Posts Tagged ‘supraspinatus tendon’

Gentle Shoulder Rehab: Just A Suggestion

October 31st, 2009

There is an old saying that suggests that there are many ways to skin a cat. Just so, and there are also many ways to stretch and rehab any joint, including the shoulder.

I sometimes feel that there is a gap in the way that we as therapists and trainers handle the recovery and rehabilitation phase of shoulder injury; that the categories are sub-divided too starkly into black and white, passive and active, low-stress mobilising and strength building. It seems to me that we should more often look at what the individual needs and build in an intermediate phase, where act as guide but let the injured individual be inventive and therefore participatory in their own recovery. They improve faster as a result. Encourage them to clean windows, polish floors, bounce balls against a wall – all low, (or at least controllable), effort activities that help to distract from the discomfort but also gives a sense of achievement.

This is not revolutionary thinking by any means as business management techniques are always telling us that if the employee ‘buys in’, then productivity and contentment rise! Why should patients and sports people be any different?

Each individual is just that, individual, and has different physical structure, varying levels of physical activity, abilities, age, expectations and needs. It seems intuitive, therefore, that while those who are professionals endeavour to tailor recovery regimes, that they should, in part at least, be led by the recipient.

I am a great fan of The Rotater and, increasingly, of Kettlebell workouts, but they have very different ‘points of entry’ in the timeline of recovery – the Rotater can be used fairly early in the recovery phase – gently at first, ramping up the intensity as pain reduces and range of motion increases and until it becomes an integral part of any workout, prehab or sporting event. Kettlebell is fantastic as a total body workout that is low impact and wonderful as shoulder mobiliser, BUT is only appropriate rather further down the recovery road!

The following video tries to outline a fairly ‘loose’ approach to mobilising the shoulder – be inventive, work within your means to start with, gradually increasing range and intensity, trust your therapist or trainer, but trust yourself as well.

As with all advice on medical conditions, check with your doctor, osteopath, physiotherapist, chiropractor or trainer before embarking on any new regime.

Scott Welch – Boxer takes on the Rotater

August 31st, 2009

Scott Welch, former professional heavyweight boxer and all-round fitness advocate has suffered from general shoulder and rotator cuff problems and has recently been using the Rotater to increase his range of motion, a unique device developed in the US for just this type of problem.SCOTTW_ROTATER

After just a couple of weeks of use, Scott tells me that “the Rotater has really helped to loosen up my shoulders, increasing range and flexibility. I will definately be encouraging the lads to use it before and after sparring and glove work. I can also see it being useful before competition as part of their pre-fight prep…….good one!”.

Former boxer, amateur and professional, picking up British & Commonwealth Champ and WBO Heavyweight Champ of Great Britain titles and was a contender for the Heavyweight Champion of the World (sadly lost on points).

He now coaches boxing at the Hove Amateur Boxing Club, keeps fit with road and off-road cycling and undertakes SCOTT_Brad_Pitt_02events like the Marathon Des Sables for charity. Just for good measure, Scott starred as Horace ‘Good Night’ Anderson in Snatch alongside Brad Pitt! His moto and attitude to life is “to do us much as I can as fast as I can”.

NSAID in Shoulder Therapy or NOT?

August 28th, 2009

The use of  non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) is widespread in medical prescribing worldwide and over the counter self-medication is on the increase.

Anyone recovering from shoulder surgery, especially those affecting the rotater cuff tendons, should all be aware of recent animal research by David B. Cohen, MD, Sumito Kawamura, MD, John R. Ehteshami, MD, and Scott A. Rodeo, MD.

Their paper suggests a hypothesis that suggests ‘traditional non-selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and cyclooxygenase-2–specific non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs interfere with tendon-to-bone healing’.

This is not the same as saying that human tissues and tendons will react in the same way, but read for yourselves and draw your own conclusions.

http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=17538154

http://www.jbjs.org.uk/cgi/content/abstract/91-B/2/259