Hey guys. I did a search, but oddly couldn't find anything. In fact, I scoured all my books at home and still oddly could not find anything on a torn muscle.
I have a client who is presenting pain in his deltoid, superior (proximal) to the deltoid attachment on the humerus, roughly on the medial (to anterior) aspect of the deltoid. He also has sensitive trigger points pretty much everywhere in his upper back/shoulders area. He's been injured many times (serious car accident, roping steers, etc). He re-injured this recently when lifting weights.
He is going to get an MRI soon, but not before I work on him next and he thinks "his muscle is torn" also "it's not rrrtatercuff", his doctor told him. lol. Love doctors and their view of muscles. His doctor also told him that his erector spinae was his "tenderloin." uhhhmmmmm. yeah. (hello psoas!)
Anyway, I'm interested in any ideas on treating this, but mainly I'm wondering that if it IS torn, is it contraindicated to work the area (that he thinks is torn)? Obviously the whole muscle is not torn, just possibly a portion of it. He feels the pain mainly when he reaches his arm straight forward, perpendicular to the ground.
I've worked trigger points and did fascial meltling in all the major nearby areas including subscap, pec minor, supraspinatus, traps, rhomboids, pec major, both teres, and more. I have not addressed much of biceps, or brachioradialis. This helped the pain for a day or so, and then it came back. Then he did more roping and then it got a lot worse. He has promised no roping and we are planning 3 sessions within the next week paired with his self care to hopefully start to take care of it. He is very self motivated and has an ultrasonic machine at home that he just started using.
Any comments welcome. But mainly I'm wondering about the torn muscle thing. Would it make it work to do deep work over an area of muscle that is torn? Or are tears relatively normal and cause pain but benefit from deep work? Also, if you know where they mention it in a book that would be very helpful as I am completely freaked out that I can't find what seems to be the most basic think in any of my extensive massage book collection. (or maybe it's not extensive?) Thanks.
I have a client who is presenting pain in his deltoid, superior (proximal) to the deltoid attachment on the humerus, roughly on the medial (to anterior) aspect of the deltoid. He also has sensitive trigger points pretty much everywhere in his upper back/shoulders area. He's been injured many times (serious car accident, roping steers, etc). He re-injured this recently when lifting weights.
He is going to get an MRI soon, but not before I work on him next and he thinks "his muscle is torn" also "it's not rrrtatercuff", his doctor told him. lol. Love doctors and their view of muscles. His doctor also told him that his erector spinae was his "tenderloin." uhhhmmmmm. yeah. (hello psoas!)
Anyway, I'm interested in any ideas on treating this, but mainly I'm wondering that if it IS torn, is it contraindicated to work the area (that he thinks is torn)? Obviously the whole muscle is not torn, just possibly a portion of it. He feels the pain mainly when he reaches his arm straight forward, perpendicular to the ground.
I've worked trigger points and did fascial meltling in all the major nearby areas including subscap, pec minor, supraspinatus, traps, rhomboids, pec major, both teres, and more. I have not addressed much of biceps, or brachioradialis. This helped the pain for a day or so, and then it came back. Then he did more roping and then it got a lot worse. He has promised no roping and we are planning 3 sessions within the next week paired with his self care to hopefully start to take care of it. He is very self motivated and has an ultrasonic machine at home that he just started using.
Any comments welcome. But mainly I'm wondering about the torn muscle thing. Would it make it work to do deep work over an area of muscle that is torn? Or are tears relatively normal and cause pain but benefit from deep work? Also, if you know where they mention it in a book that would be very helpful as I am completely freaked out that I can't find what seems to be the most basic think in any of my extensive massage book collection. (or maybe it's not extensive?) Thanks.