| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Deep Release
Are myofascial problems holding you back? Discover how deep-release
techniques can help you work out the kinks and improve your flexibility.
By Kelle Walsh |
July-August 2007 |
Tight Spots
Coming Unglued
Relief Through Release
You may be chalking it up to age or the vestiges of an old injury. And you may
be partly right. But when your running stride feels clunky, or when you're greeted
by a lower-back ache every morning and you can't fathom touching your toes,
it could be more than mere wear and tear. You may be suffering from myofascial
restriction.
Most active adults are probably familiar with the symptoms of myofascial restriction,
even if they don't know the syndrome by name. It can show up as a dull, chronic
ache in a knee joint, a shortened range of motion on a tennis backhand, or muscles
that tighten as you sleep. Such stiff, achy, creaky conditions do tend to get
worse with age, but most myofascial-release experts see an underlying culprit
in restricted fascia – the weblike connective tissue that surrounds and
holds the shape of all the soft tissues in the body, including muscles (the
"myo" part of the term "myofascial").
To understand fascia and how it works, think of an orange. Under the orange
peel is the pith, the white fiber netting. Beyond the pith is the membrane that
gives orange slices their shape, and even deeper is a thinner membrane that
forms the tiny individual pulp. All of this internal material – the netting
and the membranes – is much like the fascia in the human body.
In its healthiest state, fascia is elastic and flexible, providing lubrication
between structures, allowing muscles to glide freely, and even contributing
to metabolic processes and neural function. But when the fascia tightens or
becomes restricted in its range of motion, muscles also become shortened and
restricted. Movement is impeded, posture is compromised, and the many systems
fascia supports start to falter.
Lack of use or habitually limited range of motion can contribute to fascia tightening.
But so can rough handling: "Any kind of trauma – an accident, a fall or
some kind of overuse injury, as well as the inflammation reaction that occurs
afterward – can cause the fascia to become restricted. It tightens down
and shortens," explains Cathy Covell, a physical therapist with the Myofascial
Release Treatment Center in Paoli, Penn. And when fascia becomes restricted,
it tends to impede the function of underlying muscle and nerves – in effect,
by squishing them.
Bad posture can also lead to fascia problems. "If you sit at a computer for
a long time, for example, the tissues at the front of the shoulders and hips
are going to tighten, because the body wants to make it easier to stay in that
position. Over time, you'll stoop forward," Covell says. As shortened muscles
and fascia grow more stiff, they can eventually unleash a cascade of other problems
as the body tries to compensate for the resulting imbalance. Headaches, muscle
tightness and more mysterious pains may all trace their roots to myofascial
restriction.
Tight
Spots
In your muscles, myofascial restrictions feel like knots within ropey bands
of dense material. This knotty, shortened tissue, deep in the muscle fiber,
is also home to devilish, tiny adhesions known as trigger points, so named because
they "trigger" pain reactions (e.g., burning, numbness, cramping) that often
reach, or refer, beyond the immediate site, explains Hal Blatman, MD, president
of the American Holistic Medical Association and coauthor of The
Art of Body Maintenance: Winners' Guide to Pain Relief (Danua
Press, 2006).
Trigger points cause most of your body's pain and virtually all myofascial (soft-tissue)
pain, says Blatman. For example, trigger points in the suboccipital muscles
– the four small muscles at the back of the head that connect to the top
of the spine – can cause migraine-headache symptoms. "If you have a migraine,
you have myofascial pain, but most doctors don't call it that," he says. "If
you have plantar fasciitis, you have myofascial pain. If you are diagnosed with
arthritis, some of it's likely to be myofascial pain, as well. Myofascial pain
is part of almost any kind of pain pattern."
Coming
Unglued
There are several methods of providing relief. Some myofascial therapists use
a combination of hands-on techniques to warm and stretch the fascia before locating
trigger points and using deep strokes to release the contraction and invite
circulation into the area. They also identify activities that exacerbate your
pain and recommend ways to avoid retriggering problems.
