Guest guest Posted February 5, 2004 Report Share Posted February 5, 2004 Barb forwarded a post to me this morning from the EDS Awareness board that referenced " The Trigger Point Therapy Workbook - Your Self-Treatment Guide for Pain Relief " " by Clair Davies. I had not included this one in my earlier book recommendations but am doing so now (and have already asked Barb to add it to the EDS Today site as well). If you suffer from trigger points, I highly recommend and strongly suggest getting a copy of this book. It is detailed, well written and user friendly. And yes, I do have a copy of it myself. The title really captures the focus of the book. It is specificaly written to be used by someone as a self-help reference and not as a medical manual for a doctor/pt/lmp/etc to use on a patient or client. From page 3: " Travell and Simons describe a trigger point as simply a small contraction knot in muscle tissue. It often feels like a partly cooked piece of macaroni, or like a pea buried deep in the muscle. A trigger point affects a muscle by keeping it both tight and weak. At the same time, a trigger point maintains a hard contraction on the muscle fibers that are directly connected to it. In turn, these taut bands of muscle fiber keep constant tension on the muscle's attachments, often producing symptoms in adjacent joints. The constant tension in the fibers of the trigger point itself restricts circulation in its immediate area. The resulting accumulation of the by-products of metabolism, as well as deprivation of the oxygen and nutrients needed for metabolism, can perpetuate trigger points for months or even years unless some intervention occurs. It's this self-sustaining vicious cycle that needs to be broken. The difficulty in treating trigger points is that they typically send pain to some other site. Most conventional treatment of pain is based on the assumption that the cause of the pain will be found at the site of the pain. But trigger points almost always send their pain elsewhere. This referred pain is what has always thrown everybody off, including most doctors and much of the rest of the health-care community. According to Travel and Simons, conventional treatments for pain so often fail because they focus on the pain itself, treating the site of the pain while overlooking and failing to treat the cause, which may be some distance away. Even worse than routinely treating the site of the pain is the pharmaceutical treatment of the whole body for what is usually a local problem. Painkilling drugs, the increasingly expensive treatment of choice these days, give us the illusion that something good is happening, when in reality they only mask the problem. " Of all the aches, pains and problems I read about in the various posts, trigger points are probably the easiest and least expensive to treat - if identified and treated properly. More importantly, they frequently can be treated using self-help techniques without having to spend a bunch of time and money seeing someone, getting expensive injections, taking equally expensive narcotics, or having to learn acupressure point or being able to feel energy. Most trigger points, and the treatment thereof, are fairly straight forward. As info, in spite of what most western trained practitioners will tell you, trigger points are also very commonly acupoints as well and can be treated using acupressure. The normal, bodywork, treatment for trigger points is very simple and easy to do. Trigger Points and Tender Points feel virtually the same except for one key difference. A trigger point refers pain elsewhere in the body and a tender point does not. A tender point is strictly " local. " The obvious way to identify a trigger point is " push on a spot and it hurts someplace else. " The pain referral pattern for trigger points, however, is well documented. Because of this, it is also fairly easy to " work backward. " It hurts at B, therefor I will push at A and see if there is a referred pain sensation. At any rate, once a trigger point has been identified, treatment is equally easy. Simply take your thumb, a finger tip, or a hard rounded object of about the same dimension, and press deeply and firmly into the trigger point. On a scale of 0-10, you press until the max level on the scale is reached. You then hold that pressure until (1) the pain stops referring and changes to local only where being pressed, and (2) the local pain level drops to just " finger pressure. " Because trigger points can sometimes be " layered, " repeat this procedure to see if the pain comes back at a deeper level. You can add little refinements by making circular or cross fiber motions while holding the sustained pressure but you don't need to. That's all there is to it. For chronic, long-standing trigger points, you will probably need to do this for 6-10 sessions before you can make it go away. Others you can get rid of fairly quickly. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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