Balance Lost?

Scott Champagne, PT.
Stay on the Baseball field and out of the operating room…

Complaints of shoulder and elbow pain are the most common reasons why a baseball athlete seeks medical attention. According to Dr. James Andrews, “Most injuries are a consequence of cumulative micro-trauma from the repetitive, dynamic overhand throwing motion inherent to the sport.” In other words, the constant repetitive demands put on the shoulder from throwing a baseball without the proper strength, mechanics, and rest are the major cause for injury in a baseball player.
Overthrowing and over utilizing the young athlete has become a huge problem in youth baseball today. Doctors have found a link between throwing volume and shoulder/elbow injuries among youth baseball pitchers and these findings have prompted the USA Baseball Medical and Safety Advisory Committee to recommend pitch limits for youth pitchers. According to the USA Baseball Medical team, not only monitoring pitch counts but having pitchers (1) compete NO MORE than 9 months in a calendar year, (2) develop and maintain good mechanics, (3) commit to year-round physical conditioning as their bodies develop, (4) participate in only 1 performance as a pitcher per day, (5) avoid showcase participation, and (6) limit participation to 1 team per season.
Rehabilitation plays a vital part for the athlete, in not only returning to sport, but injury prevention as well as pre-season training to prepare the body for the demands of their respective sport. Traditional rehabilitation is not sufficient and cannot reproduce the speed or the joint forces generated during throwing. According to Journal of Sport Rehabilitation, “The only way to mimic the forces of a baseball throw is to actually throw a ball. Interval throwing programs are progressive, sport specific regimens that gradually expose an athlete to the demands they will experience upon a return to sport.” If not properly prepared, an athlete is vulnerable to injury upon return to sports participation. This is true whether the athlete has a throwing-arm injury, a non-throwing-arm injury, or an injury to any region of the body that has resulted in lost playing time.
As the spring season wraps up, and the summer baseball season begins, make sure your athlete is prepared for the stresses associated with throwing. If you have had any shoulder/elbow pain from throwing come by First Choice Physical Therapy for an in depth evaluation which includes shoulder mechanics, strength deficits, and an interval throwing program instruction.
Brannon Chester, DPT
Doctor of Physical Therapy
To Run or Not To Run

At First Choice Physical Therapy, assessment and treatment of running injuries at all levels of fitness, from the competitive cross country runner or triathlete, to the mother of 3 who just wants to check the box for completing a marathon from her bucket list, is a daily occurrence and a specialty. We pride ourselves on being the premier clinic for runners in Northwest Florida utilizing time tested techniques and strategies to get our runners back fast and keeping them injury free.
Our system is not about treating you with a couple of exercises and then throwing you back out on the road once your pain-free, only to return to the clinic due to re-injury within the next 6 months. It is about education, starting with a functional movement assessment, footwear education, self treatment techniques, and training techniques to keep you running injury free once our job is done. Our system also focuses on instruction in multiple running gait patterns depending upon your objective of either accelerating, decelerating, or maintaining speed. We believe running is not a one size fits all activity and must be tailored to each individual and their fitness level.
Over the next few months, we will be doing a series of blogs to provide you with professional guidance and a little insight as to how we treat and what you can do to keep yourself healthy and running for many years to come. The following are topics we will cover:
1) What is a RUNNING injury.
Does pain mean I have a running injury.
Is running your problem? No.
2) When can I run again?
How do you return to running
What is too much
How do I reduce my risk of injury
3) To strength train or not
Do I need to go to the gym
Are fitness classes ok
4) Are your shoes working for or against you
Are they fashion shoes or running shoes
When do I need a new pair of shoes
5) Minimalist shoes/barefoot running… For real, fad, or farce?
Stop complaining, be proactive, and schedule your running evaluation today!!
Athletic Trainer
Doctor of Physical Therapy
First Choice Physical Therapy
www.1stchoicept.com
Excellence Drives Us-Passion Guides Us
850-248-1600
Is there a fall in your future?

Scott Champagne, PT
Heel Pain!

Let us try first… and save money!

