massage and bodywork professionals
a community of practitioners
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.
Tags:
Views: 33691
That is a tremendous testimonial!! I'm sure she was only disappointed because what you do doesn't feel at all like what she was used to, and it may not have felt like it could possibly work.
I'm glad the new client was willing to try your methods! She probably thought she had fibromyalgia...because that's likely what she was told...
wow, that is a great testimonial. i hope that one day i can get a testimonial like that. i would love to be able to help take someone's pain away like that. i think that is one of the greatest gifs you can give someone.
i have been studying bodywork for 7 years and i have about 650 hours of study under my belt. i can give a great relaxing massage but i still feel like i haven't learned the tools to help people with their pain. i did take a trigger point class many years ago, but i didn't follow up. so i am rereading the clair davies trigger point therapy workbook and studying this trigger point stuff and i plan to start working on some friends that are in pain. looking forward to hopefully learning some skills that can help people in a real way.
one thing i like about trigger point stuff is that for me, it seems pretty simple and intuitive relative to other modalities which attempt to alleviate pain, like deep tissue and myofascial release. and that makes me trust it more.
As I was reading this I was thinking extensor muscles in the forearm! Can you imagine what surgery would do??? All that scar tissue and fascial adhesions on top of the trigger points...so totally unnecessary!
More good work, Gordon!
"Can you imagine what surgery would do??? All that scar tissue and fascial adhesions on top of the trigger points.."
I'm interested to know how it is you can predict the outcome or assume an outcome of a surgery that has not yet happened? What are you basing your observations on?
"Scar tissue" is a natural reaction to tissue damage and in-and-of itself is not a pathological situation. It sadly has become one due to many years of manual therapists projecting "scar tissue", "adhesions" and "myofascial TrP" as things to rid the body of.
Which creates quite the ethical conundrum of perpetuating a presumed problem where none exists. But it does keep us relevant and employed as manual therapists and it seems to satisfy patients who don't know any better and who depend on us for help with managing their pain.
Adhesions, trigger points, and slipped discs for that matter, have not been found to exist in the human body, in the way we understand them to be. (Via, MRI scans and postmortem observations)
I've said this ad nauseum before, until we as MT's are willing to be open to new developments in the field of pain science research and open to the idea that we don't know many things about what it is we *think* we are doing, we will not be taken too seriously in the healthcare field.
Therese Schwartz said:As I was reading this I was thinking extensor muscles in the forearm! Can you imagine what surgery would do??? All that scar tissue and fascial adhesions on top of the trigger points...so totally unnecessary!
More good work, Gordon!
Gordon -
Okay....
It's a textbook or reference guide.
"Old information" - when referring to human biology - especially pain science - IS out-dated and inaccurate information. Depending on what kind of clinician you are, "old information" could prove to be fatal for your patient. Seeing as we are manual therapists the biggest risk we run, is misleading and confusing our clients with "old information", by way of our anecdotal evidence and conjecture.
What is there to "acknowledge", accept that huge amounts of confirmation bias, exist in your brief reply.
© 2024 Created by ABMP. Powered by