Guest guest Posted March 30, 2004 Report Share Posted March 30, 2004 Stacey - I agree with what you have been told so far by everybody else that it sounds like you had a spasm. All of the advice you have been given was also good. I had a post awhile back about cramps and spasms but will do a quick recap for you here. (I really need to start filing some of these so I can quickly find them when I need them instead of rewriting things). At any rate, there are three ways to manually stop a cramp or spasm, regardless of where it is: direct pressure, reciprocal inhibition, and origin-insertion approximation. These are the technical names for the techniques but they are not as complicated as they sound. Direct pressure is just that. Take your fist and push it into the muscle as hard as you can and hold the pressure. Works well on the front of the thigh but not so well if you are trying to do it on yourself for the middle of your own back. Reciprocal inhibition basically means make the muscle do the opposite of the action causing the cramp of spasm. Using your back as an example, assuming it was one or more of your ESG's (Erector Spinae Group) that extends or pulls your back straight or backwards, you would simply bend or roll forward. A muscle can't stay cramped when the opposite action is performed. The third technique requires a knowledge of anatomy and kineseology because you have to know (1) the muscle itself (2) the muscle's origin and insertion points and (3) the actions that the muscle does. Assuming you do know all three, the technique is to grasp the origin point with one hand and the insertion point with the other and squeeze your hands toward each other. Again, not one you could do yourself on your own back. I just mention it for info. As to which muscle it might have been, I can't tell from the information in your posts. If you can give me more detail, like exactly where in the back, one side or both, total area involved, etc, I probably could figure it out for you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2004 Report Share Posted March 31, 2004 > > > Direct pressure is just that. Take your fist and push it into the > muscle as hard as you can and hold the pressure. Works well on the > front of the thigh but not so well if you are trying to do it on > yourself for the middle of your own back. > > What can work on your back is a tennis ball - put the tennis ball in a sock so you have more control - hang it over your shoulder with the ball in the back - put your back up against a wall - find the place that hurts - or in other terms feels better when you push on it and apply pressure. You can do it laying down if you have a mat or something. Floors are usually too hard and beds usually too soft - massage mats and tumbling mats usually work pretty good. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2004 Report Share Posted March 31, 2004 Well Mike, I won't argue with you - the direct pressure method is not usually the fastest way to relieve the spasm - I generally use the opposite action to relieve acute spasm - esp when they occur in my calves. However, you said that direct pressure was hard to do on your own back and I was just suggesting one way that someone can do direct pressure on their own backs. I think it works wonderfully and I always have a sock with a tennis ball handy. Since most of my pain occurs when I'm not with someone who can help me I find it invaluable to know self help techniques. I've also become in tune enough with my body that I can usually tell when something muscular is starting and head it off before it becomes acute - that's why I have a date with my tennis ball at least once a day. I'm also working hard to determine what triggers my muscle problems and correct them. I appreciate all the info you provide - keep it comming :-) > > What can work on your back is a tennis ball - put the tennis ball in > a sock so you have more control - hang it over your shoulder with > the ball in the back - put your back up against a wall - find the > place that hurts - or in other terms feels better when you push on > it and apply pressure. > > ---------------- > > The problem with the tennis ball, direct pressure, approach is that > when you are in the middle of a screaming spasm, you don't want to > take the time to go look for a sock and ball. You want that spasm > GONE and gone NOW. The fastest way to handle it is to force the > muscle into the opposite action. > > After you get it eased to the point where you can uncross your eyes > and get a reasonably normal breath - then you go get the sock and > ball to help further relax the muscle. > > As a practitioner, where we find the greatest application for the > direct pressure method is if someone gets a back spasm or calf > charlie-horse while face down on the table. For the back, if they > are prone on the table, you can't move them into a forward bending > posture without first getting them up on their knees. I would > IMMEDIATELY apply the direct pressure to the tight back muscle to > get it to ease up. Then, and only then, would I get them into an > upright position and go do the reciprocal inhibition to further > relax the muscle. > > And while the muscle is relaxing from the forward bending position, > I would use some massage techniques to help it along. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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