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Physical therapy

Dec 30 2024

Should I push through pain when working out?

Do I Need to Avoid Painful Exercises?

Pain is a complex subject. It’s our body’s way of telling us something is wrong, and we should Middle-aged man in gym bent over in back pain.
stop doing whatever we’re doing to avoid injury. This is beneficial in the short term, but what about pain that has been present for weeks, months, or even years? Should we always avoid painful activities?

Before we dive into whether to avoid painful exercises or not, if you think you are injured, talk to your physical therapist or physician; but in short, no, we probably don’t need to avoid all painful exercises, especially for chronic pains. Let’s take chronic low back pain for example. It’s not uncommon for people to tweak their back and continue to have low back pain for up to a year, sometimes longer! Standard tissue healing takes anywhere between 2-4 weeks for a mild strain, 4-16 weeks for moderate strain, and up to a year for a complete muscle tear (which is uncommon). So, if most heal in under 16 weeks, why do so many people continue to have pain well beyond that timeframe? I wish it was a simple answer, but unfortunately there are dozens of factors that come into play. The factors range from severity of injury, history of injury, underlying conditions, exercise programming, and even our own beliefs about the injury. There seems to have been a huge shift in the physical therapy management of chronic pain over the past 1-2 decades (and mostly for the better in my opinion). Physical therapists are taking psychosocial factors into account and tailoring rehab protocols around them. We are also seeing an increase in true strength training when individuals with chronic pain. It’s not just 2 sets of 10, hot packs, rest, and ultrasound anymore! Believe it or not, we’ve found complete rest is one of the worst things you can do for chronic pain.

We have a lot of research showing that exercising through pain is safe when done properly. This is where an experienced clinician comes into play, because knowing which pain is fine and which is not can be tricky. In general, lower levels (below 5/10 on the pain scale or no more than moderate pain) dull aching, and chronic pain is usually okay to train through. Some things to consider when training through pain are, “is this tolerable,” “does the pain return back to it’s original level after 24-48 hours,” and “is the pain going up or down week by week.” If you find yourself hitting 7-8/10 and feeling worse for 3 days after a workout then that’s a good sign you’re doing too much.

So, what would it look like if you came to our clinic experiencing pain during movement or exercise. The first thing we’ll do is a thorough physical exam. Determine what’s going on and if physical therapy is appropriate for you; and if not, we’ll get you where you need to be. Next, if deemed safe, I Man bench pressing in a gym with another man spotting. like to watch you perform the painful movement. This could be squatting, benching, overhead lifting/pressing, etc. Then we’ll perform some therapeutic modalities such as dry needling or perform some soft tissue mobilization, and then come up with some modifications to reduce pain during the exercise, determine an appropriate level of pain to work through (if needed), create a home exercise program, and a schedule to get you back to your prior level of exercise. We also like to work with any other health care worker or fitness professional you’re working with. This will allow us to communicate an individualized plan to keep you in the gym while you go through your rehab journey!

If you have any questions or want to find out if you need physical therapy, you can reach me at

Joe@collegehillpilatespt.com

Written by Joe Anneken, PT, DPT, OCS · Categorized: Back pain, Chronic pain, Exercise, Physical therapy, Workout

Nov 10 2024

Why Does My Back Hurt When I Swing a Golf Club?

Has low back pain ever kept you from golfing? Low back pain is a common occurrence in the world of golf. It’s a gameMan playing golf of repetitive high-speed twisting of the spine after all. While rotation of the spine has gotten a bad rap over the years, when done too much or with other underlying issues, back pain can rear its ugly head. To make things more difficult, the issue might be from something other than the back like the hips, shoulders, or the wrists. That’s why it’s so important to work with someone trained in evaluating golfers. This post is the introduction of series of posts highlighting some common causes of low back pain including certain swing characteristics such as reverse spine angle during the backswing, hip hiking during the downswing, flying elbows, and more.

What will the first visit look like? 

