Don’t Trust Your Pain

We have all experienced physical pain (in fact, my own history of low back pain is what interested me in sports physical therapy).

Maybe you injured your back lifting weights. Perhaps you hurt you shoulder playing catch with your kids. You may have irritated your knee when training for a marathon.

You decide to see your doctor, physical therapist, or medical provider of choice. They then prescribe the recommended treatment or “plan of care.”

Throughout the course of treatment, you determine if you are getting better by monitoring your pain. Is it decreasing? Is it staying the same or getting worse? If your pain is improving, the treatment is working. If not, it is failing. Pretty straight forward.

That is the way that standard physical therapy views treatment but is short sighted.

Modifying your daily activities or exercise routines will help pain quickly improve in the short term but the root causes of the pain remain. This is when many people stop going to physical therapy or performing their home exercise routine.

This pain-free period of time provides the body with an opportunity to address the root causes of pain. This is essential if you wish to prevent it from returning in the future while returning to full activity.

Pain is a prediction made by the brain. When pain continuously occurs during a movement or activity, the body learns to expect it. This expectation must lessen for pain to ultimately disappear during aggravating activities. If you really want to nerd out on pain science, check out this article by my friend and fellow physical therapist, Zac Cupples.

Imagine that you have lower back pain every time that you attempt to lift something off the floor such as deadlifting a barbell in the gym or emptying dishes out of the dishwasher.

The brain has an expectation that this bent over position will hurt. Therefore, similar positions must be experienced without pain. Does this mean that you should start deadlifting on day 1 of treatment. Absolutely not. The best solution is to start with something less threatening and build from there. Below is an example of a great activity that physical therapy patients with low back pain start with.

The brain will then determine that these positions are not threatening, ultimately reducing risk of pain in the future while facilitating a full return to active life.

If you are an active adult ready to solve chronic pain for good, contact us to receive a customized home exercise program today!

Why Some Warmups Aren’t Useful

As performance physical therapists in Bethesda and Chevy Chase, we work within a very knowledgeable and active community.  Our clients and patients understand the importance of warming up.

Warming up is commonly touted as essential for anyone wishing to avoid injury during exercise, performance training, or running.

We agree with this statement; however, warmup routines are often implemented in a non-productive way.

There is a time and place for everything, however this does not mean that you need to stretch, roll around on the ground, and perform “activation” drills prior to being ready for exercise.

In addition to increasing total body temperature, a warmup routine should prepare the body for the specific workout that is going to take place. For this reason, we call warming up “movement preparation.” The body is being prepared to move!

Movement preparation should include drills that train the skills necessary for the day’s workout. Many times, these drills will look similar to the exercises within that day’s work out.

If you are getting ready to run, perform activities that practice things necessary to run effectively. If you are going to lift weights, practice movements similar to the lifts you are going to perform (ie. If you are going to squat, then squat in your warmup!).

This advise applies regardless of whether you are healthy, injured, in performance physical therapy, or training for performance.

Below are 2 drills that we often use during movement preparation prior to running. Each drill practices single leg balance, the ability to shock absorb on one leg, and trunk rotation. These are all attributes necessary for running.

Single leg knee to chest
Forward lunge with cross connect

Furthermore, if you have been sitting at a desk for the majority of the day, you may need a more comprehensive warmup. On the other hand, if you have an active job requiring you to move in a variety of different ways then your warmup may not need to be as comprehensive.

Movement preparation is necessary, however it is essential to be purposeful, rather than mindlessly performing the same thing before every workout.

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