Professional Documents
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Trigger Point Manual
Trigger Point Manual
Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
This book is written for you. Its divided into sections, each covering a different aspect of trigger points, and what you can do about them.
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
Most people have painful trigger points at some stage of their life
There is a long history of myofascial trigger points. They were originally described by ancient Greek texts and were noted throughout the Middle Ages. However they masqueraded under many names. These include brositis nodule, myelogenosis, non-rheumatic arthritis etc. They were nally codied by Dr. Janet Travell in the 1970s. She was a remarkable woman who was the personal physician to President John F Kennedy and was one of the main people who
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
helped him recover from injuries in World War II. She created the name of myofascial trigger points and with Dr. David Simons, mapped out the many myofascial trigger points over the body. A trigger point is dened as a hyperirritable locus within a tight band of skeletal muscle. But what does this mean?
Lets look a little closer at how muscles work. In the picture above there is a small knot of muscle labeled CTrP- this is the myofascial trigger point. When you have a trigger point, your muscle is in spasm, it is irritable and tender. It pulls a thin band of taut muscle which runs the length of the muscle bre. This feels like a guitar string within the bulk of your muscle. Life After Pain
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next The picture above is a photomicrograph of a myofascial trigger point within skeletal muscle. In the lower half you can see parallel bands of so-called I-bands & A-bands. They are evenly spread. In the upper half there is a central elliptical area where the bands are squeezed incredibly tightly together. This is the myofascial trigger point. The band of bres on either side of this are stretched further apart than normal. This is where the trigger point is.
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Introduction What are trigger points The diagram on the right shows that each of these small areas of spasm is called a contraction knot. Actually a number of these are present in each myofascial trigger point. When you run your ngers over a muscle that has triggers you can feel them as thickened bands, knots or tight chords like a guitar string At rst it may take a bit of practise, but once you know what to look for, youll be able to locate trigger points reliably. Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
The cause of myofascial trigger points is shown in this picture. The key structure is the muscle spindle bre. This is a nerve arranged in a spiral, looking and behaving like a spring. It is found in parallel with your muscle bres. When it is stretched, it res a message to your brain. Therefore if the muscle bre reaches beyond a critical length, the spindle will re. The message then goes up your nerve to the spinal cord and zooms straight back to the muscle bre causing it to contract.
The Key Point here is that the cause of trigger points is a natural process in our body. Its necessary for muscles to be able to contract quickly as a protection that stops damage to the muscle, and also to your joints and bones. For example if you trip over, your neck muscles will tighten immediately to prevent yourself from hitting your head on the ground. This simple reex arc and the message from the muscle spindle usually does not go higher. This Life After Pain
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
means that the spindle sets the length of your muscle, and controls how tight or exible the muscle is. There are millions of these muscle spindles throughout the body and they are there to allow the complex movements and postures that your body performs without your conscious thought. Problems (and trigger points) happen when your muscle spindle becomes sensitised - for example after your have been injured. Then it will not allow the muscle bre to lengthen at all and will cause a localised knot of spasm. This localised spasm is the myofascial trigger point.
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
There are other symptoms trigger points can cause that can be confused with other problems. For example triggers can cause: - Tension headaches - Tightened muscles which then compress nerves. For example the scalene muscle can compress the nerve bundle that runs down your arm, causing tingling and numbness in your arm. - Pain deep in your back/abdomen/pelvis. This can be sometimes mistaken for organ pain - Tooth pain - several muscles in your head and jaw refer pain into the teeth Life After Pain
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Introduction What are trigger points This is the motor end plate enlarged. Messages from the nerve are transferred to the muscle by neurotransmitters. This means that this part of the muscle is particularly active and therefore more vulnerable to abnormal spindle bre activity. Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next This is a special stain showing where the motor end plates enter the muscle and therefore where myofascial trigger points are found.
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
Here is another common pain pattern from a gluteus minimus myofascial trigger point. Note how the pattern behaves like sciatica. Sciatica is usually caused by irritation of the sciatic nerve by a prolapsed disc. However in this case a myofascial trigger point causes the pain pattern. A MRI could show a normal disc and treatment of the trigger point would stop the pain. Its important to note here that trigger points can occur in conjunction with other problems. For example, this person may have a prolapsed disc, as well as gluteus minimus trigger points. To gain proper pain relief, you would need to treat both problems. You can also get clusters of triggers. What usually happens here is that one or two primary triggers set off pain and tension. Secondary triggers then form around the painful area. When this happens, all triggers need to be found and deactivated in order to fully release the area.
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
A simple way to recognise trigger point is this - by pressing on an active trigger point, you should be able to recreate the pain pattern. For example, if you nd the trapezius trigger from the picture on page 10, if its active and you press on it, you should feel pain up in your neck. Its always important to conduct a full medical examination for other underlying problems. Chest pain can be caused by trigger points in the pectoralis major. It can also be caused by heart problems, so you need to rule that out rst. Once youve switched off a trigger point, it can return. Usually switching off a trigger turns it from an active to a latent trigger point. If a trigger point is latent, then it is sitting there like an accident waiting to happen. Continuing to stretch and treat the site of a latent trigger point will help prevent it coming back. Stiffness can often be a symptom of latent trigger points, so treating them proactively can improve exibility. As with most muscle related problems, gentle, regular exercise, stretching and good nutrition can help prevent triggers coming back.
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Introduction What are trigger points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next
Whats Next?
If you got this manual as part of my free email course, heres what youre going to get next: Message Message Message Message Message Message Message 2 3 4 4 5 6 7 Great free tool to easily Find Triggers anywhere in your body Getting Rid of triggers - why you cant and why its a good thing 6 Steps to help Stop Triggers Coming Back Are You Creating Triggers? (How to make sure you arent) 3 Core Muscle Strengthening Exercises The Really Advanced Stuff How to Switch Off Triggers - Pain Free Technique
If you havent signed up for this free email course, heres where you can go to sign up: The Life After Pain Trigger Point Treatment Email Course Best Regards, Dr Jonathan Kuttner. MBBCh, Dip O&G, FRNZCGP, Dip Sports Med, Dip MSM, FAFMM.
DISCLAIMER The information contained in this manual is based on sources and information reasonably believed to be accurate as of the time it was recorded or created. However, this material deals with topics that are constantly changing and are subject to ongoing changes related to technology and the market place as well as legal and related compliance issues. Therefore, the completeness and current accuracy of the materials cannot be guaranteed. These materials do not constitute legal, compliance, medical, or related advice. The end user of this information should therefore use the contents of this manual and the materials as a general guideline and not as the ultimate source of current information and when appropriate the user should consult their own accounting, construction or other advisors. Any case studies, examples, illustrations cannot guarantee that the user will achieve similar results. In fact, your results may vary signicantly and factors such as your health, medical condition and many other circumstances may and will cause results to vary. Privacy Policy: I never sell, rent, trade or lend any information about my subscribers to anyone, for any reason, whatsoever. I assure you that your privacy is respected and well protected.
Why we get Trigger Points Where you get Triggers How to Recognise Triggers Whats Coming Next