Movement Interventions
Cross-source consensus on Movement Interventions from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- Retained wisdom teeth were identified as the limiting factor for lateral jaw motion. — Movement Debrief: Rectus Abdominis in Breathing, Neurological Red Flags, and the Survival Theory of Stability
- Wisdom teeth removal normalized lateral jaw movement and improved sleep, heart rate variability, and some upper extremity measures. — Movement Debrief: Rectus Abdominis in Breathing, Neurological Red Flags, and the Survival Theory of Stability
- Daily movement practice includes bar hangs, feet-elevated downward dog, and single-leg hip thrusts with arms overhead before workouts. — Movement Debrief: Rectus Abdominis in Breathing, Neurological Red Flags, and the Survival Theory of Stability
- Septoplasty with turbinate volume reduction produced the largest measured intervention outcome described in the article. — Movement Debrief: Rectus Abdominis in Breathing, Neurological Red Flags, and the Survival Theory of Stability
- Complete turbinate removal was avoided because of the risk of empty nose syndrome. — Movement Debrief: Rectus Abdominis in Breathing, Neurological Red Flags, and the Survival Theory of Stability
- Vision glasses and a jaw splint were associated with restoration of a deep squat and later pistol squat ability. — Movement Debrief: Rectus Abdominis in Breathing, Neurological Red Flags, and the Survival Theory of Stability