Archive for the Pain Category

Posted in Arthritis, Health, Muscle, Pain, Proprioception, Strength on January 8, 2009 by livewithoutpain

How to cure pain without getting off the couch!

Remember when you used to go to the doctor and they would say “take an aspirin and call me in the morning.” Now it seems to be “do these exercises and see me in a month.”

Exercise is such a standard part of the treatment and rehabilitation of injury, we hardly give it a second thought yet it is difficult to find any evidence to support its use.

A study from the Netherlands recently published in the Australian Journal of Physiotherapy showed that 8 weeks of intensive exercise in chronic low back pain patients, had some, small, short-term benefits in overall wellbeing but no increase in strength or other outcomes after 8 weeks or 6 months(1).

Even in ankle sprains, where strengthening exercises should show some benefit, no reduction of symptoms or recurrence was found in a large multicentre trial in Holland between those doing supervised exercises and those doing no supervised exercises(2).

Neither of these findings would come as any surprise to Michael Owen or Dean Macey who, despite having careers as professional athletes and having access to the best of medical advice and treatment, have been repeatedly side-lined by injury.

Obviously there is a time for exercise. If you’re a couch potato and your exercise routine consists of opening the fridge door twenty times a day, you will probably feel some benefit from moving more. And if you’re an athlete and have been overtraining, maybe taking it easy for a few days would freshen you up and allow you to start your work again.

But if you’re moderately active, neither exercise nor rest will change the basic tone of your muscles, which is the key to changing posture and resisting injuries.

And that’s because up to 90% of muscle control is subconscious and relies purely on reflexes, leaving only 10% available to be improved by exercise.

Neurologists(3) have identified two types of muscle control.

Feed-forward (or proactive) control is the type we would normally associate with our muscles. It is used to produce the force needed to do a bench press or a squat. Such activities start with a thought and end with a movement, although the mechanisms that control the movement are incredibly complex.

Pro-active control is the system you use when you do exercises for your back or your neck or any other injuries. They are most commonly employed in training and rehabilitation schemes designed to increase muscle strength through controlled repetition of deliberate actions.

However, most injuries don’t occur doing a bench press or a push-up. They happen due to minor, but unexpected changes in direction, usually doing an activity or movement we have done hundreds of times before. Resisting these changes uses the second type of movement control which is feed-back or REACTIVE control. It uses a quite different set of processes than the PROACTIVE system.

If I drop a tennis ball and you reach out to catch it, your ability to work out the angle and velocity of the ball, where your hand needs to be and how to move it there would all be defined as proactive control. The reflex reaction of your biceps, triceps, flexor and extensor muscles from the stretch on their respective muscle spindles as you catch the ball would constitute reactive control.

Reactive control depends mostly reflexes, particularly the stretch reflex.

It is the reactive control stretch reflex that prevents your ankle from spraining if a rock gives way suddenly under your foot. The sudden stretch on muscles on the outside of your ankle will increase the firing from those muscles, directly stimulating the nerves in your spine increase their output, immediately counteracting the movement of the ankle and thereby preventing damage to the ligaments, bones and joints.

It is reactive muscle control that will tighten every shoulder muscle at the end of a throw to keep your arm attached to your trunk and it will stabilise your vertebrae when you bend over to pick up a lawn-mower.

Reactive muscle control prevents injury by constantly adapting muscle tone to the tension applied to the muscle. It thereby limits the amount of load transferred to surrounding tissues and because it uses spinal-level reflexes, it does so at speeds that could not be achieved with cortical processing.

Being a neurological mechanism, reactive muscle control is not related to the physical capacity of the muscle or the training of the individual. Good control can exist in a 50kg 83 year old woman just as easily as in a 25 yr old 80 kg body-builder. Both can also suffer from a faulty reactive mechanism.

Reactive stretch-reflex control is often found disrupted in patients with pain or injury.

Simon King, a Chiropractor with 20 years’ experience in teaching and practice has just published a book called Live Without Pain: A New Theory on What’s Wrong With You, and How to Fix It.

The book describes how thousands of patients have found the answer to their pain and injury problems when all conventional exercises and treatments hadn’t worked by such simple things as removing their earrings, changing a filling in their mouth or eating different foods, things that affect muscle tone in ways they could never imagine. Simon describes how everything we can sense, we sense through our nervous system, whose job it is to regulate our muscle tone and our sense of our body can be disrupted by many things we take for granted.

The book explains how to find out what things are affecting your muscle tone. Once you know the cause, it’s easy to cure the problem, and you can do it permanently; without drugs, exercise or surgery.

