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Trigger Point Therapy for Myofascial Pain: The Practice of Informed Touch PDF

311 Pages·2005·6.39 MB·English
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Trigger Point Therapy for Myofascial Pain The Practice of Informed Touch DONNA FINANDO, L.AC., L.M.T. AND STEVEN FINANDO, PH.D., L.AC. Healing Arts Press Rochester, Vermont To our patients, from whom we have learned much about the nature of pain and how to treat it. And to our students, who required us to think about, order, and communicate what we practice. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS J anet Travell, M.D., whose life work in clarifying and ordering myofascial pain syndromes has provided the reality base that has eluded so many others. Her work has demonstrated beyond any doubt that pain results from muscular dysfunction. So many in the medical community have, until very recently, disregarded the musculature as a source of pain and suffering. Through Janet Travell’s lifelong work—her systematic efforts to identify and chart pain patterns associated with muscular trigger points and the various means with which to eliminate them—we have been given the basis for treatment of chronic pain suffered by so many for so long. Mark Seem, Ph.D., who has strived to evolve the application of Dr. Travell’s work to the field of acupuncture. Understanding the value of acupuncture as physical medicine in the treatment and resolution of pain, Mark has dedicated his efforts to bringing acupuncture into the forefront of American health care. We would also like to thank Mark for coining the phrase informed touch, which so clearly describes what we seek to accomplish through our work. Arya Niellsen, L.Ac., Steven Rosenblatt, M.D., and Robert Ruffalo, D.C., whose feedback has helped in making this book most useful for Eastern and Western practitioners alike. Jane Waski, whose skillful drawings demonstrate stretches that are so beautifully rendered that we can feel and sense the stretch of the muscle as we look at them. Susan Bubenas and the staff at Polan and Waski, whose graphic capabilities have been critical in the production of illustrations that so clearly identify muscle and trigger point. Susan Davidson of Healing Arts Press, who has helped us clarify, order, and evolve this work. Her help, her encouragement, her careful and critical editor’s eye, her patience, and her dedication to this project have been invaluable to the evolution of this manual. CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION A GATHERING OF FORCES: Toward an Era of Interdisciplinary Cooperation in the Treatment of Pain CHAPTER 1 THE NATURE OF MUSCLES AND TRIGGER POINTS CHAPTER 2 QI, MOVEMENT, AND HEALTH CHAPTER 3 INFORMED TOUCH CHAPTER 4 DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT CHAPTER 5 HOW TO USE THIS MANUAL Muscles of the Head, Neck, and Face STERNOCLEIDOMASTOID SCALENES SPLENIUS CAPITIS SPLENIUS CERVICIS POSTERIOR CERVICALS TEMPORALIS MASSETER PTERYGOIDS Muscles of the Shoulder Girdle TRAPEZIUS LEVATOR SCAPULAE RHOMBOIDS SERRATUS ANTERIOR PECTORALIS MINOR Muscles of the Upper Limb PECTORALIS MAJOR DELTOID LATISSIMUS DORSI TERES MAJOR SUPRASPINATUS INFRASPINATUS TERES MINOR SUBSCAPULARIS BICEPS BRACHII TRICEPS BRACHII BRACHIALIS BRACHIORADIALIS HAND AND FINGER EXTENSORS HAND AND FINGER FLEXORS Muscles of the Torso ERECTOR SPINAE QUADRATUS LUMBORUM ILIOPSOAS RECTUS ABDOMINIS ABDOMINALS Muscles of the Lower Limb GLUTEUS MAXIMUS GLUTEUS MEDIUS GLUTEUS MINIMUS TENSOR FASCIAE LATAE PIRIFORMIS HAMSTRINGS QUADRICEPS ADDUCTORS PECTINEUS GRACILIS SARTORIUS POPLITEUS GASTROCNEMIUS SOLEUS TIBIALIS POSTERIOR TIBIALIS ANTERIOR PERONEAL MUSCLES LONG EXTENSORS OF THE TOES LONG FLEXORS OF THE TOES APPENDIX 1 MERIDIAN PATHWAYS APPENDIX 2 ON CUTANEOUS ZONES APPENDIX 3 COMMONLY USED ACUPOINTS FOOTNOTES BIBLIOGRAPHY AOUT THE AUTHORS ABOUT THE INNER TRADITIONS BOOKS OF RELATED INTEREST COPYRIGHT INTRODUCTION A G F ATHERING OF ORCES Toward an Era of Interdisciplinary Cooperation in the Treatment of Pain T he field of pain management, specifically the treatment of myofascial pain syndromes, has become a meeting ground for health professionals. Acupuncturists, medical doctors, and practitioners of various manual and physical therapies who previously had little to say to one another are now collaborating in ways that are unprecedented in the history of American health care. The reason for the development of such interdisciplinary communication is the growing recognition that myofascial syndromes are the basis of a huge segment of patient complaint, and associated allocation of resources, within our