Posture Braces

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Physical Therapy

Not everyone is blessed with perfect posture. For some, it takes dedicated concentration and extent of the right to have the perfect balance of the spine. That is the position of spacers are used for centuries in the Victorian era when the young woman used to wear their dresses to keep a good attitude. During these days of proper etiquette and education is reflected in how a woman carrying her. Not Today, braces are used but that the physical body itself, but to keep the body healthy.

Posture braces today has come a long way – from those who benefit from early Victorian braces strong and that women wore under their clothing, modern and easy to use and breathing gear used by men and women alike. Where the dancers are very important to have good posture and flow that makes it mandatory to use braces to hold up the spine and shoulder. Likewise, the braces are also used in military schools where the soldiers are just and inflexible attitude, which is part of their general education and should continue throughout their careers.

But not many people in today’s braces to correct but using the body structure, but also as a prevention tool for a variety of spine and spinal disease. Constant use computers at work and at home today, the movement is limited to this one. The average person can spend works much as four hours sitting on the computer, and this figure was for people who are high enough to do on a main intensive use of computers. You can sit in one place for long periods of pain, not one, but it could also lead to additional difficulties in the spinal cord. Tilt does not apply when reading books or sitting watching TV.

Braces are available on the market today and is not the right choice so difficult. All this requires a reasonable search through the Internet and check out a review of various materials posture can provide a pretty good idea that is more suited to your needs. There are many shops of various kinds and sizes of braces posture where you can try it in the locker room or choose a song on the Internet.

Pelvic Floor Dysfunction: Move Over Kegals

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Physical Therapy

According to physiotherapist Dr Pauline Chiarelli, pelvic floor problems can effect as many as one in three women. If you came to see us for advice on rehabilitation and help with an injury you would quickly notice that we ask questions that are not just related to your present concern but also questions about your health in general. We do this for a number of reasons; primarily we does this so that we can put your current concern into context but also it allows us to see if you have any other problems that you might have thought were “just normal”. When we ask these questions our clients frequently mention some sort of pelvic floor dysfunction with which they have just learned to live.

Is pelvic floor dysfunction more of a female than a male problem? Scientists, Ireland and Ott, say the male pelvis is denser and the bony part of the pelvis is generally smaller in diameter allowing faster coordination between all the muscles. This denseness combined with the smaller area means that the male pelvic floor is less likely to become dysfunctional. Conversely, the female pelvis is less dense and wider, as the bony structure is designed to house and deliver a baby. This means that the female pelvic floor is more susceptible to decreased strength and coordination between the pelvic floor muscles.

How is your pelvis meant to work and why do people get problems e.g. incontinence? In normal posture the pelvis should be anteriorly tilted allowing the bones of the pelvis to provide support to the internal organs, muscles, ligaments etc. In females the bladder is supported by the pubic bone at the front, which, in turn, creates support for the uterus. A large proportion of women with problems stand with a posterior pelvic tilt and decreased lumbar spinal curve. This puts more pressure on the pelvic floor by taking away the bony support from the bladder and uterus and creates pelvic floor problems. The good news is that this can be helped learning to correctly move your pelvis…. I will discuss a little later how to correct pelvic floor problems with exercises that are much more comprehensive than Kegals.

When looking at the muscular support of the pelvic floor it is useful to look at other muscles involved in its correct function: the abdominals, the spinal muscles, the hip and the respiratory diaphragm. These muscles work as a functional group. For example, as the respiratory diaphragm contracts it lowers, drawing air into the lungs, as it lowers it causes the organs that are underneath it to move downwards. This increased pressure in the abdominal cavity gently puts pressure on the pelvic floor causing a harmonious movement between the diaphragm and the pelvic floor. The pelvic floor assists in lumbopelvic stability (Markwell 2001) along with the muscles of the lower back, hips and abdominals. Anatomically there are connections as well; one of the hip muscles, the obturator internus, and part of the pelvic floor, the levator ani, are connected by a common tendon, the arcuate tendon. This means that if there is restricted movement in one or both of the hips, perhaps from arthritis, tight muscles or even ankle injuries, part of the pelvic floor will also be affected.