The first thing we’ll do is a full-body screen created by the Titleist Performance Institute. This will give a general sense of how you are moving and functioning from head to toe and then will home in on some areas of concern. Next, we’ll check your swing out so Golfer with his hand on his low backwe can determine what factors of the screen are leading to certain swing characteristics which may lead to low back pain. This will help decide if you need to see a medical professional to correct any physical faults or see a golf pro for some lessons. If PT is appropriate for you, we’ll begin with treatment on day one. Day one will include personalized exercises to address any deficits found in the screen along with some manual intervention such as spinal manipulations, soft tissue mobilization, or dry needling. These manual interventions will help reduce pain quickly to get you back to golf ASAP while we also work on strengthening and mobility to prevent the issue from returning in the future. We’ll also get you set up with a golf professional if needed.

What will future sessions look like? 

The end goal is to get you back to golf and, as mentioned earlier, prevent the pain from returning. Each session we’ll review how your symptoms have changed and how your golf game is going. We’ll quickly perform the physical screen from day one to see how mobility and strength have changed, perform any hands-on treatment, and continued progressing the exercises. While each plan of care is customized for you, during the initial visits you can expect some introductory strength training such as barbell and dumbbell work, Pilates, or body weight exercises depending on need and preference. Each session will last around 45 minutes to an hour and will start once per week and taper off as needed. Sometimes we have people come in once every few months for checkups and exercise progressions.

Summary

To summarize, low back pain can be detrimental and recurrent for golfers. It’s a complex condition that requires a trained individual to evaluate and assess. I use the tools provided by the Titleist Performance institute, my years of experience as a PT, and my own experience with pain on the golf course to help you get back to what you enjoy. I’ll provide hands on therapies such as spinal manipulation, soft tissue mobilization, and dry needling paired with an individualized exercise routine tailored to you and your preferences not only reducing pain but potentially improving your golf game!

Written by Joe Anneken, PT, DPT, OCS · Categorized: Back pain, Golf, Physical therapy

Oct 27 2024

Cervicogenic headache: Is my headache coming from my neck?

Woman in discomfort holding her head and neck.

Is my Headache coming from my neck?

In short, yes, it’s certainly possible. Headaches that arise from issues at the neck are known as cervicogenic headaches. The most common structures that can trigger these types of headaches are the upper cervical spine or the musculature surrounding the neck such as the upper trapezius, levator scapula, and the small suboccipital muscles at the base of your skull. When these structures are irritated, overworked, or simply tight, they can irritate nearby nerves that innervate the face and head. This can lead to headaches in the head or behind the eye. Possibly both!

Anatomical illustration of the neck and head.

 

 

 

 

 

 

How do I tell if I have a cervicogenic headache?

Most of the time the headache will be on one side of the head and feel like it starts from the base of the skull and wraps around the top of the head to the side. We call this a ram’s horn pattern. Think of the design and location of the LA Rams football helmet but backwards. This is likely where the headache will be. Sometimes the headache will feel like it’s behind the eye too. The headaches will occur with certain head movements or positions, especially if you hold that position for a long time, like when you are sitting at your desk looking at a computer or reading a book in bed.

Illustration of cervical trigger points.

It’s important to differentiate a cervicogenic headache from other types of headaches like a migraine or a tension type headache. A migraine is a headache caused by blood flow problems to the brain. Migraines can present very similar, if not exactly like a cervicogenic headache. That’s why it is so common for a cervicogenic headache to be misdiagnosed as a migraine and vice versa. Key differences to look for are throbbing type pain, signs that a headache is coming on known as an aura, and other symptoms such as nausea, light sensitivity, and sensitivity to sound. These are all signs of a migraine that are not found with a cervicogenic headache. A Tension-type headache is another form of headache that arises from the musculature of the head. These will present on both sides of the head usually across the forehead and feel like a tight band is around your head. Tension type headaches don’t change with activity and can also present with light and sound sensitivity but usually not both.

Can physical therapy treat cervicogenic headaches?

