Rehab & Pain/Injury Recovery

Shoulder Pain

Are you Dealing with Shoulder Pain? Best Shoulder Pain Relief Exercises!

Are you dealing with shoulder pain? Best Shoulder Pain Relief Exercises

Are you currently dealing with some sort of shoulder pain, whether that’s pain in the front of the shoulder, the top, or the back? Or is it a shoulder pain that only really comes around when you’re exercising or doing some sort of physical activity?

Shoulder pain is a very common condition, especially if you are an active person with a busy adventurous lifestyle.

For those of you who are dealing with shoulder pain, and who want to lead a LOUD, active life, this can be a big hindrance that prevents you from doing all of the things that you want to be able to do.

So, if you’re interested in:

  • dealing with your shoulder pain
  •  fixing your shoulder pain
  • understanding how shoulder mechanic’s work
  • what can you do to make your shoulders more bulletproof and stronger

This is the blog for you!


PLAY VIDEO ⬇︎


Now, shoulders, because of the nature of the ball and socket joint, it allows for a lot of free range of motion, a lot of active range of motion, but because of that, many of us lack the basic stability that allows our body to move. Now, this is an important concept that we’ll discuss throughout the video.

Many become biased to only thinking physical therapists or orthopedics might be able to help with shoulder pain. But here at Live Loud Chiropractic in Lafayette Colorado, we are able to help you test and diagnose what is causing your shoulder pain. So if you want to once and for all fix your shoulder pain and issues please do not hesitate to reach out and schedule you initial consult and assessment. 303-717-6323.

STABILITY OR STRETCHING For Your Shoulder Pain

Stability is what is needed to allow your body to express mobility. So oftentimes, we’re stretching and stretching and stretching, hoping that that will help with our shoulder pain, when in fact, it’s not really getting us anywhere.

Now, while stretching might be beneficial.

You have to understand who, what, when, where, and why.

Who would benefit from stretching?
Why would you need to stretch?
What are you actually stretching?
And again, what’s the outcome we’re trying to get out of that?

Now what you need to understand is a proper assessment and an evaluation to determine the cause of shoulder pain.

Unfortunately, this is oftentimes mismanaged through simple diagnostic procedures, such as X-ray and MRI, assuming that there must be some form of a soft tissue injury or damage, that is eliciting the shoulder pain that you’re describing.

When many times this is, in fact, not the case. It usually breaks down to some sort of overloading principle, whether that is an overuse injury due to improper mechanics, due to an increase load variation that you just came across, or just not using it enough.

In this video, we’re going to break down and show you some of the common causes of why shoulder pain might be occurring, some of the neighboring attributes such as the spine that might be contributing to why there might be some shoulder pain, and more importantly, a few things that you can do that will help the shoulder pain that you currently have, whether it is acute or chronic. Now again, this is just a very sneak peek of what’s to happen. Because of the complexity of the shoulder, the shoulder issue, we really have to dive in to determine what’s best for you.

The Key to determining an overuse injury, for shoulder pain

As we were saying, in the intro, shoulder pain, outside of trauma, you’re going to be dealing with usually some sort of an overuse type of injury.

Now, the key to determining an overuse injury is having a very in-depth conversation to detail the programming or the load progression that might have led to the pain your shoulder has.

Right?

If you are someone who is doing Orange Theory, or Group Fitness, here are some questions to consider.

  • When did you start?
  • Is this something new?
  • Did you increase your weight?
  • Did you increase your reps?
  • Was there an immediate spike in your loading progressions that might have just caused more acute overuse injury?

More commonly, we see nothing changed, but it was over months, if not years, the shoulder injury just started acting up more.

What this tells us is that there’s probably some sort of a range of motion, stability, or movement discrepancy that was adding more load to a particular area over time, thus creating this overuse injury.

It’s important if you are having shoulder pain that you go through an in-depth conversation with whomever your provider is to determine what that progression might have been like to better direct you.

Common Areas of Shoulder Pain

For the shoulder, we see a couple of common areas as your main hub of where the pain is:

  • Front of the shoulder
  • Top of the shoulder
  • Back of the shoulder

Three Usual Main Causes of Shoulder Pain

When we’re looking at shoulder pain, there are three usual main causes that we will try to rule in or out during our evaluation at Live Loud Chiropractic and Coaching.

  • When you have pain at the back of the shoulders it is usually some sort of rotator cuff, irritation, capsular tension, and or some sort of maybe tendinitis
  • On top of the shoulder in the front of the shoulder, we’re going to be seeing the impingement type of issues. Whereas when you go to lift the shoulders, it pinches at the top here, creating pressure on tendons or other soft tissue structures and pain. And then bicep tendons similar could be part of that impingement syndrome process.
  • But we also see this as a loading discrepancy meaning how you’re pressing, or loading the shoulder is causing more load to go to the bicep tendon, creating tendinitis and irritation

Movement Criteria to Determine the Cause of Shoulder Pain

At Live Loud Chiropractic, here are a few of the different movement criteria that we use to determine what the cause of your shoulder pain might be.

Basic range of motion

  • Stand tall (this is important to look for cheats in other parts of the body)
  • Bring arms up overhead
  • Arms up from the side
  • Arms reaching behind you

This is where we look to see if you have adequate range of motion to be able to perform an overhead press or other movements required by the shoulder.

Oftentimes, when people were performing either a stretch or something that they feel to be beneficial, and they have their arms turned in, that’s actually creating an internal rotation of the shoulder. That’s going to enhance impingement symptoms, which could then make something worse. So, we have a conversation around positioning based on the movements that you’re doing.

 

Push-Up Mechanics give a good look at loading mechanisms of the shoulder

Another movement that we want to test at Live Loud Chiropractic is a push up. You’ll want to do a push-up at an incline. This gives us a regressed format, especially if you’re having pain. This allows us to look at your position in a push-up type of holding pattern or even a plank.

What we see very commonly is a “dump” of the shoulder, that creates more tension on the bicep tendon. I.e. then creating bicep tendonitis. When you have tendonitis of the shoulder, it gets super irritated through almost anything you do.