health care system. Patients with myofascial pain syndromes are seeking the help of family physicians, internists, orthopedists, neurologists, rheumatologists, osteopaths, physiatrists, psychiatrists, and anesthesiologists. Dentists, particularly specialists in temporomandibular joint syndrome, regularly see patients presenting with myofascial pain. In addition, acupuncturists, chiropractors, physical therapists, occupational therapists, massage therapists, and psychotherapists are all encountering patients in pain. Conferences on pain treatment have increasingly become polyprofessional experiences. It is possible that, through health professionals’ mutual interest in the treatment of myofascial pain syndromes, true complementary medicine may emerge as a reality in the United States. Complementary medicine here refers to the use of conventional medical practices in conjunction with recently emerging Oriental and other body-therapy approaches, providing a coordinated treatment strategy that is best for the patient. This differs from the alternative medical model, which tends toward a competitive concept of health care, ultimately forcing a division between itself and conventional medical practices that may not, in the long run, be of the greatest benefit to patients. At this point in our medical history the fact is that health professionals from widely varying disciplines are talking to each other with a newfound respect, and the result may be the fostering of a cooperative spirit that will help millions of people who are in pain. This book, a field manual for any health professional dealing with myofascial syndromes, therefore serves a vital purpose. Its aim is to simplify and order the vast amounts of information related to the evaluation and treatment of myofascial pain. Utilizing our many years of clinical and teaching experience, we have endeavored to address the concerns and desires of health care providers for a manual that can assist in evaluating a patient, defining the presenting condition, and guiding treatment of that condition. It is assumed that the reader has some knowledge of myology; therefore no effort is made to replicate the extensive background and theoretical discussion found in seminal works on myofascial pain, such as those of Janet Travell and David Simons and P. E. Baldry.1 Instead, in addition to the technical core of the manual, introductory chapters discuss topics that will facilitate communication among the many professions concerned with this area of study. We begin with a discussion on the nature of muscles and trigger points, useful as review for those who treat primarily from this perspective and a good introduction for those entering the field. We then examine the phenomenology of qi, that elusive concept of “energy” that is the foundation of all Oriental medical practices. Qi is examined from the perspective of myofascial syndromes, making it a more accessible and useful metaphor for all health professionals. It is hoped that an expanded view of the concept of qi will help facilitate, rather than hinder, communication between practitioners of Eastern and Western medicine. Since muscle-palpation skills are at the center of effective evaluation and treatment, we next discuss the nature and process of palpation. Because a relative few practitioners are adept in this type of palpation, some guiding principles are offered to help those who are evolving palpation skills. A chapter outlining the fundamental approaches to evaluation and treatment of myofascial pain syndromes helps establish common ground among health professionals, in the realization that there are behavioral elements in treatment that are shared, independent of one’s particular training or orientation. Thus the acupuncturist, neurologist, and physical therapist, while differing in perspective regarding myofascial pain syndromes, all ultimately share similar behaviors in evaluation and treatment. A brief overview of how to use the clinical body of the manual, with a description of the information provided for each muscle, finishes the introduction. In the final analysis, since this is a manual for the health professional who encounters patients presenting with pain on a daily basis, the approach is pragmatic and behavioral. In the interest of expanding our scientific knowledge, it is enticing to determine underlying mechanisms for pain that strengthen our theoretical understanding. However, it is far more important that the practitioner in the field ascertain what helps patients, and learns how to effect that help. This book is about how, not why.

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