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Dear members .

Below you will find question that was today  posted on one of my YouTube clips .

I hope that it will be interesting  for you to read . Any comments and questions  are welcome.

Best wishes .

Boris

 

This is  a question :”Hello Boris, I have great amount of pain in this area and have been diagnosed with chronic pelvic pain. My question is if this is the massage I would need? It is hard for me to find a therapist that can do this for me like you do...... Thank you”

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My answer: I'm sorry to hear about your suffering. If from this clip you have learn that  TFLMS symptoms is similar to pains   you are suffering then in the best of my knowledge  this is not really chronic pelvic pains.Having said this  lower back region is a posterior abdominal wall and any disorders within abdominal cavity including and not limited to endometriosis, adhesions and more can produce pains similar to lower back disorders including  TFLMS.this is in cases of females, but males can develop chronic pelvic pains including the same symptoms due to prostate dysfunction and disorders,and including adhesions being it postsurgical  or just as a result of chronic inflammation.One simple test that can help to differential if this is symptoms of skeletal muscular system more than related to abdominal cavities / pelvic chronic pain, is to try to  check trigger points  within skin, muscle, and subcutaneous tissue. It is important  to differential deep areas of having trigger points from superficial areas of the abdominal walls. I hope Dr. already did it. Just in case. Ask your doctor to  press on the abdominal wall while you raise your head . In such a case this pressure will be significant decreased to internal organs. If trigger points will be detected while you keeping your head up, then most likely pain is originating  from skin, muscle, and subcutaneous tissue reflex zones of pathological/ abnormal changes, and not from visceral / internal organs. Having said it please be aware that this trigger points can be presented in both skin, muscle, and subcutaneous tissue as well as at visceral / internal organs .Not often but in some cases abdominal as well as pelvic floor hernias could produce similar pain.My advice is to see Dr. and to  exclude  it.in case if abdominal as well as pelvic floor hernias will be excluded ,the good news

is that application of specialy designed abdominal/ visceral massage protocol is very effective in cases of  chronic pelvic pain because we addressing directly and not directly visceral components as well skin, muscle, and subcutaneous tissue within abdominal walls which allow us,to eliminate adhesions, to address trigger points,to normalize muscles tone etc.and bottom-line to promote arterial blood supply, which is real therapy in such cases.

Wish you fast recovery.

Boris.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSH8vFgPls0&lc=31yqsHS1PxUxFYhS...

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