Yes, it can! Physical therapy is a very effective form of treatment for cervicogenic headaches, and in my experience, it can be very quick. Depending on the source of the headache, either from the upper cervical spine or the surrounding musculature, treatment will likely include cervical spine manipulation/mobilization, soft tissue mobilization, and dry needling. These treatments will help get rid of the headache quickly, sometimes immediately. We then follow up with exercises for the neck and shoulder girdle. These will keep the muscles and spine flexible and strong, preventing future headaches.

What if my headache isn’t coming from my neck, can Physical Therapy Still Help?

That’s a harder question to answer. Unfortunately, physical therapy cannot help with a true migraine. As mentioned above, migraines are issues with blood flow to the brain. These are best treated with migraine medications. Luckily migraine medications are very effective. It is common, however, to have a residual headache despite the effectiveness of migraine medications. These residual headaches may be cervicogenic; and that we do treat!

Summary

Your headache very well could be coming from your neck. These are termed cervicogenic headaches. These headaches usually come from sustained neck positions or movements. They are usually one-sided, start at the back of the head and radiate to the front and side of the skull. Physical therapy is a great treatment for cervicogenic headaches. Treatment will likely include spinal manipulation, soft tissue mobilization, and dry needling combined with exercises for the neck and shoulder. Differentiating between other forms of headache such as migraines and tension-type headaches is important. So, the best course of action is to seek advice from a health professional such as a physical therapist or your medical doctor.

Schedule an appointment with one of our physical therapists for an assessment to see if physical therapy can help manage your headaches!

Written by Joe Anneken, PT, DPT, OCS · Categorized: Headache, Neck pain, Physical therapy

Feb 01 2022

Experiencing a Catastrophic Shoulder Injury from a Physical Therapist’s Perspective, One Year Later

I haven’t posted an update about my shoulder rehab process since last April, which is when I returned fully back to work. Not really a coincidence!

As of today it has been one year since my surgery to repair my torn labrum and Hill-Sachs lesion. For anyone just now catching this blog, I dislocated my shoulder when I tripped on a sidewalk crack and fell while jogging early in the morning January 14, 2021. I have been working very hard all year to rehab my shoulder. I would say it’s about 95% recovered at this point. I’m hopeful that there is still some improvement to be seen.

It has been a challenge to regain the mobility and rebuild the strength at the same time. I’m happy to report that my range of motion is nearly 100%. Functional reach behind my back is still a little limited but good enough to fasten a bra behind my back or loop my belt around the back of my waist. My strength is also mostly back to normal. I am able to do all of my work activities, including manual therapy, that I would normally do. I don’t notice many functional limitations at home either and was even able to return to playing tennis with my family this summer.

The big issue is still that pesky scapulohumeral rhythm, especially when I reach forward and up overhead.

https://www.collegehillpilatespt.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Shoulder-flexion-and-scaption.mp4

You can see that my scapula still wings a little bit as I raise my arms up and down. This is caused by the continued limited range of motion of the actual ball-and-socket joint of my shoulder. So more of the motion has to come from the shoulder blade moving excessively. This causes pinching of the soft tissue structures in the subacromial space because the humeral head does not glide downward as it rolls upward. As a result, these impinged structures cause pain. This pain is the biggest problem that is yet to resolve. I notice it the most at night because I still wake up several times a night in pain. If I spend too long in any sleeping position, it becomes painful and wakes me up. Happily, I am able to fall back asleep once I shift positions are rearrange myself. But my ultimate goal is to not wake up at night due to pain.

Glenohumeral joint arthrokinematics
On the left we have normal joint arthrokinematics. On the right you can see the pinching above the humeral head (the “ball” part of the joint) that results from altered joint mechanics.

Even though it has been a full year since surgery, I feel like this is still slowly getting better. So there is still more room for improvement. I plan to continue working on loosening up the part of the joint capsule that is still restricting this movement, strengthening the scapular stabilizers, and working on neuromuscular control of the entire pattern. So I’m still hopeful it will get even closer to 100%.

