangement of fibers is in temporal region Hamann, Sacks, Malinin, J of Anat Jan 1998 43 Study info • 20 fresh cadavers,, no pathology • 0-92 years old • Less than 24 hours postmortum • Superior S i sagittal itt l sinus i and calvarial section of ttissue o ssue • Placed in saline and frozen. Hamann, Sacks, Malinin, J of Anat Jan 1998 44 Study Information • Tissue looked at using small angle light scattering HeNe lazer, has optics between optical miscroscopy i and d gross visual analysis. Hamann, Sacks, Malinin, J of Anat Jan 1998 45 Dura • The top picture is viewed with the eye, the bottom picture shows SALS applied to the same area th with the direction of the collagen fibers more apparent. pp Hamann, Sacks, Malinin, J of Anat Jan 1998 46 Is the Collagen oriented along vessels? l ? • Not found to be oriented along large vessels, but along smaller vessels Hamann, Sacks, Malinin, J of Anat Jan 1998 47 Near Coronal Suture • The collagen fibers are aligned in an anterior/posterior direction just behind the coronal suture, in th area off the the th remnantt of an anterior dural girdle. girdle • Thought to be the result of growth stress. stress Hamann, Sacks, Malinin, J of Anat Jan 1998 48 Treatment of horizontal fibers of f l and falx, d opening i middle iddl b buttress • Lay the patient on their left side, id a pillow ill under d th their i h head. d • Place your left index finger along the anterior falx, right index finger along the posterior falx. • Follow F ll the h PRM iinto extension, don’t allow if to go into flexion. After some time,, maybe 5 minutes, the system will become quiet, then go into flexion and everything will flexion, soften. Described by Dr Fulford 49 Buttresses • “In the boney structure also p areas of there are developed greater density known as buttresses. Although this stage of development is not reached in infancy, the buttresses will be described here since understanding d t di th their i normall or expected positions, slight deviations in the infant skull which may result in gross abnormalities are more easily recognized recognized” The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 50 Butresses • Anterior: across glabella g laterally, over superciliary ridges to zygomatic process of frontal. frontal • Posterior: inion, most superior nuchal lines, mastoid process • Inferior: inion to opisthion, foramen magnum, magnum basion, basion to posterior wall of sphenoidal sinus The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 51 Buttresses • Superior: Inion, sagital suture, t frontal f t l crest, t glabella, crista galli • Lateral Oval: mastoid process, EAM, EAM th then 2 ridges. Outer: zygomatic bone to zygomatic process of frontal frontal. Inner: pteryoid process and lesser wing • Oblique basilar: Petrous ridges of temporals, point towards sphenoid sinus, the roof of which forms the floor of the sella turcica. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 52 Buttresses • “The various buttresses may be pictured as radiating di ti ffrom about b t th the sella ll turcica t i and d iin a manner similar to the stress bands of the reciprocal tension membranes membranes.” • “1. Straightening or flattening the anterior buttress will widen or cause the margins of the ethmoidal notch of the frontal to increase their posterior divergence p g thus allowing g for a widening of the upper part of the lateral masses”. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 53 Using the Buttress to mobilize the lateral ethmoid’s th id’ articulation ti l ti • To release lateral surfaces and close the anterior surfaces• Frontal’s metopic suture, extending laterally over supercilliary arches and maxilla s W1/3R maxilla’s-W1/3Rposterior p anterior • Occiput-W/R Cranial Sutures-Marc Pick The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 54 Median Buttresses “Increasing or decreasing the arc of the median buttress will allow the crista gali to fall or elevate depending upon the type of head. That is, in an extreme flexion head it would be wiser to attempt to lift the crista galli by increasing the arc of the anterior buttress thus narrowing the lateral masses of the ethmoid. ( Horizontal falx technique). technique) In an extreme extension head we would rather allow the crista galli to fall permitting widening of the l t l masses off lateral ff the th ethmoid”. th id” (A/P compression- face with inion) The Selected Writing of Beryl Arbuckle 55 Treatment of “Horizontal fibers of Falx” and increase the arc of Falx “Anterior Buttress” • Lay the patient on their left side, a pillow under their head. • Place your left index finger along the anterior falx, right g index finger g along g the p posterior falx. • Follow the PRM into extension, don’t allow if to go into flexion. After some time, maybe y 5 minutes, the system will become quiet, then go into flexion, and everything will soften. Described by Robert Fulford 56 Buttresses • Zygomatic pillar of the face-from the first molar l ttooth th tto the th zygomatic ti angle l off th the frontal • By B increasing i i or d decreasing i th the iinferior f i convergence of the zygomatic pillars, change in the posterior divergence of the margins of the ethmoid notch of the frontal may be obtained. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 57 Frontoethmoidal Manipulation • To release anterior, and close laterally• Bil contact superior p to sphenofrontal sutureW1/3R-medially. • Lateral aspect of hard palate- W1/3Rl laterally, ll then h pullll anteriorly The Cranial Sutured, March Pick The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 58 59 The Vault, Fontanelles, and Sutures • • • • • • • • From left to right: g 14 weeks 20 weeks 24 weeks 30 weeks 34 weeks Adult In the fetal skull there are 6 fontanelles 60 Anterior Fontanelle • Anterior fontanelle becomes bregma g after the fontanel closes and the sutures form. It is between the 2 halves of the frontal bone ((metopic p suture)) and the 2 parietals. • The metopic suture is open at birth separating the frontal into birth, 2 halves, from nasion to bregma. It ossifies during growth but retains a natural growth, malleability, moving during flexion-extension, aided by the attachment of the falx falx. “The The cranial puzzle” 61 Bregma Treatment Part 1 • Due to the overlapping of the sutures sutures, the medial ends of the coronal suture need to be treated first, then the anterior t i portion ti off the th sagittal suture. • The medial end of the coronal suture is treated by the fingers of one hand on glabella, depressing posteriorly, while the thumb of the other hand is posterior to bregma, depressing The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 62 caudad. Bregma Treatment part 2 • The sagittal suture is treated with fingers on parietals, thumbs overlapped over the anterior part of the suture, t force f directed di t d posterior, inferior and lateralward Arbuckle lateralward. The Selected Writings of Beryl Arbuckle 63 Bregma • Trauma at bregma. (trauma may be direct on area or indirect from a fall on the feet or buttock). The bone is pushed inferiorly at bregma g and forced laterally y at p pterion. This will restrict the great wing and the sphenobasilar. The sagittal suture will be depressed or one parietal lowered in relation to the other. The occipital condlyes may be moved back in the pits of the atlas (bilateral posterior occiput). OCF 64 Beryl Arbuckle • Preserved Sutherland’s earliest approaches to mobility diagnosis ( position and motion testing) and mobility, treatment (direct). • Refined the view of the reciprocal tension membrane into 20 different directions of fibers, all of which are helpful in diagnosis and treatment (both by themselves and as handles for the bone). • Described thickened areas of bone called buttresses, that can be used in diagnosis and treatment (by themselves and as handles to the membranes). membranes) 65 • Was way ahead of her time. FORCE • Force= Foundation for Osteopathic Research and Continuous Education • Do you believe that Osteopathic Medicine should be the standard of conservative medical care in America ? • Need eed for o research-evidence esea c e de ce based medicineed c e payment for treatment. • Do yyou believe that Patients need to know about the Osteopathic approach ? • Grateful patients can donate. • Help us help you- Making Osteopathy a 66 household word. 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