Other techniques focus more exclusively on releasing trigger points, or combine
release methods with lifestyle and nutritional advice designed to facilitate
healing; still others combine trigger-point release with stretching. Some techniques,
such as Rolfing or structural integration, analyze a person's posture to assess
misalignment, and then, using a combination of deep, slow, soft-tissue manipulation
techniques, move layer by layer through the tissue, stretching fascia and releasing
adhesions and trigger points along the way.
Covell uses a technique called myofascial release, which utilizes gentle stretching
and sustained pressure (with a minimum of a minute and a half to two minutes
per area) until the body releases the restriction on its own, deep in its collagenous
layer. Collagen is like plastic – once you stretch it beyond a certain
point, it will maintain the new length. With this technique, the body may spontaneously
move as the restriction releases, something practitioners call "unwinding."
Blatman says there are some key myofascial techniques you can do on your own
that are just as crucial as help from the pros. Self-myofascial release requires
a tool, such as a tennis ball, to reach trigger points and break through restrictions.
Manufacturers have created numerous devices – including foam rollers and
knob-ended handheld massagers – to allow people to work on their own myofascial
issues. The key to self-care, says Blatman, is learning where your trigger points
are and using the tools regularly, followed by stretching, to keep pain at bay.
"Stretching the fascia is the cure for myofascial pain," he says. "Myofascial
release, trigger-point therapy, massage therapy, acupressure – they're
all ways to allow that to happen. Once you work out restrictions, you'll be
stronger, your endurance will be greater, and your pain is going to decrease.
Plus, your flexibility is going to be improved, so your chance for future injury
will be less."
Kelle Walsh is a writer and editor based in northern California.
Relief
Through Release
Here are some indications that your pain might be caused by restricted fascia
and improved through myofascial release techniques:
- You feel a dull, hot, aching pain in your muscles or suffer from
chronic joint or muscle stiffness.
- You feel clumsy, weak or uncoordinated, like your muscles are no
longer following orders.
- You notice your range of motion has become more limited.
- You feel like you have a pinched nerve, or you continue to experience
muscle cramps from a previously torn muscle.
- You have intermittent tingling or numbness in an arm or leg.
- You feel cramping or burning pain in an area of your body.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deep Release
Are myofascial problems holding you back? Discover how deep-release
techniques can help you work out the kinks and improve your flexibility.
By Kelle Walsh | Fitness Fixes Department, July-August 2007 |
Tight Spots
Coming Unglued
Relief Through Release
You may be chalking it up to age or the vestiges of an old injury. And you may
be partly right. But when your running stride feels clunky, or when you're greeted
by a lower-back ache every morning and you can't fathom touching your toes,
it could be more than mere wear and tear. You may be suffering from myofascial
restriction.
Most active adults are probably familiar with the symptoms of myofascial restriction,
even if they don't know the syndrome by name. It can show up as a dull, chronic
ache in a knee joint, a shortened range of motion on a tennis backhand, or muscles
that tighten as you sleep. Such stiff, achy, creaky conditions do tend to get
worse with age, but most myofascial-release experts see an underlying culprit
in restricted fascia – the weblike connective tissue that surrounds and
holds the shape of all the soft tissues in the body, including muscles (the
"myo" part of the term "myofascial").
To understand fascia and how it works, think of an orange. Under the orange
peel is the pith, the white fiber netting. Beyond the pith is the membrane that
gives orange slices their shape, and even deeper is a thinner membrane that
forms the tiny individual pulp. All of this internal material – the netting
and the membranes – is much like the fascia in the human body.
In its healthiest state, fascia is elastic and flexible, providing lubrication
between structures, allowing muscles to glide freely, and even contributing
to metabolic processes and neural function. But when the fascia tightens or
becomes restricted in its range of motion, muscles also become shortened and
restricted. Movement is impeded, posture is compromised, and the many systems
fascia supports start to falter.
Lack of use or habitually limited range of motion can contribute to fascia tightening.
But so can rough handling: "Any kind of trauma – an accident, a fall or
some kind of overuse injury, as well as the inflammation reaction that occurs
afterward – can cause the fascia to become restricted. It tightens down
and shortens," explains Cathy Covell, a physical therapist with the Myofascial
Release Treatment Center in Paoli, Penn. And when fascia becomes restricted,
it tends to impede the function of underlying muscle and nerves – in effect,
by squishing them.
