Referred Pain Index 17+

Functional Therapeutics Ltd.

Designed for iPad

    • 3.0 • 2 Ratings
    • $4.99

Screenshots

Description

The Referred Pain Index contains a vast database of referred pain patterns including myofascial, ligament, connective tissue, organ, nerve and neural matrix pain.

The Referred Pain Index (RPI) is assessment and reference tool for healthcare and rehabilitation practitioners that deal with referred somatic pain. Injured somatic tissue (neuromusculoskeletal) can produce a variety of pain patterns, making it difficult to isolate the cause of a patient’s pain.
The most challenging aspect of treating somatic pain, is identifying the source.

The RPI allows practitioners to narrow down the source of pain from the largest database of somatic pain referral sources, including; myofascial and ligamentous trigger points, joint referred pain and other somatic pain provoking tissues.

Using a graphical representation of the pain symptoms, the practitioner and patient can together confirm the appropriate source of referred pain. Using the RPI as an assessment tool is not only efficient in improving examination and treatment outcomes, but an evidence based method to ensure that the practitioner and patient recognize the appropriate pain pattern. As a patient education tool, the RPI can seamlessly inform patients about the existence referred pain and pain sources. In addition, the RPI acts as a reference guide to allow practitioners an on-the-fly database of pain referrals at their fingertips.

What’s New

Version 1.4

- Updated Menu Listings
- New Images for Organ Locations
- Addition of Muscle Origins, Insertions, and Nerve Innervation

Ratings and Reviews

3.0 out of 5
2 Ratings

2 Ratings

@AmyAtlanta ,

Has potential, but...

Either the app is incomplete or I just wasted $5....buyer beware: apparently opening the app starts some free trial or something, I opened it, forgot about it and was charged for it. Grrrr. Prompted me to look closer at the app, might be good if you don’t have any other pain charts. It’s not something I’d use with patients/clients, especially when it’s not complete (under anatomy there’s only muscles for some areas - others offered just the skeleton still). Each area I selected the information section was blank. Looking for developer information now. As is, the app isn’t worth it. I’ll update should the app update/display information.

JulieBarr ,

Client education

I have used this in my massage practice for over a year now. The way that I use it, is to allow the client to show me specifically where their pain is. I would pay hundreds of dollars for this app just for the benefit of client education and the trust that they place in me because they know that I understand exactly what structures are involved!

App Privacy

The developer, Functional Therapeutics Ltd., has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

No Details Provided

The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.

Supports

  • Family Sharing

    Up to six family members can use this app with Family Sharing enabled.

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