Powerlifting Injuries - How Muscles Get Injured
And How To Treat Them by Ken Kinakin, D.C., C.S.C.S.
Powerlifting injuries can come from a variety of sources. Examples
of this may be poor lifting technique, lifting beyond your capabilities
or training too often without proper rest or recuperation. All of
these sources can lead to microtrauma, or small injury, that can
get worse over time. Because you don't recognize that the is injury
there, you reinjure yourself frequently. This repeated microtrauma
can eventually have a profound effect on the specific action of
the joint and the surrounding tissues. The effects of the microtrauma
include the microtearing of the muscle, the sheath around the muscle
and the adjacent connective tissue, as well as stress to the tendon
and its bony attachments. The microtearing of the muscle tissue
leads to microscopic bleeding, all of which affects the entire area
around the injury, contributing to what is commonly know as inflammation.
Most people assume that inflammation can be easy to detect like
the swelling around a badly sprained ankle. This is not always the
case however. Microtrauma causes a corresponding low level of inflammation
that cannot be seen or palpated.
The body responds to this myofascitis, inflammation of the muscle
and fascia, by forming fibrous adhesions, or scar tissue in the
muscle, between the sheaths of adjacent muscle groups and between
the fascia and the muscle sheaths. These fibrous adhesions limit
the ease and range of motion of muscles and joints and can decrease
the muscles lengthening and shortening capabilities. Once the normal
biomechanics of the joint is altered, this can lead to further inflammation
and the pattern becomes a vicious cycle of long-term wear and tear.
This fibrous adhesion pattern can be seen in people who do certain
exercises such as bench press and complain of the same pain in the
exact same spot. This doesn't happen by chance. The fibrous adhesion
formed in the shoulder muscle is preventing proper motion and pulling
on the various soft tissue structures like muscle, fascia, tendon
and bursae when trying to perform the bench press.
Taking time off lifting will decrease the chronic inflammation,
but it will not decrease the fibrous adhesion. As soon as you start
lifting again, the fibrous adhesion will increase the inflammation
and stop you from doing this exercise due to pain. An analogy would
be if your car tire hit the curb on a icy road altering the tire
alignment causing the tire and car to shake when driving. Putting
the car in the garage for one month and not driving will prevent
further damage to the tire and steering linkages, but it will not
fix the wheel alignment. You have to take it to a mechanic that
will properly assess the altered wheel alignment and then he balances
it until it spins perfectly again. The same thing occurs when you
have an injury. You have to identify all the possible fibrous adhesions
in the muscle, then perform some soft tissue therapy on the muscle
to break up all those fibrous adhesions in the muscle, muscle sheaths,
tendons, ligaments and fascia. This will restore normal motion to
the muscle and joint allowing proper movement and function. One
of the latest soft tissue techniques that is being used on athletes
all over the world is call Active Release Technique (or A.R.T.)
that was created by Dr. Micahel Leahy D.C. A.R.T. is aimed at manually
breaking up adhesions, the scar tissue that can entrap muscles,
tendons, ligaments and even nerves.
The new procedure is similar to some massage techniques, only
it's more aggressive. You must be able to locate the adhesion and
know how to use active motion of the body part to break them up.
To break up an adhesion, you must actually put your thumb or fingers
on the scar tissue and make it move in a way that breaks it away
from the tissue it has adhesed to. Depending on the amount of chronic
inflammation and severity of the adhesion, the pain can be minimal
to quite intense, but the procedure is only done a few times and
the relief from the injury can be almost immediate at times. Sometimes
with less severe injuries only three to six sessions are needed
to restore normal muscle and joint function along with proper guidance
of exercise technique, stretching and diet to prevent the injury
from reoccurring. More severe injuries can take longer and other
forms of therapy must be regularly performed to fully restore normal
muscle and joint function. After the adhesions are broken up, a
rehabilitation program should be used to strengthen the muscles
since certain muscles in the point will have been not properly strengthen
due to altered biomechanics.
This has been a very useful and common sense therapy that has worked
very well for my patients and complements all the other treatment
modalities I use. It has allowed many of my patients to get back
to the weight room pain free, full strength or runners back running
at their full potential. If you have a current injury that will
not go away, even with other forms of treatments or rest, this maybe
an appropriate therapy for you to try.
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