 

Modified Cat-Cow to assess back mobility which may be the cause of your shoulder pain

We also talked about this with the neck pain video, if you have not seen the neck pain video and you’re dealing with neck pain, be sure to go check that out HERE.

The neck, like the shoulders, are directly attached to the mid-back.

So, if we’re dealing with a shoulder issue, we have to look at the thoracic spine and determine if there’s movement, range of motion discrepancies, whatever that might be, that might be creating our issue.

Here we will have you start on your hands and knees and sit back towards the heels. This is a modified cat cow. We’re going to do cat cow here, then extend now so we’re looking at mobility to determine if there are any catching spots.

Globally, it might look fine. From an isolated perspective, we might see some areas that need either more flexion or extension. Then we might do a kind of “Wag the Tail” motion. So that would be a side-to-side motion. This allows us to see how well the spine flexes laterally.

Then last but not least, we’re going to put one hand behind the neck, and then rotate up towards the ceiling. With this motion we can assess rotation. While rotation and lateral flexion might not seem directly correlated to the shoulder, we have to look beyond just our basic segmental sagittal pattern.

We know that sports, athletics, and even just training, there’s rotation and side to side movement involved, that would affect the position of the shoulder.

Impingement Syndrome Diagnosis for Shoulder Pain

So, impingement syndrome, again, is one of the main issues that you’re going to see in the front of the shoulder/top of the shoulder. When we’re dealing with this, similar to our movement mapping with our shoulders, we have to teach the body what we want and that is usually directed towards mobility restrictions.

Very commonly, people are coaching and queuing you to pull your shoulder blades back, back and down.

This is important for rows and pulling types of motion. When we are reaching forward and up that is actually counterproductive. If you are pulling your shoulder blades down and back that is opposite of the direction of up and over.

So, the main issue with impingement syndrome is the roof of the shoulder called the AC joint, creates impingement syndrome.

So when are thinking or cueing down and back you are restricting the AC joint and the roof of the shoulder creating more compression of the soft tissue under the AC joint.

Conclusion

If you’ve been dealing with some sort of form of chronic shoulder pain, or you’re just at a management level, “eh I can do most of these things…”

But there are certain things you just don’t want to do.

If you want to get back to those, please feel free to reach out to us here at Live Loud Chiropractic in Lafayette, CO.

I know these tools will help in the short interim, of helping with this kind of immediate pain. Still, shoulders being as complex as they are, you have to set up a framework in a progressive loading pattern to gain more confidence around various positions that are more challenging.

We’d love to be able to help you out with dealing with that shoulder pain issue that you’ve had for maybe even years.

Please feel free to reach out.

Let’s get you back to Living Loud with all the activities you want to be doing.

We’d love to help you!

BOOK NOW!

Low Back Pain Explained

Low Back Pain Explained! If you are Suffering this is for You!

Low Back Pain Explained! If you are Suffering this is for You!

It is estimated that 80% of the population at one point in time, will sustain or suffer some form of lower back pain. 

 

Understanding how the back pain was generated is the MOST critical component of understanding the solution to your lower back pain. 

 

This blog post is for you if:

  1. You have dealt with lower back pain in the past
  2. You are worried, apprehensive, or not confident about your back
  3. You are refraining from doing certain activities that you want to do because of your back
  4. You just sustained an injury


PLAY VIDEO ⬇︎


After having low back pain explained from this post you will know how lower back pain occurs, the proper way to go through a cause of pain evaluation, as well as going through movement assessments and orthopedic assessments to determine if there’s actually structural damage.

 

Simply looking at Xrays and MRIs to determine what’s causing pain from a structural approach is not enough!

 

If you want to deal with your back pain once and for all, if you need a solution, if you want a plan, Live Loud Chiropractic in Lafayette, CO has your back! Dr. Antonio’s specialty is lower back pain. He loves explaining lower back pain and helping individuals who are feeling defeated by lower back pain gain more confidence, strength, mobility, and ultimately gain more life! 

 

If this isn’t for you, but you are researching for a family member or a friend, we appreciate you putting in the time and effort to share this with them. This is such a prevalent topic and again unfortunately it is being mismanaged across the board. 

 

We at Live Loud Chiropractic want to be able to help you out by having low back pain explained to you!

What's the majority of Low Back Pain Caused by?

Back pain is one of the most prevalent musculoskeletal conditions across the world. It’s estimated that roughly ⅓ of individuals are dealing with some sort of lower back pain. The majority of lower back pain is almost always some sort of flexion intolerance. 

 

Flexion Intolerance is when your body doesn’t tolerate bending forward well. Now, knowing this really helps us determine the best course of action for you. Flexing forward is normal, and you should be able to do that pain free and with enough stability that you’re in control. Often there are times where we have to manage that. So a lot of our conversation, depending on how acute the individual is, will determine what the immediate course of action is! 

 

First and foremost, our goal is to just help you get your pain down. Because if you’re in pain, you’re not able to do a lot of stuff as it is. We need to break that cycle and understand what your lower back pain triggers are! We want to understand what keeps causing you pain and then we can figure out where to go from there.

Functional Approach Vs. Stagnant Approach

Now, more times than not if you have a good clinician and they’re asking the right questions, we’re going to know right off the bat, right? A good clinician can see it in how you move and see it in the description of what your symptoms are. When things are being mismanaged people are looking at a stagnant perspective of your pain. This means they’re taking an X-ray or an MRI to determine what the cause of pain is. 

 

What we need to do is look first and foremost functionally at what’s causing the triggers of your lower back pain. This will tell us the issues or the site of pain that we need to be more cautious of, but then also the area we need to focus on and strengthen afterwards!

 

We’ve got the solution about how to deal with your lower back pain.

Examination Process for Low Back Pain

Touch Your Toes

We are going to want to start off with a basic toe touch, this will help us determine if you are flexion intolerant.

  1. Bend down and attempt to touch your toes. Does this create any symptoms? Does it cause any pain? 
  2. Now take your arms overhead, come back up, and extend back.

Something to note here is, oftentimes when someone is flexion intolerant they actually become extension intolerant for a while too. This is a possible cause if when you are coming back from the toe touch position you feel pain as well. The exercises Dr. Antonio is going to give you today help soften a lot of your lower back tension. These exercises give you your mobility back in a subtle way that won’t trigger your pain. 

