Archive for the ‘Health and fitness professionals’ Category

Ouch! Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

(Due to server errors this is being reposted after originally being posted on December 18th, 2009)

It’s the time of the year when people make those resolutions. You know the same ones we here every year: “I’m going to start taking better care of myself by exercising and eating right”.

You should be welcomed with open arms and applauded for taking the initiative toward better health. Statistics show a tremendous drop in exercise adherence after the first several weeks following the initiation of a new exercise regime. There are many reasons for this that are physical or psychological or both.

Ours is a society that wants things NOW. Therefore, all too often the previously sedentary person attempts advanced moves and to pick up where they left off 3 years ago…all on day one. On the next day they start to think that that might not have been a good idea. And two days after that first workout, they know that that wasn’t a good idea. It is forty-eight hours after a workout when delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) is at its peak. This is one of the most important events in shaping the attitudes of a new or renewing exerciser. It is the attitudes and beliefs about exercise that will keep them coming back, or throwing in the proverbial towel.

If the new exerciser does not know that DOMS in moderation is a positive benefit from exercise, they may not come back. If they do not know that it comes from micro damage to the muscle fibers and that they can control how much micro damage occurs (by reducing weight lifted, reps, etc.), they will not come back. And if they do not know that mild to moderate cardiovascular exercise can actually reduce DOMS by flushing the waste from the muscles, they may not see a light at the end of the tunnel.

Here are a few suggestions that anyone can use to see that new exercisers become seasoned exercisers by sticking with the health benefits of a regular regime:

1. Understand that there is often a transitional period of slight or moderate muscle soreness that might occur from new uses of the muscles.

2. Know that muscle soreness is OK, but joint pain, swelling and any sharp or localized pain is a sign that something is wrong and a qualified professional should evaluate them.

3. Get help. A qualified fitness professional can provide you with many safe and effective alternatives to properly work the body. The new exerciser will not know what their limits are until it is too late. (Check what our personal training services offer here)

4. Find a partner or work out with a small group so you can communicate with someone who might be experiencing similar challenges and provide each other with support.

Keeping the new exerciser invested in their health is good for all of us. It is good for the individual’s longevity and quality of life and it is good for society as a whole because it is one less person burdening our health care systems.

Corrective Exercise #14-Supine Hip Rotations

Friday, September 11th, 2009

I hope you enjoy the latest in my series of Corrective Exercises. Up until now, the exercises have been in written form with still photos to accompany them.

Corrective Exercise #14 has gone to video. We are currently working on a membership web site that will contain a tremendous amount of educational content similar to this. We want to get this content to as many professional as we can, so the membership fees will be very reasonable. Along with the membership, there will be monthly discounts on products and events.

Supine Hip Rotations look like a familiar ab exercise. Surprise! The ab work is down low on the application of this exercise.

The Hip Rotations is one of the many exercises presented in The Pain-Free Program: A Proven Method to Relieve Back, Neck, Shoulder and Joint Pain. As with so many of our corrective exercises, the Hip Rotations has a lot more going on than just the obvious.

Trigger point acupuncture: The inflammation alternative

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Definition and Brief History

The alleviation of pain in the body that originates from a focus or foci of neural hyperactivity in one or another of the different structures which together form the musculoskeletal system, has its origin in England in the late 1930’s.

It was there, at University College Medical School, that researchers discovered that referred pain from a focus of irritation in muscle and or other connective tissues or fascia may be felt in broad, diffuse, and specific areas, such as muscles, joints and even teeth.

This was significant, as pain from these foci of irritation did not and do not follow the dermatomal or nerve root distribution of neurological pain common to actual nerve injury. In fact, it was demonstrated by Drs. Good, Kelly, and Travel, in England, Australia, and the U.S., that each individual muscle in the body, when affected by these “irritant foci”, has its own unique and specific pattern of pain referral that is predictable and mapable.

These foci of irritation came to be called, over time, “myofascial trigger points.” It was discovered that the common characteristic of the various trigger points, regardless of the tissue, was electrical hyperactivity. It was also discovered that it is possible to “de-activate” these acutely tender points through the insertion of a needle, and in the process relieve the pain and inflammation that is common to sports injuries, degenerative pain like arthritis, or painful conditions such as headache or TMJ.

