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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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When an anesthesiologist puts a patient to sleep prior to surgery, is it the nervous system that prevents the pain, or is it the drugs coursing through the veins that block the nervous system's ability to send the pain signal?
Likewise, when Gordon, or I, or any other manual therapist skilled in treating pain says he or she "made the pain go away," that is 100% true-- the nervous system, in conjunction with the trigger-pointed muscle, created the pain. Intervention by the therapist restored proper communication between the muscle and the CNS...the muscle relaxed, so the pain stopped.
A trigger point , as painful as it can be, is not a life threatening condition; its purpose is to prevent movement of what the CNS perceives to be an injured muscle(s). Usually, but not always, the condition is self-correcting: in a few days or weeks or months, whatever was going on within the tissue heals itself, communication to the CNS is fully restored, the TP relaxes, the pain stops. I say, not always, because we have all encountered clients who had been hurting continuously for 20 years, and with out skills, we discovered the painful trigger point(s), encouraged them to release using a variety of techniques, and therefore made the pain go away.
Stacey L Brown said:
"......what I do is way beyond dry needling or what anybody knows in that article".
Be careful Gordon, a cavalier attitude is a dangerous place to work from.
Hi Gordon -
I think it's exciting to share our triumphs with others and again, I applaud your hard work and efforts with your clients.
As a profession I think it's time for us to start asking more questions and challenging these long held notions of what we think we are doing in the name of massage therapy and the outcomes we see with our clients.
Much of what we were taught and still teach in massage school is incorrect and in many cases, unsupported by credible research, and is based mostly on what we think we are seeing and feeling and how our client's feel post massage.
I urge you to watch a 20 mins. Youtube video with Lorimer Moseley; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwd-wLdIHjs
His talk on our relationship with pain is a game changer for the field of manual/massage therapists and that of our current (clinical) applications. I now question almost everything I learned in massage school. Not so much to point a blaming finger as much as to bring awareness and curiosity to what it is we are doing or as the case may be, not doing.
All the best to you Gordon and thank you for indulging me.
Er, we/you are not making the" pain go away", the nervous system does that - we are merely facilitators. It's imperative we keep that in the forefront of our mind and while we're at it, share that with our clients so they have a more accurate take on who we are and what it is we are really doing.
And regardless of the outcome of your/our sessions; "what we do", "the changes we think we are making" and "how we explain that to our clients" is largely based on outdated information and we owe it to ourselves, the profession and our clients more accurate explanations than what we have been, historically telling them.
I am not doubting that you are doing good work and that your clients are without a doubt, very grateful for that. :-)
You are right, the nervous system does controle everything. I can just manipulate it ( the nervous system ) around a little bite. Just enough to release those tight muscles. So I guess we dont really disagree.
Stacey L Brown said:Er, we/you are not making the" pain go away", the nervous system does that - we are merely facilitators. It's imperative we keep that in the forefront of our mind and while we're at it, share that with our clients so they have a more accurate take on who we are and what it is we are really doing.
And regardless of the outcome of your/our sessions; "what we do", "the changes we think we are making" and "how we explain that to our clients" is largely based on outdated information and we owe it to ourselves, the profession and our clients more accurate explanations than what we have been, historically telling them.
I am not doubting that you are doing good work and that your clients are without a doubt, very grateful for that. :-)
Hi Gary -
"Likewise, when Gordon, or I, or any other manual therapist skilled in treating pain says he or she "made the pain go away," that is 100% true-- the nervous system, in conjunction with the trigger-pointed muscle, created the pain. Intervention by the therapist restored proper communication between the muscle and the CNS...the muscle relaxed, so the pain stopped".
Going to have to disagree with you there, Gary. You, me or Gordon absolutely do not make the pain go away, 100% or .01% of the time.
If pain is created by the CNS/brain, then suffice to say the CNS/brain takes the pain away (aka; restores communication).
We do however deliver mechanical input/stimuli by way of our techniques, it is then that the nervous system decides what to do with that sensory input.
Gary W Addis, LMT said:When an anesthesiologist puts a patient to sleep prior to surgery, is it the nervous system that prevents the pain, or is it the drugs coursing through the veins that block the nervous system's ability to send the pain signal?
Likewise, when Gordon, or I, or any other manual therapist skilled in treating pain says he or she "made the pain go away," that is 100% true-- the nervous system, in conjunction with the trigger-pointed muscle, created the pain. Intervention by the therapist restored proper communication between the muscle and the CNS...the muscle relaxed, so the pain stopped.
A trigger point , as painful as it can be, is not a life threatening condition; its purpose is to prevent movement of what the CNS perceives to be an injured muscle(s). Usually, but not always, the condition is self-correcting: in a few days or weeks or months, whatever was going on within the tissue heals itself, communication to the CNS is fully restored, the TP relaxes, the pain stops. I say, not always, because we have all encountered clients who had been hurting continuously for 20 years, and with out skills, we discovered the painful trigger point(s), encouraged them to release using a variety of techniques, and therefore made the pain go away.
Stacey L Brown said:"......what I do is way beyond dry needling or what anybody knows in that article".
