Back to Back Blog
Dry Needling and Neck pain
When used in combination with osteopathy, acupuncture is a hugely effective treatment for neck and back pain.
A study (see link) published in 2014 in the Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy has found patients who received dry needling for their neck pain showed significantly better improvement than the untreated group. It was a small study, but always a good place to start. The patients reported 33% less pain immediately after treatment and 66% less pain a week later.
Most of our osteopaths have completed their acupuncture training with the British Medical Acupuncture Society (BMAS) and it is a hugely effective method of treatment, especially when used in combination with osteopathy. We often use this for neck and lower back pain, hip and shoulder pain along with many other injuries.
Statin use and Arthopathies…
A recent US study has recently found that “Musculoskeletal (MsK) conditions, arthopathies, injuries and pain are MORE common among statin users than among similar non statin-users.
A recent US study has recently found that “Musculoskeletal (MsK) conditions, arthopathies, injuries and pain are MORE common among statin users than among similar non statin-users.
The researchers concluded:
To our knowledge, this is the first study, using propensity score matching, to show that statin use is associated with an increased likelihood of diagnoses of MsK conditions, arthropathies and injuries. These findings are concerning because starting statin therapy at a young age for prevention of primary cardiovascular disease is widely advocated…..
Some other articles that highlight this:
http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=1691918
http://journals.lww.com/amjmedsci/Abstract/2013/05000/Incidence_of_Musculoskeletal_and_Neoplastic.3.aspx
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3266514/
True Proprioception and Function
You get great proprioceptive training for free if you do authentic Functional Exercise. Proprioceptors provide us with information about movement and the position of our head, limbs and body in time and space.
Proprioception could be looked at as one of the inner ‘controllers’ of our body!
You get great proprioceptive training for free if you do authentic Functional Exercise. Proprioceptors provide us with information about movement and the position of our head, limbs and body in time and space. Their aim is to protect our body from damage by using ‘stretch reflexes’ and these can restrict or limit our movement at times of need. Some of these sit in joints, some in our muscles and some in skin and fascia. In combination, proprioceptors give our body a supreme and enhanced awareness of our ‘whereabouts’.
You do need to proprioceptively train the body towards the function it so requires. Doing a ‘plank’ for example will not train your abdominals proprioceptively to protect you in upright function with lumbar spine extension and rotation. Squatting will not proprioceptively train your legs to run and that ‘static squat hold’ at 90 degrees that many are given, will certainly not protect your hips, knees and ankles while you ski.
Training proprioceptors effectively requires movement and often (although not always) it needs ground force reaction too! Increased effectiveness is achieved by using different tweaks or additions to our movement such as adaptations in speed, depth, height and angulation and this may involve using your head, limbs and body, all in 3 planes of motion. An INTEGRATED chain reaction is needed, nothing is ISOLATED.
Whatever sport or exercise you want to do, to become and stay good at it, your conditioning and rehabilitative training needs to look and smell like the sport you want to do!
If you need any help with Functional Training or need an injury treated, call us at Back to Back on 020 8605 2323
Could your groin injury be coming from your hip?
Groin pain can be a difficult problem for patients as well as their clinicians. Part of the problem is that the location of the pain is often a poor indicator of the where the pathology actually lies. Additionally, when the pain becomes chronic, multiple pathologies can be generated, adding a further layer of complexity.
It is very important to make a clear diagnosis, and we should seek to look beyond merely labelling the problem as a ‘groin sprain’. There many causes of pain in the groin, but approximately 50% of groin pain can be attributed to pain generated by the hip joint; a surprise, perhaps, for younger patients. As in any medical condition, the patient’s history will give us many clues. It is extremely important to rule out sinister ‘red flags’, such as night pain, severe pain on loading the leg, weight loss or systemic symptoms, and we need to be mindful of conditions which may occur in certain age groups, such as slipped epiphysis in teenagers.
Common causes of groin pain besides the hip, include those generated by the lumbar spine, pubic overload (osteitis pubis), iliopsoas and adductor tendon pathologies and stress responses in the femoral neck in runners. Abdominal wall hernias may cause pain which is a little higher in the groin, and less commonly, younger patients can experience the rectus femoris pulling away from its attachment at the anterior inferior iliac spine. Testicular tumours and avascular necrosis can present insidiously and we need to be on the lookout for them.
A big proportion of patients who present with groin pain as a result of hip pathology, have an underling condition known as ‘femoral acetabular impingement syndrome’, or FAI. This is essentially a problem resulting from a tear in the acetabular labrum, usually caused by repetitive trauma due to a ‘bump’ or ‘CAM’ on the head neck junction of the femur, which may be genetic.
This can cause groin pain which is worse with exercise, sitting or standing, and the pain can be brought on by putting the patient in the ‘impingement position’ of hip flexion + internal rotation + adduction. In the long term, we believe that the tear in labrum causes changes in the acetabular articular cartilage next to it, and over many years, this may lead to osteoarthritis in the hip.
FAI can affect people of all ages, and is often missed in 30-40 year olds. Taking a careful history, and carrying out a thorough examination can help identify the likely cause. Imaging, such as MRI arthrogram of the hip, can help confirm the underlying diagnosis (as X-Ray cannot rule out FAI), but it should be remembered that imaging needs to be interpreted in light of the history and examination findings. FAI may require treatment with hip arthroscopy surgery, but in some cases injection therapy and robust physiotherapy or osteopathy may be enough to get a person back to full activity.
Sports Physicians and Osteopaths are ideally placed to identify the underlying cause of unexplained groin pain, and are skilled in directing the rehabilitation necessary to resolve the problems.
If you have any problems at all and would like in to see James Dodd or one of the team at Back to Back, please call 020 8605 2323.