Trigger Point Therapy Trigger Point Therapy
Boris Prilutsky
Introduction
Medical massage therapy procedure consists of mobilization of skin, fascia and muscle tissue, trigger point therapy, relaxation techniques and post-isometric. Each of these modalities is equally important to achieve rapid and lasting results. For decades, the widespread use of medical massage has proven to be a safe and highly effective treatment for the support and movement system disorders, disorders of internal organs, managing stress, and more.
In recent years, there have been many arguments within the professional community about practitioners utilizing manual therapy and trigger point therapy. In recent professional publications many authors have raised the following questions: Is it a point to trigger tissue development in fibroconnective muscles? Histological studies ever done on the trigger points? Is there a theory of peripheral nerve pain of the endplate of a new theory and the theory only? Ischemic compression techniques for trigger point therapy safe and effective?
The short answers to the questions above are:
1. tissue formation in muscles is Fibroconnective myogelosis, incurable muscle disease.
2. In many cases myogelosis is the result of inadequate treatment of trigger points.
3. A trigger point is a pinpoint location of the pain found in the muscles, connective tissue and periosteum. The morphology of this point of pain is such that the demand for blood is much higher than actual blood.
4. The theory of peripheral nerve pain of the endplate is not a new theory.
5. Any theory must be supported by clinical production.
6. ischemic compression as a method of trigger point therapy has been proven by at least 4 years of heavy use as a safe and effective.
7. ischemic compression techniques are applied by gradually increasing pressure, which excludes the possibility of doing harm to the patient and the therapist.
In the search for true understanding of the pathophysiology, the sophistication of the organization and complexity requires us to adopt an integrated approach to any issue. Thus, I offer the reader a brief scientific review of the trigger point issue and the concept of trigger point therapy.
If you want to see hands on the demo, please click on the link below:
http://medicalmassage-edu.com/dvd-details.php?dvd_id=27&dvd=12
The nature of trigger points
There is no statement in modern scientific literature calls a trigger point of a band "hung fibro-connective tissue." However, it was once used in the late 19th/early 20th century until histological studies conducted by German scientists (Glogowski, and Wallraff, 1951; Miehlke et al., 1950) showed that there is no connective tissue proliferation (myogelosis) in the region of a trigger point in muscle. "In our opinion, fibrositis (in regard to trigger points) became hopelessly ambiguous diagnosis ... Best avoided "(Travell, Simons, 1983). However, the tissue will grow between the muscle fibers in a core myogelosis is formed (Glogowski, and Wallraff, 1951). Myogelosis is a clinical outcome of years of reactivating the trigger active in the same area. At the same time, the trigger point therapy is useless if the basic myogelosis is already formed.
In 1843 for the first time, the German physician Dr. F. Froriep describes the painful trigger points that training in skeletal muscle. In 1921, another German researcher, Dr. H. Schade, their histology and formed the concept of myogelosis. In 1923, the British doctor.
Posted on August 23, 2010.