Be careful Gordon, a cavalier attitude is a dangerous place to work from.
Sigh. Of course the CNS creates the pain, the CNS stops the pain-- when the reason the pain signal is initiated ends. Intervention by MD's drugs or the skilled hands of a manual therapist coupled with the body's own healing power enables the CNS to stop the pain.
I don't understand why you cannot grasp what I'm saying. The CNS needs help sometimes. Surgery is often necessary to correct a dysfunctional organ or to replace a crushed bone with an artificial hip socket: the CNS doesn't understand that the scalpel is performing a life-saving service, so before the incision, the CNS must be quieted-- dare I say controlled?-- temporarily.
Life, all forms of life in my opinion are the product of intelligent design, not mere happenstance. Pain is involuntary, outside conscious control. The CNS itself is completely outside our conscious control. When it senses that the life it serves is in danger from, for example, a flame, it reacts by sending excruciating pain so that the conscious mind responds and removes the hand from the flame.
Myofascial pain falls under our purview. Eighty-ninety percent of myofascial pain is either directly due to trigger points formation; or, quite often, trigger points form as part of the CNS' attempt to prevent further damage to muscle tissue. The CNS can initiate the pain, but the CNS acting on its own will not stop the pain until it senses that the danger to the life of the organism has passed.
Ischemic compression to a painful trigger point forces the contractured muscle sarcomere to open its gates so that sodium can flow out and potassium can flow in, allowing the contracture to relax, and the nerve signal can pass through unimpeded. With communication restored, the CNS stops the pain. You want exact language? Okay, the CNS itself stops sending the pain into the tissue-- but just as the CNS itself cannot heal crushed bone, it cannot correct muscle dysfunction due to a trigger point.
Stacey L Brown said:
Hi Gary -
"Likewise, when Gordon, or I, or any other manual therapist skilled in treating pain says he or she "made the pain go away," that is 100% true-- the nervous system, in conjunction with the trigger-pointed muscle, created the pain. Intervention by the therapist restored proper communication between the muscle and the CNS...the muscle relaxed, so the pain stopped".
Going to have to disagree with you there, Gary. You, me or Gordon absolutely do not make the pain go away, 100% or .01% of the time.
If pain is created by the CNS/brain, then suffice to say the CNS/brain takes the pain away (aka; restores communication).
We do however deliver mechanical input/stimuli by way of our techniques, it is then that the nervous system decides what to do with that sensory input.
Gary W Addis, LMT said:When an anesthesiologist puts a patient to sleep prior to surgery, is it the nervous system that prevents the pain, or is it the drugs coursing through the veins that block the nervous system's ability to send the pain signal?
Likewise, when Gordon, or I, or any other manual therapist skilled in treating pain says he or she "made the pain go away," that is 100% true-- the nervous system, in conjunction with the trigger-pointed muscle, created the pain. Intervention by the therapist restored proper communication between the muscle and the CNS...the muscle relaxed, so the pain stopped.
A trigger point , as painful as it can be, is not a life threatening condition; its purpose is to prevent movement of what the CNS perceives to be an injured muscle(s). Usually, but not always, the condition is self-correcting: in a few days or weeks or months, whatever was going on within the tissue heals itself, communication to the CNS is fully restored, the TP relaxes, the pain stops. I say, not always, because we have all encountered clients who had been hurting continuously for 20 years, and with out skills, we discovered the painful trigger point(s), encouraged them to release using a variety of techniques, and therefore made the pain go away.
Stacey L Brown said:"......what I do is way beyond dry needling or what anybody knows in that article".
Be careful Gordon, a cavalier attitude is a dangerous place to work from.
http://www.stretchingusa.com/active-isolated-stretching
I first started thinking consciously about manipulating or getting the nervous system on my side while doing my bodywork way back in the early 90s I think. When I first discoverd Active Isolated Stretching which avoided the nervous systems Stretch Resopons. Then shortly after that a Britsh Sports Massage therapapist integrated Active Isolated Stretching along with Massage movements with outstanding results for his clients. He called it Soft Tissue Release. That greatly boosted postive results with my clients especially for arm and leg trigger points and injuries.
http://www.softtissuerelease.com
Grinning. I'm not dyslexic, but I'm a lousy typist...I mistype. And in my old age, I just plain out msspell common words (I was a spelling bee champion for my school district in the 6th grade).
Gordon J. Wallis said:
Sory, I'm kind of dislexic and mis spell words all the time, get letters in the wrong place and so on.
See I said Sory when I ment to say Sorry. lol Gordon J. Wallis said:http://www.stretchingusa.com/active-isolated-stretching
I first started thinking consciously about manipulating or getting the nervous system on my side while doing my bodywork way back in the early 90s I think. When I first discoverd Active Isolated Stretching which avoided the nervous systems Stretch Resopons. Then shortly after that a Britsh Sports Massage therapapist integrated Active Isolated Stretching along with Massage movements with outstanding results for his clients. He called it Soft Tissue Release. That greatly boosted postive results with my clients especially for arm and leg trigger points and injuries.
http://www.softtissuerelease.com
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