Myofascial release techniques not only benefit
patients with chronic pain, but can also aid patients with acute
injuries by preventing the injuries from becoming chronic pain
conditions.
"What people typically do when they first have
pain is to ignore it. That's the reason why there are so many
patients with chronic pain," said Teresa Stayer, PT. "If they
would get treated at the time of injury, they would recover sooner
and would not have to live with pain forever."
Stayer has used the myofascial release approach
on patients in an acute-care hospital beginning in 1986 and now
continues to use it in an outpatient setting as vice president
of SpecTraMed Inc., her private practice, in West Bloomfield,
MI.
In her experience, myofascial release can be
used quite effectively on acute patients and has even treated
patients who sustained severe injuries on the same day they were
admitted to the hospital, i.e., motor vehicle accidents and orthopedic
injuries. "That's when you want to treat them. One of the positive
effects of myofascial release is to increase localized circulation
in the injured area which will enhance and quicken the healing
response," Stayer said.
FASCIA is a three dimensional web surrounding
every tissue of the body which runs from head to toe without interruption,
she explained. Myofascial spans have the propensity through trauma,
inflammatory process and poor posture to become solidified and
shortened down, and can produce enormous tensile strength of up
to 2,000 pounds per square inch. This pressure from the myofascial
restrictions can put abnormal pressure on the nerve that innervates
the muscle, compromises the circulation and pulls the osseous
structures to close together, which can jam the facet joints and
bulge the disk.
Stayer prefers to treat patients before they
become chronic. A physician on the hospital softball team, for
example, pulled his quadriceps while running to first base. Stayer
performed a deep cross hand myofascial release across the pulled
muscle and the doctor went out and finished the rest of the game.
"He didn't have to live with that pull for a week, a month or
a year before it got treated [as other people might have done],"
noted Stayer. Getting to the injury right away is the best treatment
short of avoiding the injury altogether.
In sports medicine, avoiding injury is the
name of the game, and myofascial therapy can help in that arena,
also. While using myofascial therapy is just one method that therapists
have to treat patients, it can be a very effective one in the
right situation, noted John Woolf, PT, ATC.
Woolf is the director of the Arizona Athletic
Treatment Center at the University of Arizona, in Tucson. He presented
a program on using myofascial techniques for athletes at the National
Athletic Trainers' Association annual conference in June.
Myofascial techniques are beneficial for stretching
and preventing injuries, as well as treating injuries, Woolf indicated.
He explained that in traditional orthopedic rehabilitation, a
stretch seems to exist only in one plane. A standard hamstring
stretch might require a patient to lie supine, lift the leg in
the air, and hold and relax the muscle. The myofascial technique
leg pull, on the other hand, involves traction to the entire leg
combined with range of motion.
Both techniques are appropriate in their own
situations. Woolf described that the myofascial leg pull technique,
for example, may be used when the athlete resists the raised straight-leg
stretch, rolls the hip up because it's uncomfortable or doesn't
feel it's working.
IN SUCH CASES, the leg pull provides more relaxation
and control of increasing range of motion. Athletes have said
that the stretch feels deeper and muscles feel looser, noted Woolf.
He acknowledged that myofascial therapy is
often delivered for outpatient orthopedic or chronic pain patients.
But when he began to apply it in the sports medicine setting,
he was surprised to find how many athletes have chronic pain syndromes.
These include back pain, neck pain and recurring
tendinitis, which could be incorrectly classified among general
athletic diagnoses as strained or pulled muscles. The athlete
may realize that what feels like a pulled muscle could be the
result of a long-time fascial restriction.
Woolf also incorporates the techniques into
pregame and preworkout warm-ups. He gave the example of a football
place kicker who has a soccer-style kick; the kicker does not
run at the ball head on but comes more form the side and across.
The kicker moves from abduction to adduction and by using the
leg-pull technique, the therapist is able to stretch him throughout
his functional motion.
Furthermore, this technique provides a relaxation
throughout the lower limb and even into the low back, as opposed
to just stretching the hamstring. Woolf reminded that the myofascial
extends throughout the entire body. That reflects how treatment
should be provided.
In traditional orthopedic treatment, and the
way anatomy is view, the body is segmentalized: an arm or leg
is treated. For patients in general, and athletes in particular,
Woolf said he disagrees with the notion. "We don't do anything
with just a segment. We use our entire bodies in sports, so that
has to be kept in mind when determining the problem and providing
treatment."
Woolf keeps it in mind when treating acute
injuries. If he needs to include a myofascial technique within
his treatment of an acute injury, he can treat the proximate area.
"You can get more intense with the technique as you get further
away from the injury and still have a positive impact," he said.
That's exactly how myofascial release treatment
works, said Stayer "You find the pain and look elsewhere for the
cause."
She described a woman with low back pain who
had come to the hospital for physical therapy prior to scheduled
surgery. The woman had torsion of the sacrum which was compressing
the nerve roots and causing weakness in the lower extremities.
The woman was treated with myofascial release techniques to initially
balance the pelvis by releasing the psoas piriformis, iliotibial
band, soleus and hamstrings. As a result, the woman became pain
free and was able to avid a lumbar laminectomy.
"The techniques, however, have to be done properly
in order to work," emphasized Stayer. Although holding the stretch
for 90 to 120 seconds will get the myofascial release started,
it's usually not enough to make a permanent change. She recommended
holding the stretch, in each area, for three to five minutes to
allow the release cycle to complete.
Stayer said that she believes all physical
therapists could benefit form learning how to do myofascial release.
However, she cautioned that it is not appropriate for all patients.
Contraindications include malignancies, systemic or localized
infections, and aneurysms, for example.
Similarly, not all techniques can be done on
all patients. While Stayer could use myofascial release on a pregnant
woman for low back pain, she wouldn't use a psoas release, in
particular.
The myofascial release approach has been around
for years, but it is still a relatively new concept to insurance
companies. As of 1995, myofascial release received its own CPT
code (97250), although practitioners can only use it for one 15
minute unit per patient per day.
Stayer explained that with only 15 minutes,
myofascial release is viewed as the equivalent of a modality,
like a hotpack, which she considers to be much less effective.
Nevertheless, she often complements this 15-minute treatment with
soft tissue mobilization, neuromuscular re-education or therapeutic
exercise.
Currently, Stayer is in contact with the American
Medical Association in a effort to obtain approval on extending
the treatment time. Insurance companies should know that sufficient
myofascial release treatment, in the acute phase, in conjunction
with other therapy, can head off potentially more serious (and
more costly) chronic pain conditions. "The ultimate goal of myofascial
release whether done in the acute or chronic state is to return
patients to an active pain-free lifestyle." concluded Stayer.
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