Friday, January 28, 2011

Sports Massage: maintaining your edge


Where dynamic muscular therapy is all about treating chronic repetitive athletic injuries and resolving dysfunctional movement patterns, sports massage is all about maintaining your hard earned training gains and managing chronic conditions at their best possible level. That is, maintaining the most appropriate range of motion (for their event), minimizing discomfort and maintaining optimal tissue health in the athlete. 

How often and when?

How often to receive sports massage and when to receive depends entirely on what type of work you need to maintain your conditioning and when your major events occur. With respect to timing, therapists will often provide a set schedule themselves. This may or may not be appropriate, depending on how much experience a client has in judging their body’s needs. For a non-athlete or an inexperienced athlete, a set schedule determined by the therapist may be the best alternative until the client develops a sense of their need for massage. For the experienced athlete, I prefer to have them note how they feel and perform 24 to 48 hours after treatment and track how long it takes to start lose that “edge” they’ve gained from the work. We want to time the work to make sure the edge stays sharp, not to wait until it gets dull. This is important for both excelling at your event and for injury prevention. At the point when their performance starts to waiver, an athlete will strive to keep up with their competition by pushing their performance past their current conditioning, compensating any which way we have to, risking both traumatic and chronic injury. So tracking when you start to lose your edge, rather than waiting until you are in pain, is important for considering how often an athlete needs to schedule sports massage.

Timing around intense events (workouts, games, meets) is also very important. If the athlete has a chronic injury that has tendency to adhere to the tissue around it, this may require more intensive work that may not be appropriate close to an intense workout or event, so the bodywork has to be scheduled with this in mind. Less intensive work may be extremely beneficial to the athlete’s performance directly before, during and after an intensive event. All of this must be considered by both the athlete and the therapist as a team when considering when treatment is most beneficial.

Learning to make these judgment calls is part of the athlete’s educational process and is why education plays such a significant role in treatment at Soarbody Therapeutics.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Treating Chronic Injuries: How long, how often?

Two services are offered at Soarbody Therapeutics: Dynamic Muscular Therapy and Sports Massage. The goal of sports massage is maintenance of the client’s tissues for optimal performance. The treatment plan is short, simple, and completed within each session. The goal of Dynamic Muscular Therapy is to resolve chronic athletic musculoskeletal conditions. The treatment plan may be quite complex and take several weeks to complete. There is often some doubt among new clients about the need for the frequency and the duration of the treatments. A clear and simple explanation is provided below.

Chronicity: practice makes permanent; history is everything

The old saw practice makes perfect may be true, but with respect to how the body is wired, a more appropriate expression may be practice makes permanent. When you practice the piano, for example, the nervous system is programming specific pathways to fire in certain patterns, specific muscles are developing characteristics (strength, speed, local endurance) based on what the nervous system is demanding, and the fascial system adjusts itself to support the needs of the muscular system. The earlier you learn to play and the more often you practice, the more ingrained these patterns become.  This is a good thing! If basic patterns were not executed thoughtlessly and effortlessly, we couldn’t so much as walk never mind play the piano. However, if one learns in their mid thirties that they have been playing the piano incorrectly since they were eight years old, it’s going to be more difficult to reroute the nervous system and create the changes in the soft tissues needed to form new patterns.

So it is with chronic injuries. There may indeed be a specific lesion that needs to be directly addressed (hamstring strain, lateral epicondylitis, etc), but the lesion may well be only the head of the dandelion – eliminating only the flower leaves the root cause of the injury intact to come back with even more devastating effects. Additionally, the body is smart! Once you’ve incurred an injury to one part of the body, the rest of the body will compensate around the injury to continue to meet the demands placed upon it. This compensation can allow movement and eliminate pain for some time – sometimes many years. But these compensational patterns are always inefficient and will eventually fail. For a great many clients, they don’t seek help until these compensational patterns fail, more damage is done and they cannot continue their activities effectively.

Duration: How long will treatment take?

Obviously, the sooner we can stop the body from practicing these compensational patterns, the easier it will be to heal the lesion and learn efficient movement patterns. This is why you have to fill out such an extensive history of activities, injuries, and surgeries, from childhood to present day, for your initial assessment. It provides us with clues as to the root cause of the pain as well as providing a rough idea as to how long it will take to resolve the root cause to best state possible. The older the inefficient patterns, the longer the duration of the treatment plan is likely to be.

Frequency: How many times per week will I need to have treatment?

The appropriate frequency of treatment in a treatment plan is crucial to success. After the first the first manual treatment the client will experience a decrease in pain and an increase in freedom of movement – for a little while. After that short relief, their condition will return back to it’s about its initial state. This makes sense – we can’t expect our piano performance to improve much if we practice once a week. But if we practice several times per week we can capitalize on the success of each subsequent practice, starting at a slightly higher performance level each time. There will be diminishing returns of course as we meet our potential, at which point we have the option of moving on to practicing different, more challenging pieces, which incorporate maintenance of our older skills.

So it is with treatment for chronic injuries. Without the proper frequency to improve at steady rate, the condition is not going to change significantly. We have to catch the improvement after each treatment to start at a higher level than the previous session in order to make steady improvement. See the graphs below.


