Pompal 09.
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2011
- Messages
- 43,916
- Reaction score
- 52
- Points
- 48
HI,
I think this should be a really easy one, which is why I'm frustrated! I'm a new therapist. This man has had shoulder and arm soreness for siz weeks (much more detail below). I've worked on him twice in the last week: The first time he felt pain-free for two hours, then the shoulder started seizing up again, and, he said, MORE FREQUENTLY although the pain wasn't more intense. The second time, he started the massage n pain, felt pain-free 3/4s of the way through the massage, and began to seize up again in the last ten minutes. Here's more background info:
His pain is on the top of the shoulder (upper trap, supraspinatus, infraspinatus at insertion to humerus) that sometimes moves into upper arm AND all the way down to outside of the pinky. He says it's NOT a shooting pain or a bad pain, merely a nagging muscle soreness, but really nagging. He's had it for six weeks and thinks he got it sleeping (on his stomach, sometimes with head up and back on a pillow, shortening lev scap and splenius capitis). It will wake him in the night. He can make it go away by working on TPs in traps, infraspin and rhoms and with stretching, but it always comes back in a few hours. He can reproduce it by tilting head to opposite shoulder, and we can reproduce the pain down the arm by working the insertion of the infraspin at the humerus (which is REALLY bound up). Otherwise, the areas that seem very seized up are all traps and especially upper, the rhoms on both sides, the upper 2/3rds of the scalenes, and the insertions of the supraspin and infraspin. (Hope you're all enjoying my abbrevs.)
The first session (one-hour a week ago), I worked:
rhom, subscap, infraspinatus, supraspinatus, traps, scalenes, lev scap
All but subscap and lower traps seemed involved but seemed to release easily.
He felt pain-free when he left and for a full two hours, then it seized up as if he had never had a massage, AND he said it seemed to be seizing up MORE FREQUENTLY although not hurting more. The second session a week later, his shoulder seemed much more seized up than the first time, and as if it were having trouble relaxing, and I was not getting good releases.
I worked all the above plus pec major and minor, coracobrach, deltoid and triceps.
After an hour of work (forty minutes prone), he sat up, tilted his head to the side to check, and said he again felt pain-free. He lay down again and I started working the other shoulder, and the 'bad' shoulder started to seize up for the first time in the massage. We noticed it at the same time: I found myself returning to the rhomboids on that side and saying, "wow, these seem newly tight" just as he was saying, "it's starting to hurt again." The neck muscles did not seem strained in the headrest, though I wondered at that option. But he left, it seems, back at the beginning. And is coming back next Wednedsay.
I'll check in with him today and tomorrow, but...any ideas?
THANK YOU!
I think this should be a really easy one, which is why I'm frustrated! I'm a new therapist. This man has had shoulder and arm soreness for siz weeks (much more detail below). I've worked on him twice in the last week: The first time he felt pain-free for two hours, then the shoulder started seizing up again, and, he said, MORE FREQUENTLY although the pain wasn't more intense. The second time, he started the massage n pain, felt pain-free 3/4s of the way through the massage, and began to seize up again in the last ten minutes. Here's more background info:
His pain is on the top of the shoulder (upper trap, supraspinatus, infraspinatus at insertion to humerus) that sometimes moves into upper arm AND all the way down to outside of the pinky. He says it's NOT a shooting pain or a bad pain, merely a nagging muscle soreness, but really nagging. He's had it for six weeks and thinks he got it sleeping (on his stomach, sometimes with head up and back on a pillow, shortening lev scap and splenius capitis). It will wake him in the night. He can make it go away by working on TPs in traps, infraspin and rhoms and with stretching, but it always comes back in a few hours. He can reproduce it by tilting head to opposite shoulder, and we can reproduce the pain down the arm by working the insertion of the infraspin at the humerus (which is REALLY bound up). Otherwise, the areas that seem very seized up are all traps and especially upper, the rhoms on both sides, the upper 2/3rds of the scalenes, and the insertions of the supraspin and infraspin. (Hope you're all enjoying my abbrevs.)
The first session (one-hour a week ago), I worked:
rhom, subscap, infraspinatus, supraspinatus, traps, scalenes, lev scap
All but subscap and lower traps seemed involved but seemed to release easily.
He felt pain-free when he left and for a full two hours, then it seized up as if he had never had a massage, AND he said it seemed to be seizing up MORE FREQUENTLY although not hurting more. The second session a week later, his shoulder seemed much more seized up than the first time, and as if it were having trouble relaxing, and I was not getting good releases.
I worked all the above plus pec major and minor, coracobrach, deltoid and triceps.
After an hour of work (forty minutes prone), he sat up, tilted his head to the side to check, and said he again felt pain-free. He lay down again and I started working the other shoulder, and the 'bad' shoulder started to seize up for the first time in the massage. We noticed it at the same time: I found myself returning to the rhomboids on that side and saying, "wow, these seem newly tight" just as he was saying, "it's starting to hurt again." The neck muscles did not seem strained in the headrest, though I wondered at that option. But he left, it seems, back at the beginning. And is coming back next Wednedsay.
I'll check in with him today and tomorrow, but...any ideas?
THANK YOU!