  1. Harts CC; Helmhout PH; de Bie RA; Staal JB A high-intensity lumbar extensor strengthening program is little better than a low-intensity program or a waiting list control group for chronic low back pain: a randomised clinical trial.Aust J Physiother. 2008; 54(1):23-31
  2. van Rijn RM et al. Supervised exercises for adults with acute lateral ankle sprain: a randomised controlled trial. Br J Gen Pract. 2007; 57(543):793-800
  3. Kandel ER, Schwartz and Jessell. Principles of Nerual Science, 4th edition 2000

How to Be Your Own Doctor

Posted in Arthritis, Health, Muscle, Pain, Proprioception, Strength on January 4, 2009 by livewithoutpain

If you have a pain or disability, what should you do?

The first thing to do is to consult the Hippocratic Oath. Raise your right hand and repeat after me “First, DO NO HARM.”

Harmful things you could do might include:

  1. Resting when you should be exercising
  2. Exercising when you should be resting-just do more of whichever makes it better and less of whichever makes it worse.
  3. Taking painkillers or anti-inflamatories – these just hide your pain and do nothing to solve the problem. Remember pain is your feed-back mechanism – an indicator of your body’s ability to heal itself. How are you going to get yourself better if you don’t know what is working and what is not?

Next, don’t waste your money on:

  1. Tests that won’t help you get better – X-Rays, MRI scans, Blood tests all take “pictures” of your current state. Most of the time (except in very rare cases) they are a complete waste of time and money. Think about them as a photograph taken of a car accident. You can see all the damage,  but nothing in the photo tells you whether someone fell asleep, or there was oil on the road, or the bend was too tight.
  2. Treatments that have temporary effects. Ask yourself how the treatment you are considering could  still be having any effect a week from now.

Is it Inflammatory or Mechanical?

  1. Inflammatory pain tends to come on spontaneously and tends to affect more than one joint or area at a time. So, if you’re honest, you tend to have a long list of aches and pains.
  2. Mechanical pain tends to be associated with an event, traumatic or trivial, but you know when it started and what you did to “cause it” (be careful, what you did probably isn’t the cause).

Is your progress “normal?

  1. If you’ve sprained a joint like an ankle, you can probably expect a couple of weeks of pain. If you’ve broken a bone, it might take 6-12 weeks to heal. What is not normal is if this is the second or 3rd time you have suffered this problem or if you haven’t recovered in the expected time.
  2. Most mechanical injuries swell for up to 3 days and then should start feeling easier, so rest for 72 hours and seek help if it is not getting better after then.

Find the Cause

  1. Inflammatory pain tends to be diet related. You need to stop having inflammatory foods and give your body as many fresh, raw, natural foods as possible. Try avoiding dairy, wheat, tea, coffee, nightshades – in that order for just a few days and see if detoxing makes you feel better.
  2. Mechanical pain is caused my muscle reflex weakness. This cannot be treated with exercise. If it could be treated with exercise, Dean Macey (Olympic Decathlete) would not have suffered a back problem that kept him out of the Olympics and Michael Owen would not have recurrent injuries. Reflex Dysfunction is caused by interference to sensory input. It’s time to buy the book at www.live-without-pain.com and check out the videos  or visit a practitioner trained in proprioceptive medicine.

Disclaimer: – always consult a qualified health practitioner before embarking on any treatment or diagnosis. None of the opinions here are meant to take the place of qualified diagnosis and treatment and no liability is accepted for any loss resulting directly or indirectly from the opinions given.

Live Without Pain

Posted in Arthritis, Health, Muscle, Pain, Proprioception, Strength on July 16, 2008 by livewithoutpain

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Wouldn’t it be great not to have to live with pain? Just published in December 2008 is a new book “Live Without Pain: A New Theory on What’s Wrong with you and How to Fix It” is a revolution in Natural Healthcare.

This remarkable book describes how your pain can be caused from something as simple as your jewellery or a crown on a tooth, in a way that no-one has yet suspected or published.

I wrote the book based on my discoveries and observations (many recorded on video) over the last 22 years in practice.

Pain is caused by tissue damage. It’s your body’s warning sign that something is wrong.

Usually, pain is temporary. We all have the occasional accident where something is damaged. Usually we brush ourselves off and get on with our lives (even if it takes a couple of weeks). Occasionally, however, our pain persists, or the injury reoccurs and no matter what we do, we can’t get it better.

That’s where the book – and this blog, can help.

The book looks at proprioception – our body’s sense of it’s self. If anything interferes with the reflexes that control our sense of our self, or our reflex reactions to our environment, then we end up with chronic injury and chronic pain.

Metal jewellery and metal dentistry are two of the biggest suspects in the body-reaction robbery although there are a few others.

By interfering with our reflexes, metal causes muscle inhibition or muscle weakness. Since our muscles protect our joints from sprain, strain and injury, weakness of muscles can cause chronic back pain, neck pain, osteoarthritis, spondylosis, sciatica, slipped discs and many other musculoskeletal injuries.