This method of pain relief is now called “Trigger Point” acupuncture. As such, it dovetails, somewhat, with the Chinese system of acupuncture points specific to pain, called “Ah Shi.” However, the practice of trigger point acupuncture requires a thorough knowledge of western anatomy, as well as the precise location and referral pattern of the trigger points found in the various muscles, tendons, ligaments, joint capsules, periosteum, and even skin of the body.

Trigger points occur, most often, in the thick portion of muscle bellies, particularly in the region of the motor point, but are also found in their origin and insertion.

Cause of Myofascial Trigger Points

Trigger points can form in weak, overused muscles, such as occurs in repetitive stress injuries in keyboard use. But they can also occur in very strong, but overused muscles, such as occurs in runners who rest inadequately, or other athletes. I recently deactivated the forearm and wrist trigger points in a patient that routinely does 1000 pushups at a stretch.

Trigger points may also occur in trauma from direct injury, such as a blow or sprain, as in the patient with sudden onset shoulder pain after being pulled suddenly and unexpectedly by her 110 pound dog

Many of us are familiar with the “tension” lumps found in both the shoulders and low back, properly called “fibrositic nodules.” These nodules also contain trigger points.

Effect of Trigger Points

The problem of trigger points is not just that they are at the source of much myofascial pain; but that a muscle containing active trigger points undergoes shortening, and becomes weaker and less capable of the task at hand. This can then lead to a cascade of compensatory biomechanics, that further increase pain within the affected, and allied, muscles.

Role of Stress

I have observed clinically a link between the presence of active trigger points and the presence of diffuse inflammation in the body. We know, scientifically, that constant and poorly managed stress places us in the “fight or flight” response that elevates our stress hormones like cortisol.

My informal theory is that this mechanism imitates an overuse syndrome in that our muscles are held as if ready to run or fight. This is work, and places our muscles into anaerobic sources of respiration and concomitant lactic acid
burn. This creates various chemical cascades that may contribute to both inflammation and the formation of active trigger points.

Treatment of Trigger Points and Stress with Acupuncture

One of the great things about acupuncture of any kind is that is places you into the relaxation response, similar to what is achieved by meditation. Acupuncture reduces our body’s biochemical responses to stress, lowers blood pressure and reduces inflammation and pain.

In terms of hormones and neurotransmitters it does this by increasing the secretion of our body’s natural opiates, endorphins; and by increasing secretion of natural cortisone-like anti-inflammation drugs in the adrenal glands.

Myofascial trigger point acupuncture goes one step further. In addition to being profoundly relaxing, as above, when you relieve trigger points, especially the ones in the muscle belly associated with motor points, the muscle responds by actually lengthening; this has a decompressing effect on joints, tendons, and tendon sheaths.

It is not unusual after a myofascial acupuncture treatment for the affected joints to “release” as after a chiropractic adjustment, gently, naturally, and safely. This is generally followed by an immediate relief in pain.

It is also typical that after acupuncture treatment to feel extremely refreshed, as if after a deep sleep. One will often sleep profoundly well the night of a treatment, which has enormous restorative value.

Acupuncture and the Function First Exercise Alternative for Pain

Acupuncture, like deep tissue manual therapies, works hand in hand with the Function First system. My favorite kind of patient is the one who wants to help herself. Acupuncture is passive. You lay there on the table and the therapist uses his skill to create an environment of reduced inflammation and pain, so that you can take matters into your own hands through exercise. As such, acupuncture can be a necessary “evil” that enables you to take it to the next level with your own efforts.

Function First with Anthony Carey was of enormous benefit to me in the rehabilitation of my own neck, shoulder, and back chronic pain. While I definitely treat myself with acupuncture on a regular basis to enable myself to keep as active as I do, I continue to this day to do my Function First exercises on a daily basis.

Eyton J. Shalom, M.S., L.Ac., is the owner of BodyMind Wellness Center at 3577 Louisiana St. in North Park, San Diego. He is expert in the practice of Myofascial Trigger Point Acupuncture for Sports Injuries and Chronic Pain, as well as the use of Chinese Herbal Medicine and Ayurveda in the treatment of Dermatological, Gastrointestinal, and Immune Disorders.