If you were not yet aware, you can come to First Choice, first. This will save you time, money and potentially even surgery. Call us today for your evaluation!
Physical Therapy vs Imaging Study Hits the Washington Post
Research on the cost-savings of physical therapy vs advanced imaging has been making news in professional circles, and now it’s making an even more public splash.
On March 27, The Washington Post published an article summarizing the findings of research that compared health costs for patients with uncomplicated low back pain (LBP) who were referred to physical therapy with patients referred for advanced imaging. As reported in PT in Motion News, the results showed that physical therapy typically resulted in dramatically lower subsequent costs than a first referral for imaging. The original research article was published in the journal Health Services Research (abstract only available for free).
The Post article characterized the reasons for the differences as being “more likely found in the heads of patients and doctors than in anyone’s back.” Post reporter Lenny Bernstein writes that patients with uncomplicated first-time LBP can “pressure” physicians for a referral, and physicians may comply—sometimes with a referral for advanced imaging, sometimes for a referral to physical therapy.
The lower health care costs associated with physical therapy have a connection with how patients respond to physical therapy’s more proactive, patient-focused approach, according to the Post.
In summarizing comments from Julie M. Fritz, PT, PhD, FAPTA, the study’s lead author, the Post describes physical therapy as an approach that “focuses on educating patients about what might be causing their back pain, assuring them that most problems subside in time, and engaging them in their therapy.”
The study theorizes that as opposed to physical therapy, a referral for imaging early on can lead to a different patient attitude, one that often results in more testing, more physician visits, and greater use of medication. After 1 year, the imaging-first approach can result in average costs over 3 times higher than a physical therapy-first approach, according to the study.
Fritz is quoted in the article saying that “We think this is an area where our profession has something to offer, especially when it’s timed correctly,” adding that advanced imaging can be appropriate thing to do, but “just not early in the course of care for most patients.”
Available at the APTA Learning Center: pre-recorded CE on manipulation for LBP presented by study author Julie M. Fritz, PT, PhD, FAPTA; also “Manual therapy management of the lumbopelvic spine” presented by Josh Cleland, PT, DPT, PhD, OCS, and Shane Koppenhaver, PT, PhD, OCS, FAAOMPT.
Myofascial Release

To understand the term “myofascial release”, it is crucial to explain, what the myofascia is. Prefix “myo” means muscle in Greek language, “fascia”, on the other hand, comes from Latin and it means a flat band or bandage . Fascia is the dense connective tissue composed of elastin and collagen fibers that surrounds and covers every muscle, nerve, blood vessel and organ in our body. Similar to yarn in a sweater, pull and damage in one area will strain distant areas and cause tension throughout fascial network. Healthy myofascial tissue has the ability to stretch and move without restriction. Due to poor posture, sedentary life style, emotional stress, inflammation, repetitive motions, surgical procedures, or traumas such as a fall or car accident, fascia scars and hardens. It loses its pliability, adheres to muscle, which leads to restricted range of motion of the neighboring joints and abnormal biomechanical functioning.
Myofascial release is an effective hands-on or instrument assisted technique that involves applying sustained pressure directly on the myofascial tissue. Initially, a therapist seeks autonomic or reflexive effects and gently stimulates sensory receptors in the skin and at the level of the subcutaneous fascia. This way a therapist desensitizes affected area and gains entry level to deeper structures with less potential for tissue microtrauma and exacerbation of pain. The next step of the intervention is mechanical change such as a stretch of the contracted muscle or superficial tissue rolling to mobilize adhesions. After freeing up the superficial restrictions, stronger pressure is applied to go through the “layers” until the deeper tissues are accessed. At times, forceful technique is required to free up longstanding restrictions. When optimal length and mobility of the soft tissue are established, therapy focuses on changing abnormal joint alignment and normalizing patient’s movement patterns.
The purpose of myofascial release is to break down scar tissue, loosen tightened fascia, reduce hypertonicity of the contracted muscle and decompress lesions such as nerve impingement. It is also intended to increase blood circulation, lymphatic drainage and facilitate tissue repair capacity. Although fascia and its corresponding muscle are the prime targets of the myofascial release, other structures, such as Achilles tendon or forearm common extensor tendon, are frequently treated with this technique.
Myofascial release therapy has been effectively utilized for relief from common problems such as neck and low back pain, headaches, plantar fasciitis, lateral epicondilitis (tennis elbow) to name just a few. It shortens and optimizes recovery from traumatic injury or surgery and improves performance in high level athletes. By targeting specific areas of restrictions, myofascial release therapy reduces pain, restores normal mobility and allows the patients to return to their normal functional capacity.
Maggie Garbiec, PTA
“My Back Hurts” — Really??
Do you have lower back pain that came out of nowhere? Can you not remember how it got there? You’ve been through X-Rays and MRIs and nothing shows up. You start to think you’re going crazy, right? Don’t worry, you’re not crazy. It could be a pelvic asymmetry. Pelvic asymmetries occur frequently and often mimic lower back pain. Often times, there are no real tender points. Usually, just aching and pain with certain activities. Your SI joints become maligned and cause aching in the muscles attached to the pelvis and even into the legs. Women are more likely to have SI problems than men due to the ability of the pelvis to move for childbirth. If you’re having persistent low back pain or pain into your hips, give First Choice a call to get it checked out.
Dr. Stephen Peaden, DPT
Doctor of Physical Therapy
Do the research

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Remember. It’s your choice. Make it count.
First Choice Physical Therapy
Happy New Year!

Have a Healthy and Happy New Year!
To Your Health,
Dr. Wade M. Rinehart
Doctor of Physical Therapy