I can’t round out this year of shoulder rehab without mentioning a little bit about my continuing work to recover mentally and emotionally from this injury as well. While tripping on a sidewalk crack might not seem all that traumatic or frightening, it really affected me. I still have anxiety about walking on the sidewalk, especially if it’s dark outside. I haven’t been able to run since this injury, and even watching other people run on the sidewalk gives me a lot of anxiety. (Run on the street, my friends!) I see this a lot with my patients. We develop avoidance behaviors, consciously or subconsciously, because something we did caused us pain. Sometimes it’s something big and traumatic, but sometimes it’s something little like hurting your back when you bent down to pick up a sock. So ever after you have fear that you’ll relive that pain whenever you pick up a sock. Or maybe you felt a tweak in your back and ignored it and a few days later that tweak turned into intense pain down your leg. So now every little tweak you feel sets off alarm bells. I began seeing a mental health counselor a couple of months ago to try to work through some of this because, while running is not my favorite thing to do, I would like to be able to do it if I feel like it without fear or dread. And as a PT I do need to be able to watch my patients run now and then to analyze a faulty gait pattern. I’m hopeful that working through some of these issues on the mental health side of the equation will also help me get to full recovery and prevent this incident from affecting what I can do for any reason, physical or mental.

Nothing is lost of course. This experience has given me more empathy for my patients, though that empathy has probably actually made me a tougher rather than an easier PT! (I’ve been through it, you can do it too!) Feeling the tightness and tension in my own shoulder has helped me understand the way some of the treatments I perform and prescribe for my patients feel, and how they can help. Prior to this injury all of my joints were so loose and hypermobile that I had a hard time understanding what restricted joint mobility feels like. Now I know!

I hope that in writing about my experience with this challenge I’ve helped people have a better understanding of injury, whether their own or someone else’s. I hope that reading this reminds you of the awesome resilience and general coolness of the human body and, of course, of the power of physical therapy!

Written by Mindy Nagel, PT, DPT, OCS · Categorized: EDS, Hypermobility, Physical therapy, Proprioception, Range of motion, Scapulohumeral rhythm, Shoulder, Shoulder injury, Shoulder rehab, Shoulder surgery

Apr 15 2021

Experiencing a Catastrophic Shoulder Injury from a Physical Therapist’s Perspective, Part 14 — Back to Work!

Busy, busy, busy!

Yesterday was the 3 month anniversary of my shoulder dislocation caused by tripping on a sidewalk crack while jogging. The strange thing is that even after 3 months I still feel detached from this injury, like I’m watching someone else go through it and working on it as if I were my patient. When I talk about the injury and the recovery process it feels like I’m talking about someone else. I’ve read that this can happen as a result of trauma. But I think it also has to do with the fact that I am a physical therapist and therefore my natural inclination is to look at an injury objectively with an outside observer’s perspective.

I haven’t written a blog entry about my shoulder injury recovery in a while because I have been so busy with the re-opening of my office! It didn’t take long to get back up to a full schedule of patients and keeping up with that is just a little challenging with my shoulder not being 100%. It’s a common challenge that as we recover we start to add our usual activities back into our lives and the time we have to devote to rehab, rest, and recovery starts to get chipped away. So I’m working really hard to balance my time between treating myself and treating my patients. I’m so thankful to be back in the office seeing patients and clients though. This past year has taught me how much I need that for my own mental well-being!

Sleep

Right now I’m about 10.5 weeks post-surgery. A lot of things are getting much better. The biggest success I can report is that I have finally been able to sleep in my bed again for the past week or so! This is a huge deal for me and it took much longer to get to this point than I anticipated. Sleeping is one of my favorite hobbies and, not to brag, but normally I’m really good at it. While I’m thankful to have a recliner that I could sleep in, it’s just not the same as being in my own bed. I had been sleeping in the recliner since the initial injury on January 14th with the exception of a couple of failed attempts to sleep in bed. Each time I tried I would wake up after less than an hour asleep with pain in my shoulder that just wouldn’t calm down with adjusting positions. I would have to get up and get some ice on it and go sleep in the recliner. For a while it was to the point where I didn’t even want to go to sleep (even in the recliner) because I knew when I woke up I would be in intense pain. I’m still not sleeping that well — waking up with pain and needing to adjust positions frequently throughout the night and getting maybe 5-6 hrs of sleep each night — but at least now I can fall back asleep without having to get out of bed.