He can be reached at www.bodymindwellnesscenter.com, or 619/296-7591

Exercise sequencing vs. exercise progressions: What’s the difference?

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Progressing exercises is a common component to effective exercise program design. Exercise sequencing should also be a common component to effective program design but that’s not always the case.

There is a definite difference between exercise sequencing and exercise progressions. Exercise progressions are typically defined by an increase in the intensity, duration, frequency or amount of exercise. In other words a progression is quantitative. Therefore progressions are a broader component to exercise program design.

Exercise sequencing, on the other hand has more to do with the relationship between exercises in a given series of exercises within a program. Sequencing looks at the effects of each exercise in the program to the other exercises within the same program and is more qualitative. Therefore sequencing is a deeper level to program design.

Consider the analogy of a phone number. You have 7 digits that are all an important part of the phone number. Each number represents a critical part of what it takes to successfully complete a call to the desired recipient. But if you change the sequence of just one of those numbers, the call does not go through.

The impact of improper sequencing may not be as immediately apparent with exercise as it is with a call not going through. For the healthy population or the asymptomatic population the effects are immediate but aren’t easily observed by the less experienced professional. Yet those immediate effects do become cumulative. Over time improper sequencing will lead to deterioration in the quality of movement and potentially injury.

Corrective exercise program design is particularly sensitive to optimal sequencing. One exercise should prepare the body for the next and never cancel the benefits of a previous exercise. Many of those who have studied with me state that this is one of the most challenging aspects of designing effective corrective exercise programs.

A successful corrective exercise routine is based on meeting an immediate objective. In other words, when I write a corrective exercise program I expect for there to be an immediate change in the structure and function of my client at the end of the session-not three or four weeks down the road. I will know if I met my objective because I will “audit” my program by seeing if my client can do now what they couldn’t do before the program.

If the objective pertains to the quality of movement of the client, optimal sequencing must have intermediate objectives under the main objective. This helps you lay out a clearer path to your final objective. They are stepping stones to the primary objective all within a given exercise program.

Using an oversimplified example, you have a client who is a baseball pitcher with chronic rotator cuff problems. Through you assessment procedures you identify that the shoulder girdle is being stressed due to his lack of thoracic rotation. The lack of thoracic rotation is due to his kyphotic thoracic posture. And his kyphotic thoracic posture is combined with a posterior pelvic tilt.

Where does your sequence begin? Shoulder girdle? Thoracic spine? Or hips/pelvis? If you say pelvis (I would) an intermediate objective would be to improve lumbar extension. This should immediately positively influence thoracic extension. And than your next objective would certainly be to further improve thoracic extension/rotation. Following successfully improving the preceding objectives you would want to integrate the shoulder girdle with the thoracic spine and hips.

I encourage you to review your current exercise sequences for your clients. Ask yourself if they are following a logical order that produces positive change immediately. And are you successfully linking together smaller objectives that allow you to meet your primary objective.

More Neutral Pelvis for you

Monday, September 29th, 2008

A follow up to the last commentary on the “myth” of the neutral pelvis:

The Neutral Pelvis Myth Got Your Attention

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Wow! The video clip on the neutral pelvis generated more feedback to me personally then any other email I’ve ever sent. And not one of the emails disagreed with what I said.

I realize the video clip was short, so it certainly didn’t cover everything that could be covered on the neutral pelvis theory. In defense of the neutral pelvis concept, I would like to add that it can be used as both an evaluation tool and an exercise.

It is still a static event and it almost exclusively refers to pelvic rotation in the sagittal plane. But if we want someone to “find” a neutral pelvis that must mean that there pelvis is currently not neutral. Therefore, for them to move their pelvis into a neutral position they must have the appropriate lumbo-pelvic awareness. Moving into the neutral position will now give them a reference point from which to understand what their norm is.