 

Again, understanding the triggers of your pain will help you get out of pain sooner than just putting some proactive exercises toward it. 

 

Compression Test 

The next thing to determine the extent of flexion is a compression test.

  1. Find a chair or stool to sit in
  2. Sit up nice and tall and grab the bottom of the chair or stool
  3. Then with your hands grabbing the chair or stool, you will pull yourself into the chair

 

What this does is create compression in the spine. Does this create any issues for you? When we are in a neutral stacked spine, more times than not, this does not create the issue. If you had a plate injury, meaning you fell some sort of distance or took a hard landing, this might aggravate you. 

Next we’re going to repeat the test but this time instead of sitting up nice and tall we are going to tuck the lower back. This causes us to slump in flexion, meaning we are creating compression under flexion. 

Does this create any issues for you?

For those of you who might be having acute pain at the middle of the back, that tells us one thing. However, if you get some sort of shooting pain down your legs, that tells us something else. 

 

We’ll have a separate condition video tailored towards disc injuries and sciatic injuries. Where we will further explain your low back pain.

This compression test for your lower back pain allows us to determine the extent of how flexion intolerant you are. 

 

How Live Loud can help your Low Back Pain

Dr. Antonio specializes in low back pain here at Live Loud Chiropractic and Coaching in Lafayette, CO. He knows exactly what patterns to look for that are associated with flexion intolerance. What Dr. Antonio does is secondary to what we’re about to give you today. He tells every single one of his low back patients:

 

“If I can help reduce your pain without me touching you, that creates autonomy in your lower back pain. Then all you have to do is rinse and repeat when you get at home to help decrease your pain. Like compounding interest, the more you do it, the better it gets.”

 

Now we are going to give you the exercises we give to help you decrease your lower back pain once and for all. We want to not only have low back pain explained for you, but also give you the tools to do something about it too.

At Home Exercises to END Low Back Pain Once and for All

Hip hinges

The first one is understanding how to hip hinge. 

  1. With soft knees, hinge your butt straight back
  2. Notice we’re getting the torso down towards the ground, but all the load is going into the hips and the hamstrings
  3. If you need to get lower, all you do is simply bend the knees a little bit

 

Supported squats

The next exercise is supported squats. If you have a TRX or suspension trainer you’re going to do this. 

  1. Depth does not matter here, you’re just going to squat up and down
  2. The goal here is to give the hands the majority of the weight

What this exercise does is loosen up the hips that are oftentimes very tight from holding down and guarding. This also helps stretch the lower back a bit. Most importantly, what we have found is it provides mild pumping decompression in the lower back. This really helps decrease a lot of the pain that you are having in your low back.

 

Hip Drops

Exercise number three is hip drops.

  1. Start on your hands and knees (This is going to be like an upward facing dog but instead of being super active and prying up all we’re going to do is shift forward and let our hips sink down.)
  2. Shift forward letting your hips sink down
  3. It’s okay if you don’t get very far. Each time you want to focus on going a degree further
  4. If it hurts going forward, we’re going to go backwards to soften and work on our mobility

 

Now outside of that, there’s obviously many more stages into getting you back to all the activities that you want to be able to do. Seeing a low back specialist such as Dr. Antonio at Live Loud Chiropractic in Lafayette, CO. He’ll take you through the appropriate progressions from day one!

Conclusion

If you can do hard things or lift heavy things, you’re gonna have a lot more confidence in your back and not only from your acute injury you might have now, this is especially important for all having chronic lower back pain. If you’re afraid of picking up your children or even a bag of dog food let’s get you confident in your back!

 

So if you’re tired of dealing with low back pain, stop waiting, come in and see us and I guarantee we’ll be able to help you deal with this either chronic or acute injury to get back to all the activities that you love to do!

Thanks for following along with us as we get your low back pain explained!


5 Easy Tips to Improve Your Deadlifts (video included)

Today, we will be going over five of the top tips that we give to help our patients and our clients, who visit our Lafayette Chiropractic Clinic,  with deadlifting. 

Watch the video 

 

This is an associated video with a podcast episode that we did. It's the same information that we did in the Podcast. We just wanted to demonstrate what those tips are so that you can see it in live-action to give you a little bit more of a frame of reference.

Now, how can you apply this information?  

Well, digest it. 

Practice it. 

Film yourself. 

Get a coach. 

If you don't have a coach looking at you and you're trying to go through a self-developmental process, you're just trying to understand your body a little bit more. That is a fantastic way to understand what's going on. 

But sometimes, you need that expertise and coach's eye to give you what you need.

 

So let's dive in:

1) Keep the bar close 

 

The first tip is keeping the bar, or the weight closer to you and not letting it get too far in front of you.

From a side view I need my shins right up against the bar, so you can see how close that weight is to me. This helps me keep that bar path nice and straight and close to my body as I go up and down, hinging to do the movement. 

Now, if I did this exact same thing, but I'm standing out here, you can see how much further that bar gets away from me and I can feel how much more load and stress is being put on my back as a result of that. 

Now the same also goes true. If we're just talking about like a kettlebell. We prescribe sumo deadlifts or kettlebell deadlifts all the time. 

But what we instruct is for people to straddle, or stand directly over the kettlebell, okay, now, why is because it keeps that weight nice and close to you. And it allows you to sit back into your heels to make sure we're loading that posterior chain. 

But same thing, if I'm forward here, where that kettlebells in front of my toes, I'm going to be putting potentially a lot more strain on that lower back, because I've increased the distance from the kettlebell to the actual lever, moment arm, which should be essentially my hips, right.

So as I'm reaching forward, that's going to put more strain on here, now, you can still maintain a neutral spine, a long spine or a straight back, but just simply the act of having an out in front of you, even though my backstraight, this is having to work that much harder. 

So we want to make sure we're keeping the weight, the box, whatever that is closer to us, okay. 

 

2) Watch your speed 

Now, the second point that we want to make is pulling too fast. 

You can see in the video that I'm pulling the bar too fast. 