So it’s more than just the pelvic floor muscles then? Due to the interconnected nature of the pelvic floor and the muscles of the low back, hips and abdominals we always look at the “pelvic core neuromuscular system” or PCNS for short. This term was originally coined by my friends and colleagues, Christina Christie and Rich Colossi, physiotherapists specializing in pelvic floor dysfunction. By taking this approach we can determine if the current pelvic floor problems are actually being maintained by other things like poor posture, faulty breathing patterns or even by some thing as far away as an old ankle injury! Physiotherapist Gary Gray argues that in order to get the pelvic floor functioning optimally all the structures of the PCNS should be integrated subconsciously. For example, you don’t have to think about bracing your leg muscles to stop you from falling over, it just happens, and that should be the case for the pelvic floor as well. You shouldn’t have to consciously tense your pelvic floor to prevent leakage – it should just happen.

What is pelvic floor dysfunction?

It can take many forms, including but not limited to, pelvic pain, pelvic-organ prolapse, anal incontinence and urinary incontinence. Urinary incontinence can be subdivided into three categories:

  • Stress incontinence- involuntary loss of urine with an increase in intra-abdominal pressure e.g. a sneeze or a hop causes a small leak of urine.
  • Urge incontinence- the urge to empty your bladder with only a small production of urine.
  • Frequency incontinence -urinating more than eight times in twenty four hours.

So what is normal? Generally you should be urinating every two to four hours during the day and zero to once during the night (although pregnancy does temporarily increase the incidence of urinary incontinence).

Are there any other problems I may have due to pelvic floor dysfunction? When we are talking about urinary incontinence it is worth noting that the loss of control and coordination of the pelvic muscles puts strain on other structures in the body. Many people do not realize that their back pain, sacroiliac dysfunction, sciatica, knee pain and ankle sprains could all be coming from dysfunction of their PCNS, and visa-versa.

What is an effective way to correct these problems?

Due to the PCNS’s highly integrated nature with the rest of the body it doesn’t make sense to continually isolate it and rely on exercises like Kegals. That would be like treating a sore knee that was caused by limping due to a sprained ankle. The ankle should be treated first, otherwise the knee pain will just keep coming back. Having said that, there are circumstances where specific pelvic floor work such as Kegal’s are useful, but if you are able to, it is more beneficial to strengthen the pelvic floor in an integrated way.

So what do we recommend to strengthen it? In order to create an environment where the pelvic floor and it’s functionally related muscle groups (diaphragm, low back, hips and abdominals) are working subconsciously we need to exercise the body in all three planes of motion using both the arms and legs to ‘drive’ or move the body to create a specific load to the whole complex of functionally related muscles.

Move over Kegals! Introducing the Pelvicore Exercise Ball…This simple device was developed by physiotherapists Christie and Colossi to help their patients get faster and better results from exercises they were doing. It consists of a small inflatable ball that fits between the knees and an elastic strap that goes round the thighs holding the ball in place. Strengthening the hip muscles becomes easy when wearing the pelvicore ball because if you step out to the side all the lateral hip muscles have to work against the resistance of the elastic strap and when you step back all the medial/adductor muscles work against the pressure of the ball. Depending on your level of ability exercises with the pelvicore ball can vary from simply sitting and slowly moving your legs apart and then back together to exercises that involve squats, lunges and alternate hand drivers. These are whole body exercises that involve all aspects of the PNCS right from the ankle up to the neck.

