ETIOLOGY: This
results from irritation, trauma, or immobilization of interplanar
fascia within and surrounding the muscles. It is often painful
and prone to flare-up from acute injury. It is a complicating
factor to other diagnoses and is a common residual from
significant soft tissue injury. It can be minimized with early
treatment. It may be associated with sleep disturbance.
APPROPRIATE CARE:
Once established, myofascitis is hard to treat. It is
easily aggravated by overuse, yet passive and active tissue
movement provide the best long term outcome. Care includes
aggressive deep myofascial work, long term stretching exercise,
heating modalities and conditioning if response is poor.
EXPECTED FREQUENCY AND DURATION
OF CARE: 2 to 3 sessions per week initially,
reducing to weekly sessions if beneficial response is seen within
the first 2-4 weeks. The patient must be self-dependent. Care
beyond 6-8 weeks is appropriate PRN only if the patient complies
with active stretching and ROM home exercise.
TOTAL: 10-14 VISITS OVER 8-12
WEEKS.
WEEK |
CARE |
PROGRESS |
M |
T |
W |
T |
F |
S |
1-4 |
Aggressive myofascial work
Heat
Stretching |
Great subjective pain reduction initially with
gradual improvement
2-3 /week |
X |
|
X |
|
X |
|
5-8 |
Deep myofascial work
Home stretching
Active strengthening exercise |
Gradual progress with significant pain reduction post
treatment
1 /week |
|
X |
|
|
X |
|
> 8 |
As above PRN |
Permanent and stationary with flare-up management |
|
|
|
X |
|
|
ATTENUATING FACTORS:
The patient's sleep habits, mental stress levels and compliance with home exercise may all contribute to reduced
response.
PRN = per required need (patient requests)
Return to CHIROPRACTIC CARE PARAMETERS
|