So what that means is, my shoulders are connected my arms, my hands connect to the barbell, the work is basically being done from here to pull my upper body up, which is effectively going to pull my arms up.

So what can happen is if I just start yanking too fast, I'm rising too fast. I'm trying to jerk that bar up to be explosive, because you want to move the weight all finding good, but what can happen with all of the speed is we lose tension and end up rounding the back. 

 

We're effectively not keeping all that pre tension that you've built up. And what happens is you want to yank really fast in the spine will end up rounding your back sometimes, because your body's trying to move too fast and you're not maintaining the tension.

We want to be able to make sure that when we're rising up the whole unit, and the whole system is rising up together at the same speed, and  we're not rising with a really fast, jerky motion.

 

 

3) Control your hips

The next fix that you want to think about is not letting your hips rise too fast as well.

I gave an analogy on the podcast, which I'm going to describe here.

Imagine my elbow is my hips. My forearm is my torso, and my fist is my shoulder.

So in this setup, which is a hinge, it's perfectly fine for your torso to be horizontal to the ground.

So what will happen sometimes is we'll set up and then we'll start to lift and the hips will come up, because you trying to pretension the hamstrings and the posterior chain.

When the hips start to rise too fast then the upper body is trailing which has to follow to lift the weight but they are not moving together. We want collectively for everything to be moving together.

As an example, let’s say we have a good setup. But based on maybe being a little bit too squatty or low, what's going to happen is once I want to start lifting, you're going to see the hips rise to increase tension in the hamstrings or posterior chaing.

You see this one step, two step jerky motion. It could be subtle and you might be maintaining a neutral spine still, but I'm shifting hips first, and then the rest is coming.

Again, the reason why most people are doing that is because we did not tend to pretension that posterior chain, the hamstrings and the glutes enough. And so your body's trying to find that tension, before you lift. Your body is trying to store up elastic energy to help you initiate the movement before the concentric motion of the muscles takes place.

Ideally, what you'd want to try to do is find that hip position that makes you feel like you're under that initial tension. And when referring to barbell deadlifts you're going to hear a little click as the barbell pulls into the ring of the plate. 

 

It is fine to start a little low, and then raise the hips a little bit. But that is the pre-tension, and then you should move as one unit. 

 

4) Activate your core and get your torso ready 

Next tip is activating your core and getting your torso ready! We hear brace, tighten abs, and a number of different cues that people will give when lifting to clients or coaching.
We are going to go back to our forearm analogy.  In order for the shoulders to effectively rise as the hips come through and forward. The forearm (torso or core) cannot be soft, right?

Notice, obviously, my, my forearm is one piece/bone. But that's essentially what I'm trying to do, I'm trying to turn my torso into one stiffened piece, so that the forced transfer that my legs are doing, as my hips are driving forward, will adequately raise my chest, raise my shoulders, raise my arms and raise the weight.

If we're soft, and we have a soft system, then as you come up, you're going to be dispersing energy all over the place and not being as effective and efficient. And this could could potentially lead to some back pain or an injury, right? So we want to make sure that that that mid system is stiffened. So that you can transfer all that force that you're generating to your shoulders, arms, weight, so on and so forth.

So what do we need to do? We need to stiffen the torso.

The torso is essentially the area from my shoulders, ball socket joints to ball and socket joints at the hips.

As I'm hinging, my torso stays together as a unit.  The curvatures you have in your spine as your stand with normal posture will be preserve and maintained when you hinge, it is simply your torso is in a different angle in space.

We're trying to maintain that and as the load increases, you have to stiffen the abdominal wall all the way around to ensure that you're keeping that together. We can do that by increasing your intra-abdominal pressure.

One of the main cues people understand will be to take a big breath of air in, increase the air and then hold it, that'll help stiffen your torso/abdominal wall.

One of the most important things to understand is knowing how much tension you need to generate. If you're over bracing it will not be useful for you and expending more energy than necessary. But as the task gets heavier, you're going to need to brace and stiff more, because low load is going to really challenge your positioning on that torso.

Another cue  is to stick your fingers into the space/midsection between your ribs and your pelvis. Next, pretend like you're blowing out a candle forcefully.  You should see and feel that part of your torso expand, right?

While I'm not pushing my belly out, that little cue of blowing hard stiffens the torso automatically and you get a little bit of an expansion of the abdominal wall. You should also feel this in the back. The next cue is the same but with a Wonder Woman or Superman pose.  With your hands on your waist and in between your ribs and pelvis your thumbs will be pointed and right in the side/back muscles near your spine.  When you blow the candle out you should feel a little pulse against your thumbs.

This is an amazing tool for someone who's recovering an injury who's feeling vulnerable in certain hinging or squatting positions.  We can enhance the bracing and stiffening because it's going to provide more stability, and more comfort, that allows us to keep moving and keep loading you and keep progressing while feeling more and more confident.

 

5) break down pre-tensioning and wedging  

 

The last tip is going to break down pre tensioning and wedging.

Pre tension or wedging is essentially one trying to pull themselves down into the hole or pull themselves into the bar, which is basically like compressing the spring. So when you are ready, you begin to release the stored up energy to help you initiate the movement, and then all the muscles involved in this movement are going to go through its concentric phase to actually lift me up.

When talking about pre tension or perhaps better understood as activation, we are trying to load and prime the posterior chain which would be the backside of the body.  And for deadlifts we are looking at the hamstrings, glutes, and back primarily.

We can facilitate the pre tension by wedging and pulling down into the bar, but we can also increase this tension by torquing into the floor.

When we tell people anchor your feet,  they are going to be screwing into the ground, without actually moving your feet.  This creates a coil of tension up the legs.

Now we also have to pre tension our connection to the bar, kettlebell, or dumbbell so that we have a strong linkage to the task.  If we have a weak connection or weak grip that is going to make it harder to move the weight.

So imagine a dowel, the bar, or a handle.  Your hands are right next to each other and you are trying to snap it in half like breaking a stick.

This is exactly like screwing our feet into the ground, only now your shoulder having coiled up tension that also connects all the way down to your lower back and hips through the lats.