Strengthening

This phase of rehab is generally supposed to be a time of building strength and it’s coming along pretty well. I’ve been able to add free weights to most of my exercises and to increase the resistance level of the Theraband I’m using for others. My shoulder is tolerating working at a computer now and most of the manual therapy I normally do. I’ve had to adjust the way I do a lot of things, especially manual therapy and manual muscle testing, to use my left shoulder for any force that needs to be generated. But overall, I don’t feel terribly limited in the things I’m able to do for my patients.

Prone row with dumbbell

Prone shoulder extension with dumbbell

Standing Row using a Theraband

More on Scapulohumeral Rhythm

The biggest limitations continue to be range of motion and scapulohumeral rhythm. I had some folks send me questions about this after my last post. I wrote in that post about how the tightness of the shoulder ball-and-socket joint (aka the glenohumeral joint) is resulting in most of the motion when I raise my arm coming from the scapula moving on my back (aka the scapulothoracic joint). This must be improving on some level because the pain in my rhomboids and trapezius from being strained by the hypermobility of my scapula is starting to feel better and the relief I get after acupuncture or massage therapy is lasting longer. But some of you noticed that my injured shoulder was “shrugging” up when I tried to raise my arm. As you raise your arm the head of your humerus should glide downward to keep the ball nicely in the socket as your arm lifts. As I raise my arm no gliding is happening so my scapula has to rotate up and out to keep the ball in the socket as my arm goes up. If your humerus didn’t glide AND your scapula didn’t compensate in this way, the head of the humerus would roll right off the top edge of the glenoid. Not to worry in my case as the glenohumeral joint has been surgically stabilized and isn’t going anywhere ever again. But as you can see from the video below, that “shrug” sign is still happening. That is a sign that physical therapists look for as it tells us that either the rotator cuff is not working well to stabilize the head of the humerus (ball) in the glenoid (socket), the muscles that stabilize the scapula aren’t doing their job, or something is wrong with the joint mobility. My problem is a combination of the last two. As you can see in the video below, it’s certainly a little improved if you compare it to last month’s blog post, but still shrugging.

https://www.collegehillpilatespt.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/InShot_20210415_160143021.mp4

What’s to be done about this? Dave, my physical therapist, uses manual therapy to work on the joint mobility for me. But you have to be careful with hypermobile people after this kind of surgery not to push too hard to get joint mobility because we really need to avoid that glenohumeral joint becoming hypermobile again. So you can’t be too aggressive. Yesterday Dave also worked on getting some better activation from my lower trapezius muscle to help stabilize the scapula, which seemed to help quite a bit.

Shoulder internal rotation stretch while lying on the injured side to stabilize the scapula
Lying on the injured side to use my body weight to stabilize the scapula while I stretch the shoulder into internal rotation.

I’m also continuing to work on stretching that joint as much as possible on my own with the scapula stabilized by lying on it.

And of course I’m working to strengthen anything I can to stabilize the joint and the scapula including the rotator cuff muscles, which are the muscles that stabilize the head of the humerus in the glenoid socket, and the lower trapezius and serratus anterior, which work to stabilize the scapula. But I know everyone who has ever had to recover from an injury feels my pain when I say that it seems that the one thing I can’t do anything about is the truly limiting factor here — time. Some of this is just going to take time.

Written by Mindy Nagel, PT, DPT, OCS · Categorized: EDS, Hypermobility, Physical therapy, Range of motion, Scapulohumeral rhythm, Shoulder, Shoulder injury, Shoulder rehab, Shoulder surgery

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