Monday, January 18, 2021

Neurovascular Compromise

 A common example of neuromuscular compromise is Thoracic Outlet Syndrome (TOS), when the nerves and / or blood vessels (brachial plexus) coming from the neck and going down the arm are subjected to pressure or abrasion (impingement) that compromises their normal function. 

Symptoms include numbness & tingling, reduced or altered sensation, or pain in the arm or hand.

Causes can be impingement between the scalenes (vertical muscles on the sides of the neck), between the clavicle & 1st rib, or a posterior distal clavicle (result of a direct frontal blow). Sometimes this is a sequela of whiplash injury; or chronic stress & tension affecting the neck, including postural stress; or from repetitive motion / overuse syndrome.  

I have precise, gentle adjustments to relieve the impingement, and give the patient stretches, exercises, and ergonomic counseling.


Monday, January 11, 2021

5 Secrets of the Right Pillow


IT PROVIDES CONSISTENT, RESISTIVE SUPPORT

to maintain the normal curve of the neck,

IT KEEPS THE HEAD IN LINE WITH THE SPINE

not bent up, or bent down,

IT DOES NOT SQUASH FLAT OR DEFORM

with movement during the night,

IT IS ORTHOPEDICALLY DESIGNED

to normalize posture during sleep,

IT WORKS FOR BOTH SIDE OR BACK SLEEPING

so you can change position.


Monday, January 4, 2021

Rotator Cuff

  Sometimes mistakenly thought to mean bones in the shoulder, the Rotator Cuff actually consists of 4 muscles which help maintain shoulder mobility, stability, & function.

These muscles are called the “S.I.T.S.” muscles, an acronym for the 4 components---the Supraspinatous, Infraspinatous, Teres minor, and Subscapularis muscles.

Of these 4, the Supraspinatous is most commonly injured. It attaches across the top of the scapula to the top of the humerus, the upper bone of the arm. “Swimmer’s shoulder” is an injury to the Supraspinatous tendon, caused by repetitive forceful adduction of the arm against the resistance of the water.   


Monday, December 28, 2020

How To Get A Headache

Some very common postures can give you a headache!

        Here's what to watch out for:

Leaning your head back to look upward toward a TV or computer monitor, or tilting the head backward to see a monitor through the near-focus part of bifocals, are common postural producers of headache. 

These postures causes the occiput (the bone across the back of the head)  to be stressed inferiorly. This inferiority may be more on one side or the other (unilateral) or global (bilateral). 

When patients present with this in my office, it may be in combination with a superiority of the posterior part of the second cervical vertebra, an additional complication which makes the headache even worse.

I make gentle, focused, precise adjustments that correct the problems without discomfort to the patient, and I provide ergonomic counseling to help keep this from happening again.  


Monday, December 21, 2020

A Piriformis Predicament

When there is pain, or numbness / tingling going down the leg, a patient’s first thought is often, “Uh-Oh. It must be a disc.”

Impingement of nerve(s) by a bulging disc can be the cause of these symptoms, but in the absence of any history of injury, such as a lifting strain or a fall or accident, or of disc problems, it is not necessarily the first thing suspected.

A common cause of such symptoms is impingement of the sciatic nerve underneath the piriformis muscle in the buttock. The piriformis may be in spasm, or the patient may have been sitting for prolonged times, or on hard surfaces, causing pressure on the sciatic nerve.

I release a piriformis spasm with the Activator instrument, and give the patient home care instructions and stretches to alleviate the problem.