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You are here: Home / Featured / Q & A for The 16% – Range of Motion Interpretation Mistakes

Q & A for The 16% – Range of Motion Interpretation Mistakes

May 8, 2020 By Bill Leave a Comment

I get a lot of questions as to how I interpret table tests, and how I relate the results of them to representations of the archetypes, symmetry or asymmetry, and what interventions are best.

Your chessboard (the compilation of all your table measures) produces a 4D representation of your client in space. This guides your thinking and your process. A common mistake or misbelief is that you’re measuring from some imaginary zero point based on dead guy anatomy. While some zero point can be a representative model in certain circumstances, it also promotes misinterpretation of many table tests.

Here’s an example of how you can have symmetrical measures on the table that are not truly symmetrical.

#straightlegraise #physicaltherapy #billhartmanpt

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Filed Under: Featured, Homepage, Professional Development, Professional Mentorship Tagged With: anterior orientation, anterior pelvic tilt, axial skeleton, Bill Hartman PT, Breathing exercises, dorsal rostral thorax, hip mobility, hip rotation, IFAST physical therapy, IFAST PT, Indianapolis physical therapist, infrasternal angle, posterior orientation, posterior pelvic tilt, range of motion, shoulder flexion, shoulder pain, straight leg raise test, table tests

Join the mentorship network.

Enter your email address below to be in the first group notified when The Intensive applications open. You'll also receive periodic educational content.

You have to earn your way into the 16%. To do so, we must think differently. Fitness training is young and indecisive. Rehab is stagnating. Strength & Conditioning is being stifled by tradition and confusion. It's time to do the work necessary to improve or join the average.

Success! We are now accepting mentorship applications. Please see the link on the professional mentorship page.

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