So if effectively doing all of these things together, you're going to be in a stronger state to start the movement through better pre tension and wedging.

 

Effective & efficient deadlifts 

Each one of these tips coincide and overlap with each other, to effectively make the movement done more effective and efficiently. 

 

Now, when we talk about effectiveness and efficiency, that's good, because that allows you to lift more, and if done well, you can lift more and if done well, you also reduce the chances of overloading some of the more vulnerable places within a deadlift, which would usually be areas like your lower back.

 

Many of you may only be picking and choosing one or two of these tips to implement. Many of you know this ins and outs of deadlifting, but if you are new or hesitant because of a previous injury these tips will be very helpful for you.

If you're doing deadlifts, hopefully this helps you. If you're not doing deadlifts, I encourage you to do deadlifts. It can be barbells, it can be kettlebells, it doesn't matter. 

 

I just want you to pick up some stuff off the ground, make that posterior chain stronger, make those postural muscles stronger, make your hips stronger, reduce load and share load between the Jones joints to make your back pain better to help heal back pain.

 

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Over Correcting & Cueing Exercises EP|69

Live LOUD Life Podcast
Lafayette Colorado

Episode 69

Over Correcting & Cueing Exercises

With Dr. Antonio Gurule


Trying to heal a tweak or injury? Dr. Antonio speaks about over correcting, muscle activation, movement patterns in this week’s episode of the Live Loud Life Podcast.

 

Episode Highlights

3:00 – Example of tennis playing patient overcorrecting back movements

7:00 – Reestablishing a better movement pattern 

8:30 – Importance of filming your movements – Getting a coach’s eye 

13:00 – Activation of muscles

18:00 – Muscle isolation 


About Dr. Antonio Gurule

Nutrition Building Blocks Broken Down

Background:

  • Father
  • Doctor of Chiropractic
  • Owner of Live LOUD
  • Personal Trainer & Health Coach

Anthony Gurule  00:00

Hey what’s up guys, welcome back to another episode of the Live Loud Life podcast. My name is Dr. Antonio, your host of the Live Loud Life podcast, I co-own Live Loud Chiropractic and Coaching with my wife, Dr. Nichelle, here in Lafayette, Colorado. We’ve been here for a number of years now. And our big focus and goal is to help guide you to the adventurous life that you are meant for, we believe families deserve more from their health care providers. And if we can create stronger families, we can create a stronger community at home. And that’s what we’re here hopefully, hopefully helping you to do. We see and help from a number of different issues, and ages from, you know, newborns all the way up to grandparents and older populations that are trying to get stronger, that are trying to move better, that are trying to deal with maybe some arthritic pain, so on and so forth. So if you’re wanting to move better, feel stronger, and decrease your pain, hopefully, we can help you do that.

 

Anthony Gurule  01:09

Now, that being said, today, what we’re going to talk about. we this is a spin off of one of the previous episodes, which I think will air a week or two before this. But this was a direct reflection as to a patient interaction that I just had. So you know, we’re, we’re having this conversation. And I was like, we got to talk about this, I gotta put something down about this. And this goes along with the corrective exercises and the accessory exercises that we talked about, like, as I mentioned in that previous episode, which is good, right? There’s good. There’s benefit, especially when you’re injured, or dealing with something to be able to isolate and work on some of our weaknesses and imbalances.

 

Anthony Gurule  01:53

Now, what we’re going to talk about today, though, is the analysis by paralysis of over calculating, and over emphasizing certain nuances about these exercises, and that getting you wrapped up and hung up without progressing. And, in particular, and I do this to some degree, so I’m going to give you kind of like both sides. And again, what the answer always comes down to is context, finding the right thing, for the right person, at the right time. And oftentimes, I’ll make an, you know, a clinical assess or a clinical judgment. And I’ll and I’ll suggest something and we’ll you know, you got it, see how it works, right, you gotta, you gotta actually do and see how it plays out. And sometimes I’m wrong. And, you know, other times, we just, hey, we’re like, hey, we were we were right there, we just need to, we just need to step to the side a little bit and do it this way, or something like that. As Charlie Ryan Groff calls it a lateralization, right, sometimes you just gotta move to the side. So we’re doing we’re on the right path, we’re on the right track, we just need to step sidestep and do it this way for a little bit, and then we can keep kind of going forward. And so this particular individual– racquet player, right, tennis, pickleball, you know, those types of things, and was dealing with some hip issues, which is not uncommon for those types of sports, because there’s so much decelaration in loading and rebounding that is very challenging on the hips. And that as a side note is something for because pickleball seems to be a very popular sport in kind of like my parents age, not that it is only for that but if you don’t have the conditioning to be able to do that last description of deceleration and rebounding so on so forth, it can it can be it could be potentially problematic.

 

Anthony Gurule  03:49

But anyway, so hips up, but then was also dealing with some flexion intolerant low back kind of like, you know, the classic stuff that we always see that usually is a result of kind of getting hung up on something doing too much too soon, too fast, so on and so forth. Nothing Nothing sinister by any means. But yet flexion being oftentimes demonized of hey, don’t flex when you’re doing something, was the was the over calculation or analysis paralysis that he was getting hung up on. And again, so here’s the other side, I do recommend not flexing the lower back for many patients. But normally this is when I’m seeing someone that is very acute, and flexion is something that really sets them off. So it’s one of those things like hey, affliction sets you off. Wouldn’t it be prudent and just not flex for a little bit so that we can down regulate and desensitize everything in in having the conversation about we will at some point and we need to flex is fine. But if you’re going to pick up your kid or unload the dishwasher or something like that, it might feel a little bit better if you hinge more or squat more and so that it’s more in the hips and the knees and the legs.

 

Anthony Gurule  05:05

But for this individual, I’m trying to just reestablish like new hinging patterns. The over calculation on what should be happening was getting them hung up. And he was overcorrecting. So he was feeling, he’s like when I’m just basic hip hinging, basic hip hinging, Good morning type of movement, it was eliciting back pain for him, and we’re watching it. And I was like, I really don’t quite understand what’s causing pain here. Because the typical flexion intolerant and pain stuff that he was describing, he was not flexing at all. And in turn, he was actually hyper extending. So as he was going through the motion, as he was hinging, he was being so cautious about not rounding or slumping his lower back that he was just overarching. So that was actually in turn trading a lot of compressive forces on the lower back.