Graph A illustrates little progress with a frequency of one treatment per week. This may be effective for optimal maintenance of the tissue’s condition once the lesion is healed and the patterns have been changed, but this frequency will probably not be effective for creating the change necessary to heal the lesion and change compensational patterns.

Graph B illustrates effective progress when the frequency of treatment is great enough to capitalize on the improvements made in each prior treatment. Progress is made more quickly and optimal tissue condition is achieved sooner.

Extensive patterns, conditions: Why must I see other practitioners?

Dysfunctional patterns often extend beyond the musculoskeletal system. Such patterns fall outside my scope of practice, which is why I have an extensive referral list of nutritionists, psychologists, physical therapists, structural integration practitioners, chiropractors and physicians. We are multidimensional beings and sometimes require a multidimensional approach to healing.     

References utilized:

Joseph E. Muscolino, DC (2011) Treatment Planning and Client Education Massage Therapy Journal, Winter 2010, 4(4) 91-95


Hammer, Warren I. “Functional Soft Tissue Examination and Treatment by Manual Methods, 3rd Edition” Sudbury, MA Jones and Bartlett Publishers, 2007


Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Injury prevention - Falls over 50


Some sobering facts and suggestions as a follow-up to the June, 2010 entry about sarcopenia. Falling is the leading cause of accidental death in adults over 70 years of age and after 50 the incidence of hip fracture, often resulting in a fall or from a fall, increases dramatically and many of those victims do not survive the injury or are left immobilized and institutionalized. Some of the factors that increase fall risk are arthritis, orthostasis, decreased muscle strength, balance, coordination, reflexive response time, and the use of 4 or more prescription medications. (1)

There are a number of interventions that are very effective to decrease these factors or their effects. Tai Chi is great discipline as a functional approach to intervention. Resistance training is the most overall effective tool to deal with these factors and slow the onset of the effects of aging. Strength, power, flexibility, balance and coordination can all be very effectively enhanced with resistance training. For the above 50 population, however, this will require a well trained and experienced trainer. For those individuals with little experience in resistance training, a trainer that can accurately evaluate your baseline condition and that understands the special needs of this population is a must for safe training that yields significant results. For those with extensive experience in resistance training, a skilled trainer is essential for guidance and to break poor habits which, although have been tolerated up until now, could spell disaster if not corrected. I have an extensive referral list of very talented personal trainers all around the greater metropolitan area of Boston, so please feel free to ask me for a referral.

Although a good trainer will train the whole person, incorporating all aspects of the body, the lower extremities, hips and pelvis often take longer to recover than the arms, neck and torso. Sports massage can be tremendously beneficial in helping recover from intense workouts and help to maintain appropriate flexibility and elasticity for your activities of daily living and sports. So always consider including sports massage in your training program.


References:
1. Christina A. Geithner, PhD, Diane R. McKenny, BS (2010) Strategies for Aging Well. Strength and Conditioning Journal, 32(5), 36-49

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Health & Safety - winter feet

 Dry, cracked feet and toe nails are an invitation to infection. This is common among all people, but especially so in winter athletes. Although TV commercials push products to treat relatively harmless bacterial colonization under the nail, more serious infections, like cellulitis, which can be life threatening if left untreated, can invade the body through cracks in the callus. Streptococcus or staphylococcus are the most frequent bacteria involved, but although cuts, abrasions, and dried, cracked compromised skin are all avenues for infection, why some people are more susceptible is not clear. Nobody is immuned. The symptoms are not always clear either. Where most people will experience inflammation and point tenderness, some people feel little. Cellulitis can spread quickly, become systemic and, if left untreated, can be fatal.

The bottom line here is to take care of your feet. One good option is a medical pedicure (a medi pedi) offered by some podiatrists. One stop shopping - foot care and a check-up for your feet! What better way to keep you on the top of your game? Check out what Dr. Jordana Szpiro has to say about medical pedicures at
http://www.bostoncommonpodiatry.com/content/view/47/57/   

Take care of those feet and I hope to see you in the treatment room soon! 

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Training package specials are back!

2011 is your year! You have some serious training objectives and you're letting nothing stand in your way. Excellent! Soarbody Therapeutics is here as always to help you reach your goals. With this in mind, we have brought back the Training Package. Training packages offers discount on sports massage to those clients seriously striving for a specific training goal. The savings are significant! Check it out:

60 minute sports massage package = 5 treatments for $375
90 minute sports massage package = 5 treatments for for $450

That comes out to $75 for each 60 minute treatment and $90 for each 90 minute treatment! That's a great deal!

Now, these packages are for those striving to meet a specific goal, so there are some specific conditions that come with the package. They are a contract - one person, one goal, one package. You must buy your package by the end of February and the whole package must be used by September 1st. The package is nontransferable. We sit down to discuss your goals, how sports massage may help them and then you sign a contract agreeing to all the above conditions. Its all very personal, very focused and very success orientated - you'd expect nothing less from Soarbody Therapeutics!

I'm looking forward to helping you all reach your goals in 2011. See you in the treatment room!