Posts tagged injury
Physical Therapy and Sports: Augmenting Rehabilitation From A Massage Chair
Apr 11th
If you play sports or other physical activities, then you know that injuries come with the territory. Depending on the type of injury and the extent of your injury, you may need physical therapy. Physical therapy is the process of rehabilitation and recovery from your injury or physical ailment. Physical therapy works on recovery of your musculoskeletal system. Massage therapy is used as part of the recovery process. Some of the more advanced therapy clinics are starting to use massage chair recliners as part of their arsenal of tools to help people recover from their injuries.
Physical therapy starts with an expert therapist. Much like a trainer, the physical therapist will design a program to increase the flexibility and strength of the injured areas. The therapist must understand your situation. They must know the procedures you went through if you had surgery. They also must know the physiology of your body and its related mechanics. Most of the programs require stretching and massage for flexibility and exercise for strength. They use specialized equipment in order to target specific areas or individual muscles. Massage chairs are particularly effective in loosening tight areas and enhancing blood circulation.
One of the first things you will do in physical therapy is to sit down with your therapist. You will go over in detail your physique and injured areas. The therapist understands surgeries and there affect on your muscle and skeletal systems. They will design a specific program with you. You will be put through a regimen of stretching. They will want you to gain more strength. You may need to do exercises or use specialized exercise equipment. They may rub down or massage certain areas of your injuries. They may have you receive massage therapy in a massage chair recliner. All these therapies are designed to help your recover fully.
One of the key areas when you start is to make your muscles more pliable. When an injury occurs, the body immobilizes the affected area. Your body has redundant systems for most everything. If your leg is injured, it will want the other leg to take over. The body does not want the injured leg used and tries to shut it down to heal it. This is good, but your muscles become stiff and tight. They actually hurt when you start to bend them. Stretching is an important part of the physical therapy routine to build back flexibility.
Exercises are important to help rebuild strength. When we have an injury, we tend to protect that area. Protecting that area is usually to isolate and immobilize it. In other words, we tend not to use the injured area. This helps to prevent further injury, but at the expense of strength and conditioning. To help rebuild the body, exercises help to build up strength, endurance and agility. Physical therapy clinics have a wide array of exercise equipment from treadmills, stationary bikes, weights and more. These help you focus building up a particular set of muscles.
Some of the problems encountered in the physical recovery process are scar tissue. Scar tissue forms harder than the original tissue. This needs recurring kneading and pressing massage to restore flexibility. The muscle tissue breaks down into shorter lengths when physically stressed. The muscles tissues need the fibers to be elongated to restore further flexibility. Massage therapy targets these two important areas. Some physical therapy clinics use massage therapists and may also use massage chairs. In either case, the focus is on increasing the longer term flexibility. Massage therapy is effective in loosening the muscles and scar tissue while increasing the blood and nutrient flow accelerate the healing process.
If you push your limits, you may sometimes go too far and suffer an injury. Or they may just happen. Either way, you just want to be fully recovered. The physical therapies being offered utilize top notch technology and methodologies. From massage chair recliners to treadmills, you will be exposed to a range of treatments designed for your full recovery.
Hopefully needed not require Physical Therapy, but if needed then research what massage therapy most benefits you. A massage chair can be an excellent investment in your health. Massage Chair Therapy offers many techniques
Treating the Causes and Symptoms of Tendon Strain
Dec 7th
It is said that the most common injury caused by a tendon strain happens through misuse. More often than not, the injury is caused by some kind of sports injury. For instance, basketball players often suffer an injury to the Achilles tendon, which connects the anklebone to the muscles found in the calf muscle.
Rest and ice pack applications are some of the best treatments for this type of injury. Wrapping the area securely, but not too tight is helpful for the prevention of swelling and the relief of pain. Elevating the area while resting, may also help to reduce the discomfort of swelling and pain.
Putting stress on any tendon is likely to result in an injury if a repetitive activity is emphasized too much or if something happens to overstretch the tendon quickly. This would happen for example if a weightlifter continued to work out the tendon every day, regardless of the warning of pain. Pain indicates that rest is needed by the body in order to repair the injured tissue. To prevent tendon strain, a body must be conditioned for it. This is why too, even professional dancers stretch prior to rehearsal or a performance.
When someone has indeed suffered an injury or tendon strain, it's often very easy to diagnose by looking at the loss of range of motion the patient is suffering. However, a physician needing further assessment may order required tests through the use of an MRI, ultrasound, or even x-rays. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) will usually be prescribed as well.
