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However, in a patient with unilateral LBP2 for
instance, if the patient can not sustain adequate pelvic
control after prolonged weight-bearing (e.g.--a waitress), no
amount of strengthening is gonna help. You've got some
clean-up work to do first.
Once a patient has had their symptoms reverted (e.g. our
waitress can complete a seven-hour shift with little to no
symptoms) how does one progress?
2. Timing/Firing.
Most therapists are aware that during or after injury,
muscle fires abnormally due to local reflex
neurologic weakness. Gone on long enough, disuse atrophy
and faulty movement patterns can ensue. But, after pain
has subsided, does this mean that normal functional movement
patterns are spontaneously restored because muscle is now
firing properly?
Debatable for sure.
McKenzie has been quoted as stating (to the effect) that
stabilization programs are a noble idea, but that strength
returns in due course after a painful afflcition has been
resolved. EMG studies (Headley, et al.) indicate
however that residual functional losses can and do occur,
although they may be task specific.
In clinical practice using some neuromuscular
retraining once pain has been alleviated is both a useful and
necessary strategy if the clinician's goal is to
prevent recurrence. Abdicating full recovery to the
natural course of healing in the injury cycle is short-sighted,
particularly in chronic cases of pain (> six months).
In the short course of therapy where patients come directly
into the PT when they have pain, McKenzie is correct, and this
is where his approach (and DiMaggio's) shine.
Incidentally, in New Zealand, there is one PT ("physio", as
they're referred to there) for every three to four thousand
people in some areas, and it has been mentioned to me by
a New Zealand physio that most people in New Zealand
have "their priest, their hairdresser, and their
physio". They have direct access and get to the PT
for correct handlings at the onset of injury, not months or
years later as is common in the US.
Big difference in how injuries turn out when they're handled
right away.
There is a lot that a patient can do correctly when
interevention is early; alternatively there is a lot they can
do wrong as well, which is usually why back, neck and shoulder
pain tend to be recurrent. In the chronic cases
that we can turn around neuro re-ed is a necessary part of the
recovery plan; it's best done as quickly as you can get
the affliction handled. Four minutes of retraining
a functional movement pattern after manual therapy for
instance, goes a long way in recovery, but also in the
prevention of future recurrence...
Which is what master clinicians keep in mind.
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1 A physician, noted as the "Father of Evidence
Based Medicine.
2 Low Back Pain
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