Try this exercise suggested by Christie and Colossi:

The Pelvic-Hip Complex Pivot Shift Matrix

  1. See if you can balance on one leg for about 10 seconds, if you can continue, if you can’t then practice that before you try this.
  2. Start with the more successful side, in this example we will stand on the right leg and move the left leg through space
  3. Sagittal Plane:Stand on your right leg and swing your left leg forward and back, do it with control, repeat 10 times.
  4. Frontal Plane:Still on the right leg take your left leg as far to the left as you can and then lightly touch your toe to the floor, taking care not to put weight on it. Then return to the middle, pause and take your left leg to the right across the body in front or behind, gently toe touch a the end of range, repeat 10 times.
  5. Transverse Plane:Again, on your right leg rotate your whole body to the right pivoting on the right hip, once you have gone as far as you can rotate to the left gently touching your left toe to the ground if you loose balance, repeat 10 times.
  6. Repeat all the above on the other side.

What Next? If you thought you were resigned to doing Kegals for the rest of your life you now know there are alternatives that may work better for you. Clients often ask us what they can do at home to help prevent problems returning. The pelvicore ball provides a simple, easy to use exercise program that can be done at home to exercise the

PCNS properly. We are the only suppliers of the pelvicore ball in western Canada. We are confident that for the one in three women who suffer from pelvic floor problems this offers a chance for them to get stronger and more flexible. What a relief to not be in fear of the familiar accidental leak that can happen all too easily when the pelvic floor is not working properly!

The Final Stage in the Healing Process

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Physical Therapy

Rotator cuff strengthening is vital due to the unique role played by the rotator cuff in shoulder stability. In my own mind I look on undertaking rotator cuff strength exercises as the final part of rotator cuff healing.

You may have had a rotator cuff tear or surgery, had some therapy, done the rehab and now it is time for strengthening. Undertaking exercises to strengthen rotator cuff muscles will actually help to stabilise the whole shoulder joint.

Training muscles to become stronger

As a general rule, a muscle will increase in strength when it is trained close to its current force generating capacity. What does that actually mean in practice? Well, put simply, it means that for any muscle to get stronger it must be worked close to the maximum it is already capable of. An example is that anyone who can already bench press 100lbs is not going to gain strength by bench pressing just 40lbs.

There are two main muscle actions when training and each can be used in rotator cuff strengthening. There is dynamic muscle action, when the muscle length changes, that can be split into concentric action and eccentric action. Then there is also Isometric action when the muscle does not change length but is working.

Dynamic – Concentric action

Dynamic concentric muscle action is when the muscle shortens and joint movement occurs as tension develops. An example is say you holding a weight in your hand, your arm is relaxed and hanging fully extended by your side. You slowly begin to lift the weight using your bicep muscle. This moves the arm from an extended to a flexed elbow position. The bicep muscle has performed a shortening or concentric action whilst moving the arm.

Dynamic – Eccentric muscle action

Dynamic – eccentric muscle action is, pretty much, the opposite of Concentric. It occurs when the external resistance exceeds force a muscle can exert and the muscle lengthens while developing tension. Using the same example as above the muscle works to slowly lower the weight against the force of gravity.

It has clearly established that a combination of concentric and eccentric muscle actions add to the success of any training. This in turn leads to superior muscle strength and increased muscle fibre size. The other notable benefit of combined eccentric and concentric training is that it is much better at consolidating gains.

Isometric muscle action

An isometric muscle action is when a muscle generates force, attempting to shorten, but cannot overcome some form of resistance. This type of action does not actually result in any real “work”. Despite this an isometric or static action can generate substantial force. This is despite any noticeable lengthening or shortening of the muscle fibres or joint movement.

You just try pushing against a wall! No matter how much effort you put in that wall is unlikely to fall over. Your muscles will be working hard without any muscle lengthening or contraction. There will be no movement within any of the joints either. Despite this lack of movement you will be tired and have had a workout.

Strengthening is, for me, the final part of the healing process. It should also be the beginning of a commitment to avoid any future rotator cuff problems. To learn more visit me at rotator cuff strengthening.