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I had a new client the other day for an 80 minute massage. I asked him if there is anything that he wanted me to know. He told me that he suffers from a herniated disc that he has had for a few years. He has constant low back and right hip pain that at times radiates down the back of his leg to his knee. He told me that he has had two injections in his low back and has to stay on anit- inflamtory medication. Anything to avoid surgery. The pain is always there. I asked him if he ever saw a chiropractor for his pain. He said yes. But the adjustments hurt his hip so bad that he could not continiue. So here is a guy that thinks he is on the verge of surgery. I knew that there was a very strong probubllity that was not the case. The vast majority of pain people experience is nocioceptive pain( soft tissue- muscle, tendon, ligament, facia). MDs and Chiropractors see pain as neuropathic pain( nerve pain). With that asumption they give the wrong treatments and therapies. Now there is no denying that at times injections and surgery is needed. Not denying that. But most of the time - NOT. 70% to 85% of all pain comes directly from trigger points. Anyway I showed my client a testimonial from a client that I was able to help out of a very painful condition that she had delt with for a couple of years. I showed him that testimonial because all pain has a psychological eliment too it. I wanted him to start thinking maybe he is not on the edge of surgery. I palpated his entire back upper torso, both hips, and right leg. I found a very painful spot on his right L5 erectors. Another very painful spot on his right greater trochantor. A painful spot in the middle part of his lower right hamstrings. And also a tender spot on the right spinous of L3. I knew that if Iwas able to eliminate all those painful palaptory spots that I would most likely eliminate his pain problem. Because a healthy body had no painful spots even with deep massage. Ive been hunting and eliminateing trigger points for thirty years now. He walked out of the massage room pain free. He was pain free for the first time in years. All those other professional people misdiagnosed him because they assume neuropathic pain over nocioceptive pain. I assume the other way around. I'm a Massage Therapist.
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Over on another forum I just responded to an LMT who began a thread about the need to strengthen neck flexors in order to eliminate posterior neck pain. Whoa, I replied. I took a few paragraphs to explain that the lady's problem is not due to weak flexor muscles of the neck and upper body, but just the opposite. Her neck is hurting, I explained, because the extensors are forced to remain hypertonic all the time in order to try to counter the stronger kyphotic pull of the flexors... that if she advised the client to strengthen-- not stretch-- the posterior muscles of neck, shoulders, and upper back-- that in a couple of weeks the underworked but overstressed extensors would quickly strengthen, and the pain would soon begin to dissipate. Yes, I'm sure a few trigger points are involved, too. But I didn't have that much space nor that much time to dedicate to the LMT's education. Instead, I provided her with this http://preview.tinyurl.com/hret77a.
You know, you'd think that by commonsense alone a caring, highly trained, licensed massage therapist would understand that weakness in posterior muscles will lead to forward head posture and stooped shoulders; they certainly ought to know that a weakened, over-stressed muscle is gonna tighten up and hurt in self defense.
Me too. I got into the strengthening of the affected posterior neck muscles to counter the asinine comment the other therapist said.
Gordon J. Wallis said:
I don't know Gary. I never think in those terms. For me, I can't relate to it. I find and eliminate posterior neck pain pretty much on a daily basis without doing any kind of strengthening of anything. I did today on two people. I did on the lady with the neck shoulder tension I talked about on my last entry.
The lady that wrote the testimonial in the attachment below came in with significant posterior neck pain. I had to see her for three 15 minute sessions three days in a row, before it was resolved.
True!
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