 

Anthony Gurule  06:00

But also those muscles were just like, locked in. And that was more of the pain that he was experiencing, it’s just those muscle contractions were just so intense and locked in, that was actually eliciting his pain. And so ultimately, this came down to is just like he was kind of, you know, he was getting some of this, some of these exercises from a PT and was just looking for a different perspective, maybe a little bit of more manual adjustments and things like that, interestingly enough, we haven’t really done much of that, because we sidetracked to the movement issues, if you want to call it. and what we started peeling off is, you know, I understand we’re worried about flexion.

 

Anthony Gurule  06:46

But this is no longer an acute or subacute thing. And when you’re talking about chronic flexion, intolerant, lower back pain, like you got to start flexing and not being worried about that micro loading.

 

Anthony Gurule  06:58

But what we wanted to do is still establish the movement pattern. So we changed, we changed the description, or we changed the goal, better yet.

 

Anthony Gurule  07:08

The goal previously was don’t round your back. And so when he heard that, I was like, Okay, well, if I don’t, if I don’t want to round my back, I might as well just hyperextend and go the opposite way.

 

Anthony Gurule  07:17

And that was creating a lot of, again, compressive force and low back and a ton of muscle tension that was then eliciting pain because the muscles were just just rockhard locked in. And so well how do we get him to hinge then and squat and move without the overcorrection of hyperextension?

 

Anthony Gurule  07:34

Well, we had to change the description of what I wanted him to actually do, accomplish, and or in this case, feel. Because the question commonly is when they get home, even if you send a video or description is like,

 

Anthony Gurule  07:46

Well, how do I know if I’m doing it Right? Well, how does it feel? Right?

 

Anthony Gurule  07:50

Are you are you able to initiate the feeling that we’re going for? And what I always suggest, which is for any of you out here, learning a new movement or anything like that, is you do two things, you do the movement and you internalize the feeling right? What areas of my body are working?

 

Anthony Gurule  08:09

Do I feel balanced? Do I feel in control. You know, if you’re working with a great practitioner, they’re going to kind of help you with these things. But don’t chase activation, this is the second part of this that we’re going to talk about in a moment here. Don’t always choose activation.

 

Anthony Gurule  08:28

But then what I want you to do is I want you to film yourself, set your phone up, film yourself doing it. So you have now this external frame of reference, you have the Coach’s Eye.

 

Anthony Gurule  08:38

So you can then immediately look at the film or the video, replay it and look and say okay, well, this is how it felt. And this is how it looked. Right.

 

Anthony Gurule  08:51

So now you have this other piece of information that is very vital to you putting those two pieces together and formulating the best new movement pattern that you can. And that is a fantastic way of learning newer movements and practicing things to get to accelerate that process if you will.

 

Anthony Gurule  09:12

Now, the so the, so sorry, we’re gonna get to the activation. So what we were focusing on is, okay when we want a hinge, right, so how can I help you hinge better?

 

Anthony Gurule  09:24

and start to look at what we want for the hinge. And so we talked about balance. All we said was, we talked about the foot tripod, ball of your foot, the big toe ball, the foot outside ball, the foot and then the heel, right? It’s kind of like a tripod.

 

Anthony Gurule  09:41

As you’re going through this hip hinging pattern or good morning or what would be like a bodyweight deadlift, I want you to just to first and foremost, first five reps, is think about how your feet feel, right? Do you feel balanced? Are you too far on your toes? Are you too far in your heels?

 

Anthony Gurule  09:53

Are you collapsing side to side? Good. After about five reps, five or six reps everyone can tune in and usually find a pretty good balance point, right?

 

Anthony Gurule  10:03

Okay, next, we’re going to work our way up, right? What do you feel? What do you feel your hamstrings doing? Right? Okay, every time we go into a hinge, I feel my hamstrings kind of stretch like a rubber band a little bit.

 

Anthony Gurule  10:12

It’s not intense, but I feel I feel that backside of my body kind of stretching and loading, if you will. And then, you know, this would be these are just examples I’m giving for this individual person, you know, if someone’s dealing with knee pain or something like that, we would say, Hey, do you feel how that pressure gets taken off of your knees, or increases on your knees as we’re going back and forth?

 

Anthony Gurule  10:32

these are all of these things that are super helpful. And by cueing certain feelings that in turn then can help the individual when they’re at home, recreate the movement pattern that we’re looking for, especially when you’re trying to manage and monitor pain, but also trying to enhance a certain area.

 

Anthony Gurule  10:52

And this is where the kind of activation model if you will, comes in. so we’re working up, and then I had him say, you know, he’s so worried about his back. I’m like, Okay, well, do you feel your back working? And he’s like, yeah, it’s it’s really intense, like the muscles are, like, really rock hard to track.

 

Anthony Gurule  11:07

And like, well, they should be. If we’re trying to maintain relatively neutral spine and send to our hips, your lower back muscles should engage, because they’re preventing you from rounding. But that’s the difference of over contraction, and overarching, so then I’ll encourage him to do one rep, or you’re arching your back. And he’s like, Oh, that’s way more intense, okay, well then do it the other way.

 

Anthony Gurule  11:27

Okay, that’s a little bit more balanced. So now you really set the frame of reference of what like an over arching or over contraction movement looks like. So it’s kind of like, the good and the bad right away. And they can start to again, blend the pieces together and put everything together to have a better understanding about what movement we’re actually trying to look for.

 

Anthony Gurule  11:48

Now, then, and oftentimes too adding weight to some capacity can really help enhance this right, when you add a little bit of weight, you can enhance balance, you can enhance certain areas that you want to load more or increase to help them elicit that feeling to so there is benefit to adding weights.

 

Anthony Gurule  12:09

And this was part of our conversation, because his previous PT said, I only want you to do bodyweight, until you master how to do this, there’s no there’s no reason to add weight. I don’t buy that. I don’t think that’s good.