Asking your client/athlete to find the neutral pelvis is in of itself a valuable learning tool. The ability to actually find this position by rotating from a previous position may be of more value than the neutral position itself. This is because even in a static position, the neutral pelvis or any static position is not meant to me held for extended periods of time. Could you imagine someone with a posterior rotation of their pelvis trying to actively hold a neutral pelvis for 15:00 while sitting at a desk? The work load of the spinal extensors would far exceed what this person was capable of. Without the contracting and relaxing of the spinal muscles from varying the positions, the tissue would become ischemic and metabolic byproducts would accumulate locally in the tissue resulting in noticeable discomfort for this person.

I’ll expand more about the artificial nature of holding a neutral pelvis during movement in my next video clip.

Keep the comments coming!

The “Myth” of the Neutral Pelvis

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

This short video clip helps debunk the myth of the neutral pelvis.

The BIG LIE about functional training

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Function First was incorporated in 1994.  I like to tell people that because the word “function” was not being used as every third word in a sentence in 1994 the way it is today.  As important as this topic is to human performance and rehabilitation, we should be treating it with a little more respect.

One positive note is that we are moving away from the notion that squatting on a physio-ball is the pinnacle of function.  So as an industry, we are heading back toward solid ground (pun intended).

Let’s start with semantics.  Very important semantics.  “Functional training” implies a mode of exercise, like resistance training or cardiovascular training.  Training for function implies an objective.  This is extremely important since function is ultimately determined by the individual, not the mode of exercise.

Those that believe that any exercise in and of itself can always be “functional” just by the nature of the movement are living the big lie.  They are relying on generalized movement patterns and/or props that have been used to train for function for specific individuals, but are not by default “functional”.

You could ask 50 trainers in a room to name just one functional exercise.  And inevitably you would get responses of lunges, squats, step ups, balance boards, etc.   And these all could be functional exercises, but are not by default functional exercises.  These trainers unknowing have bought into the big lie or are choosing to perpetuate it.

Before any answer to the question was given, every one of those 50 trainers should have responded with their own series of questions regarding a functional exercise:

Who?
What?
Where?

Who is this exercise for?  Is this a functional exercise for my 48 year old obese client with osteoarthritis of the knees?  Or is this functional exercise for my 13 year old female with idiopathic scoliosis?  Or is this functional exercise for my 28 year old NFL linebacker?  The answer should be different for each one.

What is the functional goal?  Is it to avoid surgery?  Is it to better prepare them for surgery?  Is it to improve their competitive performance?  Is it to avoid boredom in their workout?  Is it so they can mow their own lawn?

Where are they in their progression with you?  Is their body demonstrating the necessary movement prerequisites for this exercise?  Are they compensating to get it done versus getting it done right?  Are they exhibiting any apprehension toward the movement?

The next consideration must then be can a “functional” exercise ever be dysfunctional?  Absolutely.  A lunge for example, can produce compensation, reinforce existing dysfunction and produce undesirable mechanical stress as much as any machine based exercise.

We must first understand our client.  Then we must understand functional anatomy.  And then we can understand what function for that client really is.

The 3 Pitfalls that Lead to Chronic Pain

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

It is the time of year many people ramp up their activity levels. The warm weather is upon us and longer days have will have people outside taking on all kinds of physical challenges they have no business doing. 

As their body exits from its winter hibernation, I sometimes think they left the mind sleeping.  What makes a person think that riding for 20:00 a day, three times a week on a stationary bike prepares them for getting yanked out of the water by a speed boat while holding onto a tow rope?  Or that playing 18 holes twice a month gets them ready for 72 holes over 3 days while on vacation?

If you’re currently suffering from an injury that is keeping you from exercising or requiring you to modify what you do for exercise, chances are that you didn’t get to this point overnight.  Overuse injuries and injuries that end with “itis” (meaning inflammation) are often chronic issues that have become acute.  These injuries are usually tied to a number of small incidents that have occurred over a period of weeks, months and even years.

Most people don’t stop and think about their bodies when they sustain a mild to moderate injury.  Minor injuries especially, are rarely given the time and consideration that they deserve.  It’s often the minor injuries that turn into major problems down the road.

After working with people with musculoskeletal pain for more than 17 years, I’ve identified three steps that lead to long-term musculoskeletal issues:

Denial

Most people deny the seriousness of their injury, especially when it’s something like a sore elbow from a couple of sets of tennis.  If it’s not broken or gushing blood, then it’s nothing to worry about, right?  Wrong.  Thinking that your sore elbow is no big deal or that it will clear up on its own is a mistake.  Denying that there is anything seriously wrong enables you to miss a very important window at the onset- the very beginning is when you can do so much to avoid compounding the injury.

