Myofascial Release
At dundalk physical therapy we are experts in advanced myofascial release techniques. Myofascial Release is a highly specialized stretching technique used by physical therapists to treat patients with a variety of soft tissue problems. It quite often forms an important part of a physical therapy treatment.
To understand what Myofascial Release is and why it works, you have to understand a little about fascia. Fascia is a thin tissue that covers all the organs of the body. This tissue covers every muscle and every fiber within each muscle. All muscle stretching, then, is actually stretching of the fascia and the muscle, the myofascial unit. When muscle fibers are injured, the fibers and the fascia which surrounds it become short and tight. Prolonged static postures, for example slouching over a desk or long hours driving day after day can also cause restrictions in the myofascial unit. This uneven stress can be transmitted through the fascia to other parts of the body, causing pain and a variety of other symptoms in areas you often wouldn’t expect. Myofascial Release treats these symptoms by releasing the uneven tightness in injured fascia.
In other words, Myofascial Release is stretching of the fascia. The stretch is guided by feedback the therapist feels from the patient’s body. This feedback tells the therapist how much force to use, the direction of the stretch and how long to stretch. Small areas of muscle are stretched at a time. Sometimes the therapist uses only two fingers to stretch a small part of a muscle. The feedback the therapist feels determines which muscles are stretched and in what order.
Each Myofascial Release technique contains the same components. The physical therapist finds the area of tightness. A light stretch is applied to the tight area. The physical therapist waits for the tissue to relax and then increases the stretch. The process is repeated until the area is fully relaxed. Then, the next area is stretched.
The therapist will be able to find sore spots just by feel. Often, patients are unable to pinpoint some sore spots or have grown used to them until the physical therapist finds them. The size and sensitivity of these sore spots, called Myofascial Trigger Points, will decrease with treatment.
Myofascial Release is not massage. Myofascial Release is used to equalize muscle tension throughout the body. Unequal muscle tension can compress nerves and muscles causing pain. Progress is measured by a decrease in the patient’s pain and by an improvement in overall posture and range of motion.
Our Services
• Physical Therapy
• Back Pain
• Neck Pain
• Shoulder Pain
• Sports Injures
• Knee Injuries
• Chronic Pain
• Athlete Screening & Injury Prevention
• Rehabilitation from a Whiplash Injury
• Prehabilitation
• Neurodynamic Mobilisation
• Postural Assessment
• Myofascial Release
• Sports Massage
• Joint Mobilisation
• Ergonomic Assessment
• Exercise Rehabilitation