 

Anthony Gurule  12:21

I think there’s plenty of times and places in which adding weight can actually be performance enhancing for the thing that we’re actually trying to accomplish. So don’t get too hung up on not being able to add any sort of weight until you understand how to do bodyweight exercises.

 

Anthony Gurule  12:39

Now, the activation, this is the second part of this, the activation, he was so hung up on like, Well, I’m not activating the areas that I need to be activating. And while I talk about activations and you know, having to entice dormancy out of certain areas.

 

Anthony Gurule  13:02

First and foremost, what you need to understand about activation is if you’re moving through the motion, somewhat, credibly, if you will, then more than likely you’re activating right so for instance, he was talking about a glute exercise, this is your kind of classic Jane Fonda, you’re laying on your side and your your abducting are lifting one hip up towards the ceiling.

 

Anthony Gurule  13:28

He’s like, Well, I just don’t feel like my, there’s one side of my hip that’s activating, but the other side isn’t activating. And I was like, well, is your leg moving?

 

Anthony Gurule  13:36

And he’s like, Yeah, Mike, well, then it’s activating the muscles that you’re trying to, quote unquote, target or activate.

 

Anthony Gurule  13:42

If they’re not, if the leg is not moving, then you are not activating. If you are moving, then you are activating. So don’t get hung up on feeling like you have to have this burn or this intense feeling to quote unquote, activate a certain area.

 

Anthony Gurule  13:57

Now, we might want to draw attention to certain areas, because we know that they can be beneficial from a stability or force generating standpoint. 100% there’s validity to that. But what we want to encourage is like Don’t get over calculated by trying to be precise about activations in certain areas that need to be squeezed more or  engage more or not,

 

Anthony Gurule  14:26

because that was getting him again, too hung up on the precision of doing something perfectly before he can do anything else. And then in doing so, that overcorrection or precision was was limiting his box so that anytime he was outside of that box, it was pain or it was bad or it was you know, I need to go back.

 

Anthony Gurule  14:46

And so what we try to do is just get more into a movement flow state is just like hey, let’s throw out activations, calculations, over corrections, and I just want you to get more into what you are familiar with which is sport. play tennis a lot and pickleball.

 

Anthony Gurule  15:05

So it’s like, when you’re outside of, you know, maybe having some precision with the flick of your wrist or how you’re hitting and aiming, there’s precision in that calculation. But when you’re talking about drop steps and chasing the ball and deceleration, you’re not going to be as calculated on that.

 

Anthony Gurule  15:22

Now, many people will argue with this, and I do agree with their counter argument to this is, it’s one we’re talking about this is you’ve done it so much when you’re an athlete, that that calculation is running second nature, right?

 

Anthony Gurule  15:37

So yes, there is some benefits are practicing this from a calculated perspective. That’s why there’s cone drills and different things like this, where you’re running and then you see a target and you need to decelerate and turn, to calculate how to reach a ball and trajectory yet, there’s calculation right, but what we’re saying in this point in time, he is over calculated, he is over analytical, and I want him to just start getting back to play.

 

Anthony Gurule  16:02

So we were just doing some basic cosec, side lunges, side shuffles, drop step type of things, to encourage the same hip hinging patterns that we were doing, but more in real life movement, so that he cannot over calculate himself into this box of limitations, if you will.

 

Anthony Gurule  16:19

And we didn’t even talk about activation, don’t even worry about activating, all I want you to do is touch target, come back, touch target, come back, run forward, touch back, hinge here, touch back, lunge to the side, touch your inner knee, come back up, lunge to the other side, touch your inner knee, come back up.

 

Anthony Gurule  16:35

So he was able to accomplish everything that we wanted to do with minimal pain and discomfort, because we took out the over calculation and the activations. Okay. So I think that’s an important component, because too often we get wrapped up into the rehab purgatory as Dr. Craig Liebenson uses.

 

Anthony Gurule  16:53

And in, we get stuck there, because we’re worried about calculation and precision, and you need to be able to do this before this and this. Sometimes it’s beneficial to just run ahead a little bit, test the water, see what happens, create some encouragement, create some confidence, and then we can, you know, come back and re layer and back and forth.

 

Anthony Gurule  17:11

But that’s part of what the game is, is it’s just this constant back and forth of trying to find the right thing to help move the needle forward without going too much, create an injury, but then also not like having something that’s weighing you down constantly.

 

Anthony Gurule  17:25

So that was just, you know, what I thought to be a very critical sidebar in conversation that we had in his his rehab process. This is only our third time seeing.

 

Anthony Gurule  17:37

So a lot of this conversation groundwork has to be done early on, so that we’re not scrambling and playing this kind of like pickup game later on. But too many people that are just okay, we see an issue. Here’s the protocol or the program that works for most people, and you just need to do it right.

 

Anthony Gurule  17:54

If you’re not seeing results, you’re not either activating the right things correctly, or you’re not doing it enough, or you’re not doing it well enough. Well enough. And so, you know, they they almost feel guilty about their own progress, not happening because they can’t seem to activate and get things going. Right.

 

Anthony Gurule  18:18

Where in my mind, it’s not there’s not enough of a goal, or there’s not enough enticement for the body to even want to do the thing. Because we’re not challenging it, there’s no novelty, that would elicit an activation pattern that we would even want and the isolated principle, while good from maybe a post surgical and very acute setting, It’s not as beneficial when you’re trying to get back to a sport. isolation is still fine, right?

 

Anthony Gurule  18:48

When often we see isolation oftentimes with bodybuilding and you can still even isolate as a corrective or an accessory as we were talking about, if you need something to kind of pick up then it’s slightly deficient compared to everything else. 100%. But that cannot be the foundation of a rehab approach.

 

Anthony Gurule  19:06

And one last note, before we wrap up here I want to talk about for the activations is understanding like, what, what we really even mean by activation, right? Activation again means the muscle is activated or contracting.

 

Anthony Gurule  19:22

Thus, in turn, moving the body part. As we already said, I don’t think I don’t think this is activating, okay, well, like do the movement. okay, your leg moves to the muscle has to be activated otherwise, you will not have been able to complete the movement. Fair enough, right?