Pain avoidance. 

We all know that the body doesn’t like pain, so when we experience pain we begin to change our habits and mannerisms in order to avoid it.  People who have chronic lower back pain are prime examples of this.  When they stand for a certain period of time, or garden, or walk, it hurts their back.  What do they do?  They start to avoid activities that are going to hurt them.  Eventually, any movement or activity that is similar to those that initially caused the discomfort will cause pain as well.  It’s a snowball effect that gradually gets worse.

If the stairs hurt your knee, you stop doing step aerobics.  The next sacrifice is to cut out squats and lunges.  At a time like this is where many folks reach their threshold.  It is here where they will seek therapy, surgery or medications for relief.

Shortsightedness. 

When people finally do take action against their pain, it is often only enough to mitigate the current symptom.  Just enough therapy to calm things down.  Or a surgery to repair the damaged part or pills to mask the pain for now….. Unfortunately, this does nothing for all the factors from the previous incidents leading to the major pain.   

Don’t blame your aches and pains on the easy cop out, “I’m getting older”.  I tell my clients, “it’s not that you’re getting older, it’s that you’ve been doing things WRONG longer”. And pain is the price that is paid.

The cumulative mechanical stress that the body has experienced demands cumulative action to first slow, then stop and finally reverse the damage.  Equally important is to recognize that it is never too late to change and it is never too late to recognize what is happening today and keep it from haunting you tomorrow. 

A corrective exercise program designed around your specific needs can literally teach your body to move and function differently.  Bad old habits can be replaced with good new habits.  This gives the body a chance to restore itself instead of breaking down more over time.

The body has a tremendous capacity for healing when given the right environment and provided the right tools.  The right exercise, proper nutrition and a healthy mind can work miracles.

Working with Post Rehab Clients

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

As a health and fitness professional, you work closely with people on a daily basis.

 

Knowing and understanding your clients is key to establishing long-term relationships with them, as well as enabling you to get more referrals down the road.

People coming out of rehabilitation make up a large part of many health and fitness professional’s client base, and fully understanding their needs and tendencies can only benefit you and your practice.

Post-rehab clients fall into two main groups

Those who exercised before their medical treatment and those who did not.  Both offer a unique set of challenges that, as a health and fitness professional, you’d do well to expect and understand.

The post-rehab client that did exercise before their procedure can be a firecracker to handle.

 

This type of client realizes the value of exercise (and, just as important, the value you bring to their exercise) and will probably want to jump right in where they left off before their procedure.

 

Their mindset is …”Well, my physical therapy is done so I must be healed!”

The reality is that their insurance will only cover so many sessions, and it’s rarely enough to ensure adequate recovery.

Because of their past history with exercise they’re very likely to find post-rehab boring and tedious.

 

Your job is to make sure they don’t go too far too fast.

 

Many of these clients will religiously follow instructions until they are 80-90 percent healed, but then feel they are good enough to quit following instructions and they jump back on the horse.

 

It’s usually this last 10 percent that leads to chronic problems down the road.

Clients who have never exercised present an entirely different set of challenges for you.

 

Chances are high that you’ll be working around a host of physical problems. They might be referred to you because their doctor sees them as a high risk of heart attack due to a poor lifestyle.

 

But, that isn’t their only problem. If they’re overweight, they probably have problems with their knees, or their hips.

 

They might be seeing multiple doctors for all of their different conditions, which may lead to conflicting instructions for their exercise regime.

 

For example, an overweight cardio patient may need 30 minutes of walking per day to reduce her risk, but the doctor she is seeing for her degenerative hips may only recommend 15 minutes per day.

 

This can be challenging for you, but it can lead to some great opportunities if you know how to take advantage of them.

By acting as a “go between” between all of your client’s doctors, they’re in perfect position to see what a great job you’re doing with their patient.

 

This could lead to many more referrals down the road for you. Spending some time dropping off brochures and business cards would make it even easier for these doctors to pass your name along to their patients in the future!