| Ability Exercise Unit |
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Not only is the AEU the most effective device for improving muscle strength, it also allows for isolating the desired muscle group. What this means is that whenever a person with a neurological disorder is asked to perform a certain movement, due to muscle tone and lack of coordination, strength and balance, he/she will try to perform that movement with both extremities (upper and lower) at the same time. The Ability Exercise Unit, along with specific exercises performed in it, allows one to re-educate the patient's nervous system to isolate one extremity from the other and move it independently. This is how a normal gait becomes a reality. While strengthening muscles and improving function, the system of exercises performed in the UEU contributes to gains in range of motion, both active and passive, and improved muscle flexibility and tone. This is the main reason why we promote it for the cerebral palsy population. As the name "Ability" suggests, the exercise unit is used in many other ways. Another way is called the "Spider". Through the system of elastic bands and a wide belt worn around the waist, the AEU provides very dynamic vertical or horizontal suspension. The goals of the exercises performed in the "Spider" are to improve functional skills (sitting, crawling, standing, walking), balance, coordination, and sensory-motor integration. The biggest goal in mind would always be promoting independent movement. Not only is it a lot of fun for the patient, but it also substitutes for the work of two additional people. The AEU is also extremely helpful while working on specific goals like endurance for a certain skill. With the use of the tracking rail, the patient and therapist work on the proper coordination of the movement (for example: reciprocation), the quality of the movement and endurance. It is very helpful and often used in our center as a dynamic stander. Patients learn the concept of weight shifting and weight bearing along with the consequences of its lack in a safe way. Little ones love to "fly" and "spin." Parallel bars installed inside the AEU allow one to combine any of the previously mentioned concepts with gait training, functional skills and transfers. It can be done either with the use of the "Spider," tracking rail or independently. Very often we replace the parallel bars with two suspended ropes, creating a version of a "suspended bridge." |