Bad posture can also lead to fascia problems. "If you sit at a computer for
a long time, for example, the tissues at the front of the shoulders and hips
are going to tighten, because the body wants to make it easier to stay in that
position. Over time, you'll stoop forward," Covell says. As shortened muscles
and fascia grow more stiff, they can eventually unleash a cascade of other problems
as the body tries to compensate for the resulting imbalance. Headaches, muscle
tightness and more mysterious pains may all trace their roots to myofascial
restriction.
Tight
Spots (Back to Top)
In your muscles, myofascial restrictions feel like knots within ropey bands
of dense material. This knotty, shortened tissue, deep in the muscle fiber,
is also home to devilish, tiny adhesions known as trigger points, so named because
they "trigger" pain reactions (e.g., burning, numbness, cramping) that often
reach, or refer, beyond the immediate site, explains Hal Blatman, MD, president
of the American Holistic Medical Association and coauthor of The
Art of Body Maintenance: Winners' Guide to Pain Relief (Danua
Press, 2006).
Trigger points cause most of your body's pain and virtually all myofascial (soft-tissue)
pain, says Blatman. For example, trigger points in the suboccipital muscles
– the four small muscles at the back of the head that connect to the top
of the spine – can cause migraine-headache symptoms. "If you have a migraine,
you have myofascial pain, but most doctors don't call it that," he says. "If
you have plantar fasciitis, you have myofascial pain. If you are diagnosed with
arthritis, some of it's likely to be myofascial pain, as well. Myofascial pain
is part of almost any kind of pain pattern."
Coming
Unglued (Back to Top)
There are several methods of providing relief. Some myofascial therapists use
a combination of hands-on techniques to warm and stretch the fascia before locating
trigger points and using deep strokes to release the contraction and invite
circulation into the area. They also identify activities that exacerbate your
pain and recommend ways to avoid retriggering problems.
Other techniques focus more exclusively on releasing trigger points, or combine
release methods with lifestyle and nutritional advice designed to facilitate
healing; still others combine trigger-point release with stretching. Some techniques,
such as Rolfing or structural integration, analyze a person's posture to assess
misalignment, and then, using a combination of deep, slow, soft-tissue manipulation
techniques, move layer by layer through the tissue, stretching fascia and releasing
adhesions and trigger points along the way.
Covell uses a technique called myofascial release, which utilizes gentle stretching
and sustained pressure (with a minimum of a minute and a half to two minutes
per area) until the body releases the restriction on its own, deep in its collagenous
layer. Collagen is like plastic – once you stretch it beyond a certain
point, it will maintain the new length. With this technique, the body may spontaneously
move as the restriction releases, something practitioners call "unwinding."
Blatman says there are some key myofascial techniques you can do on your own
that are just as crucial as help from the pros. Self-myofascial release requires
a tool, such as a tennis ball, to reach trigger points and break through restrictions.
Manufacturers have created numerous devices – including foam rollers and
knob-ended handheld massagers – to allow people to work on their own myofascial
issues. The key to self-care, says Blatman, is learning where your trigger points
are and using the tools regularly, followed by stretching, to keep pain at bay.
"Stretching the fascia is the cure for myofascial pain," he says. "Myofascial
release, trigger-point therapy, massage therapy, acupressure – they're
all ways to allow that to happen. Once you work out restrictions, you'll be
stronger, your endurance will be greater, and your pain is going to decrease.
Plus, your flexibility is going to be improved, so your chance for future injury
will be less."
Kelle Walsh is a writer and editor based in northern California.
Relief
Through Release (Back to Top)
Here are some indications that your pain might be caused by restricted fascia
and improved through myofascial release techniques:
- You feel a dull, hot, aching pain in your muscles or suffer from
chronic joint or muscle stiffness.
- You feel clumsy, weak or uncoordinated, like your muscles are no
longer following orders.
- You notice your range of motion has become more limited.
- You feel like you have a pinched nerve, or you continue to experience
muscle cramps from a previously torn muscle.
- You have intermittent tingling or numbness in an arm or leg.
- You feel cramping or burning pain in an area of your body.
Print
| Email
| Comment
| Subscribe
| Give a Gift
|
|