Guest guest Posted February 14, 2004 Report Share Posted February 14, 2004 I mentioned that my surgeon said that my knee pain was probably fibro.related. He didn't say why. On Friday when i started back into PT, i mentioned that my knees have continued to get more and more painful. I pointed out that it was in the inside of my knees. She immediately said that it was a classical fibro related pain. If this is so, what in the world is the treatment? I 've been doing the leg lifting but they aren't making any good. Does anyone know anything that will help? Walking has gotten more and more difficult ------------------- I assume from your comments that you have been diagnosed as having Fibromyalgia? If you have, a really excellent book on the subject is " Fibromyalgia & Chronic Myofascial Pain " by Devin Starlanyl and Ellen Copeland. You said your knee pain was in the inside of the knees and that walking has become increasingly difficult. Two questions. Is the pain on the inside of the leg AT the knee or within the knee cap itself? Secondly, is your knee buckling on you? On page 107 of the book, they discuss knee pain in terms of trigger points in the Vastus Medialis muscle. There are two - one about three finger widths straight up from inside edge of the knee cap. The second one is just about half way between the knee and the groin on a straight line up from the knee cap. Take your finges and poke, prod, palpate all around these areas. You are looking for a really tender point that refers pain to the knee. If you find one (and they refer pain), then you have a trigger point. The easiest treatment is to simply apply direct, deep, sustained pressure into the point with your finger tip, thumb, or some rounded object (end of a pencil?) until (a) the pain stops referring and ( the pressure on the point stops being painful. It sometimes takes a few sessions to make it go away, but you can make it go away. No, it won't be a pleasant feeling, but it is something you can do to treat yourself if you do have trigger points. If you are having problems with your knee buckling, the above trigger points sometimes act in combination with trigger points in the adductor longis and adductor brevis muscles. These are a bit more difficult to describe for the location, but here goes. Center of the front of the leg and about about three finger widths medially (toward the inside), about two-three finger widths below a line drawn straight across from the bottom of the crotch. Again, poke and prod around in this general area. If you do have trigger points in this area, the pain referral will be just above the hip, center to outside of the leg. For just plain knee pain, like from arthritis, I just use the Polarity X technique. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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