| ||||||||||
| Efficient movement is the key to success when dealing with marathoners and triathletes. When your muscles are moving freely through a full range of motion, you will finish strong and with the best time you are capable of. However, the extreme demands of triathlon and marathon training can damage muscle tissue, causing overworked muscle (and other soft tissue) to become chronically shorter- a result of fibrous scar tissue adhesions that build up within muscles and between muscles. Normal muscle acts like a bundle of rubber bands, able to contract and lengthen without restriction. Scarred muscle loses this ability, behaving more like a bundle of rubber bands with globs of glue stuck to them. In other words, the muscle can't expand and contract and can't slide freely. This leads to weakness, tightness, and often extreme pain. Because certain muscles have nerves that pass through them, scar tissue build-up entraps the nerve causing symptoms like tingling, numbness, weakness and pain. There are four basic processes that cause muscle damage and scar-tissue adhesions:
Let's look at Carpal Tunnel syndrome, an increasingly common injury that has expanded beyond the workplace to the gym. Symptoms of this syndrome include pain, numbness and tingling into the hand caused by nerve entrapment. An ART practitioner will find where the nerve entrapment is located, whether it is in the neck, shoulder, forearm or wrist and break-up the adhesion, releasing the entrapped nerve and ultimately alleviating the symptoms. Active Release Technique is a patented soft tissue treatment that may help heal that nagging injury you've had for years. Not injured? It can also be used to effectively promote injury prevention. Types of conditions successfully treated with ART are very diverse:
Commonly asked questions and answers:
References:
| ||||||||||
|
Thank you so much for restoring the gift of running to me. After visiting several doctors over the years, no one could figure out what was exactly wrong. I finally went to SEMI, and was diagnosed with tendonitis, bursitis and a heel spur, and was told that surgery would be needed to fix the problem. The surgery was performed successfully in September 2002. In December 2003 I went on to win the age group title at Canadian cross-country championships. Thank you.
© 2009 SEMI - Sports & Exercise Medicine Institute. All Rights Reserved