HouAnswerGuy
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- Jul 17, 2010
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Hi everyone. I have a question about a client, and am wondering if you all could give me some feedback.
I have a client who is very overweight, who also has some pretty severe foot issues. She dislocated her 2nd toe years ago, and a podorothist just figured it out this year; she is scheduled for surgery this fall to reposition the toe.
In the meantime, she has a very hard time walking, which translates up through her body in a myriad of ways. I usually do a lot of work on her legs & hips to help with circulation & reduce TPs that cause her myofascial pain. But between her feet & her sedentary job, most of the help I provide dissipates btw our sessions.
This summer, it got very hot here. She was my first experience of pitting edema. oh! so THAT's what that looks like. wow. it really doesn't spring back at all.
So I told her that it is a CI. I am concerned about her body's ability to handle the extra fluid load. I have to change approaches, avoid deep & circulatory work. I told her I need her to see her MD. I even wrote a letter to her MD asking for his professional opinion. She had recently had a cardiology workup & everything was fine. But I am still concerned about her kidneys.
Well, she has been back twice now, w/o visiting the doc. I have continued to do mostly upper body work, MFR, etc. I have been avoiding her legs; I really want her MD to check out her kidneys, especially as she told me in the spring that she had had a kidney infection that she treated at home ( which I passed on to her MD).
However, the heat has passed. And during her last visit, her pitting edema had pretty much resolved. I feel like I still need to wait to hear from the doctor, but I can't make her go to see him. Since she is no longer presenting the pitting edema, does that mean I can work her lower extremities again? She really needs it; but at the same time, I really think she needs to have her kidney stuff checked out- especially before she heads in for surgery this autumn.
About a week after I first saw her pitting edema, I had another client present with it. She, however, had just seen her MD, who had told her that massage was excellent for her slow circulation, and that I should carry on with circulatory massage b/c her systems had checked out fine. So that has been in the back of my mind the whole time, as well.
Any feedback for me on this subject?
I have a client who is very overweight, who also has some pretty severe foot issues. She dislocated her 2nd toe years ago, and a podorothist just figured it out this year; she is scheduled for surgery this fall to reposition the toe.
In the meantime, she has a very hard time walking, which translates up through her body in a myriad of ways. I usually do a lot of work on her legs & hips to help with circulation & reduce TPs that cause her myofascial pain. But between her feet & her sedentary job, most of the help I provide dissipates btw our sessions.
This summer, it got very hot here. She was my first experience of pitting edema. oh! so THAT's what that looks like. wow. it really doesn't spring back at all.
So I told her that it is a CI. I am concerned about her body's ability to handle the extra fluid load. I have to change approaches, avoid deep & circulatory work. I told her I need her to see her MD. I even wrote a letter to her MD asking for his professional opinion. She had recently had a cardiology workup & everything was fine. But I am still concerned about her kidneys.
Well, she has been back twice now, w/o visiting the doc. I have continued to do mostly upper body work, MFR, etc. I have been avoiding her legs; I really want her MD to check out her kidneys, especially as she told me in the spring that she had had a kidney infection that she treated at home ( which I passed on to her MD).
However, the heat has passed. And during her last visit, her pitting edema had pretty much resolved. I feel like I still need to wait to hear from the doctor, but I can't make her go to see him. Since she is no longer presenting the pitting edema, does that mean I can work her lower extremities again? She really needs it; but at the same time, I really think she needs to have her kidney stuff checked out- especially before she heads in for surgery this autumn.
About a week after I first saw her pitting edema, I had another client present with it. She, however, had just seen her MD, who had told her that massage was excellent for her slow circulation, and that I should carry on with circulatory massage b/c her systems had checked out fine. So that has been in the back of my mind the whole time, as well.
Any feedback for me on this subject?