After healing from surgery, through care is essential. A surgeon may suggest the stretching and strengthening with a daily exercise regimen for the injured muscles. Most often, exercises are done while in warm water to help prevent re-injuring the area. Sometimes you may need to visit a physical therapist to help ensure the proper maneuvers of such exercises. Therapy may involve more than just exercises. Depending on the cause of the injury, the use of soft tissue massages, stretching, running and gait re-education, or ultrasound therapy may be necessary. Various types of splints may be necessary or even the use of cortisone injections or perhaps a medicine for numbing the area may be required.
Soft-tissue massage or mobilization, stretching and strengthening exercises, gait or running re-education or even ultrasound therapy may be included in the physical therapy. Your physician or surgeon may suggest wearing special made shoes to aid in the healing of Achilles tendon injuries and these shoes may be suitable for certain activities, such as basketball or running shoes. Wearing these shoes may help to prevent a reoccurring injury or condition. It is vital to try to prevent such injuries that involve tendon strain since fifty percent of these injuries occur while playing sports.
Golfers elbow or tennis elbow is two examples of sports injuries, which occur by the misuse of the sporting equipment. The treatment for tendon strain is the same regardless of the type of sports that one may enjoy.
Tom Nicholson spends his time helping sufferers of carpal tunnel syndrome. You can follow this link to learn more about having asore wrist.
What Treatment Are Pleasant For Carpal Tunnel Symptoms?
Nov 6th
Carpal tunnel syndrome is a disorder that can cause great pain or at least discomfort, and can certainly interfere with normal activities and with life in general. Its effects range from mild discomfort in the hands, wrists and fingers to severe pain that partially or even completely debilitates you. It can almost always be treated, but some treatments are more painful and less desirable than others
There are many different ways to treat carpal tunnel syndrome. The way you treat your carpal tunnel syndrome will depend on how severe your condition is and on what will work best for your situation. In most cases, your doctor will probably recommend you wear a wrist brace to immobilize your wrist so that your wrist ligaments are not irritated with repeated movements. Unfortunately, though, the brace itself is not perfect because it's usually only worn at night when you sleep. That means that the hand itself is left free during the day, which can further irritate ligaments. It is absolutely recommended that you minimize or even eliminate if at all possible using the affected hand for at least two weeks' time so that irritated ligaments can heal. This can mean, for example, that you don't even use your dominant hand (assuming that that is the one that's affected) for normal tasks like opening a door, brushing your teeth, all of those little routine things you always do without giving them a second thought. This can certainly mean some inconvenience and some clumsiness, but it does often help symptoms diminish and can even heal the problem altogether.
Oftentimes, a treatment recommended is that one wear the brace(s) for a period of two weeks, along with the possible use of anti-inflammatories available over the counter like acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or aspirin. One particular company has also developed a patented device that is somewhat similar to the traditional brace, but is purported to be better fitting and more flexible. Its purpose is not to necessarily immobilize the wrist so much, but to gently pull on the inflamed and swollen joint areas so that the pressure on the median nerve is reduced.
If you type or keyboard a lot in your life (whether for work or for leisure), it's recommended that you get an ergonomic keyboard so that your hands are in better alignment and there's less strain. Also always make sure that your hands are aligned parallel to the floor when you're typing. A wrist pad can help with this alignment. Finally, take a 10-minute break every hour to take a walk and massage hands and wrists so that symptoms are reduced or eliminated.
If you follow these methods of treatment (including use of over-the-counter anti-inflammatories as applicable) and you still have carpal tunnel syndrome symptoms, your doctor may be able to prescribe stronger medications that are corticosteroids. You cannot buy these over the counter and they also do have side effects. If you've come to this point, you may want to look into other treatments that are available for carpal tunnel syndrome as well. Chiropractic medicine may be able to help, with treatments such as joint and spinal manipulation and ultrasound. Acupuncture, too, is often effective with carpal tunnel syndrome, although acupuncture also usually includes dietary changes and herbal treatments. With acupuncture, traditional needles or laser application may be used.
If nothing else has seemed to work, surgery may be the best option. The procedure itself is usually done endoscopically or may be done traditionally with an open-surgery procedure. Whichever way the operation itself is done, it involves cutting the transverse carpal nerve so that symptoms are relieved. Your hand itself should not lose any strength or mobility, but you can have scarring from the procedure and will likely experience swelling and pain in your hand immediately after the surgery is done. Although an uncommon side effect, you may also have complications resulting from the surgery, including nerve damage.
But what might be the best way for every individual to prevent CTS is to do special exercises designed to treat it and prevent it. These involve no drugs, they are always non-invasive, and they are inexpensive and convenient. They should probably be into before anything else.
Trying these easy carpal tunnel exercises, as provided by Thom Nicholson (noted CTS Guru), can help you avoid surgery and ease the pain caused by Carpal Tunnel Syndrome without invasive surgery. Help your body heal itself!