 

Anthony Gurule  19:38

But when you’re looking at discrepancies, he was basically like, well, this side is burning all the time. So it must be over activated and the other side is not burning, so it must be under activated. And in my opinion, at least in this situation.

 

Anthony Gurule  19:56

The reverse is actually true. The burning side is the difficient side. the burning side is the side that is getting overworked from these basic leg lift exercises, that that means it is it doesn’t have the capacity or the endurance to do all the reps.

 

Anthony Gurule  20:13

So it’s overworked. It’s not that it’s not activated, it actually is activated, it’s just not strong enough. However you want to say it, to be able to do all that in that in turn while it’s burning, and then the other side, that’s fine, that side is fine.

 

Anthony Gurule  20:28

So I would actually say, the side that’s burning more, needs a little bit more time and attention. And that’s sometime is the downside of these isolated exercises is you’re doing something that’s too isolated for the muscle’s ability, whereas when you’re doing these side lunges, I’m still working the same hip components, it’s just not isolated.

 

Anthony Gurule  20:48

So I have the surrounding help of all the other muscles, connective tissue, so on and so forth, to help build the strength along with it. So that’s kind of a just additional side thing we should be considering when we’re talking about activations.

 

Anthony Gurule  21:01

So to recap, what we need to understand is sometimes being too precise, being too calculated being too focused on certain individual regions and body parts and or movements before you can do more, could actually be detrimental to the overall progress of what you’re trying to accomplish. Right, we have to keep the goal in mind.

 

Anthony Gurule  21:27

While it might not begood to say, Hey, if you want to end up playing tennis, let’s just start playing tennis and kind of just like, you know, tinker around as we go. No, that’s that’s going from zero to 100.

 

Anthony Gurule  21:39

Right, we need to build more stepping stones. But at the same time, if you want to get back to tennis, and yet you’re just doing clam shells, or isolated hip exercises, because your hips hurt at some point in time. Or you need to learn how to hinge because that’s really important for hips and lower back.

 

Anthony Gurule  21:56

That’s going to be a very, very long road to recovery. Now, again, because there will be someone who says it well, what about this, this, and this? Yes, context, it might be important at the same time, but as we were saying, you cannot depend on that from a long term perspective.

 

Anthony Gurule  22:13

And you have to be able to integrate that into the whole thing. And if it’s in in making sure that it’s not slowing down, or holding back at the progress of your patient or client.

 

Anthony Gurule  22:24

So keep moving, hips are important, I ain’t gonna lie, spine neutrality, hip hinging, important to a certain degree of context, it’s okay to flex the spine. If it hurt in the past, flexing forward is okay. And actually doing it more could encourage more spinal flexion and familiarity with flexion and create some resiliency and comfort and flexion.

 

Anthony Gurule  22:47

But if you’re going out in gardening for two hours, it might be prudent to hinge a little bit more so that it’s not on your lower back. You see what we’re getting at here. Explore, understand your body, start getting to a movement in a flow state and understanding that we’re looking for balance and feeling to elicit–so sorry–to complete the task at hand, change the task, make it more complex, add something novel, right. all of these things are going to help you understand your body better, how to move better, how to encourage more movement and ultimately, feel better, feel stronger, and move better. Thanks for tuning in, guys. Live loud.


Implementing Corrective Exercises & Accessory Movements EP|67

Live LOUD Life Podcast
Lafayette Colorado

Episode 67

Implementing Corrective Exercises & Accessory Movements

With Dr. Antonio Gurule


Want to change up your exercise routine but don’t know where to start? Tune in as Dr. Antonio talks about body awareness and the importance of building up to new movements for rehab and strength. 

Episode Highlights 

4:00 – Proprioceptive awareness

8:00 – Example of hypermobility

12:00 – The importance of building up to progressive movements

20:00 – Example of corrective movements 

24:00 – The importance of “shocking the system” and mixing it up for your body


About Dr. Antonio Gurule

Nutrition Building Blocks Broken Down

Background:

  • Father
  • Doctor of Chiropractic
  • Owner of Live LOUD
  • Personal Trainer & Health Coach

Anthony Gurule  00:00

Hey what’s up guys, welcome back to another episode of the Live Loud Life Podcast. I’m Antonio, I’m your host of the Live Loud Life podcast. Today we’re going to be talking about some training principles here. And we’re just gonna dive right into it, we don’t have a lot of housekeeping or anything like that.

 

Anthony Gurule  00:26

Oh, just a small note, has nothing to do with training. But we do have a short mini course out for those of you who are pregnant right now, or if your partner’s pregnant, we have a little mini course on teaching you how to not suck at giving your pregnant partner a massage. We believe heavily on being able to offer some body work at home, to help with the aches and pains that your partner might be having. But not only that, like it really helps you guys increase your relationship and your bond during this time, which sometimes things can feel a little weird or a little odd being pregnant. But not only that, it helps with the birth preparation process. So having additional hands on care in between our sessions, or if you’re not even seeing a chiropractor and acupuncturist or prenatal massage, having that hands on care really helps with the the preparation of labor and delivery. So if you are interested in that, if you’re pregnant now and you want your partner to not suck, you can get this for them and say, “Hey, watch this, it’ll literally tell you what to do.”

 

Anthony Gurule  01:30

If you want to be proactive and your partner is pregnant, you want to be able to facilitate and help out with that, then that’d be awesome thing for you to just get on your own and follow through. It’s short, it’s a two hour course we go through some anatomical landmarks that teach you, you know where to press how to press what to do, you know how to be safe and effective, so on and so forth. So if you’re curious about that, we’ll throw a link in the show notes for that. And we will also be will also put it up on our website, which is liveloudlife.com. And we have it spread across all of our social media accounts as well. We’re most active on Instagram, handle is @live.loud.life. And then obviously on Facebook, you can find us pretty easily as well.

 

Anthony Gurule  02:11

But today, what we’re gonna be talking about is accessory exercise. And so oftentimes, we get into this some referred to as like the rehab purgatory, or corrective exercise purgatory, so on and so forth. Meaning we over emphasize the importance of needing to be able to do basic things before you can do complex things now, in theory, and just from surface face value, that makes sense, right? That makes sense, we need to be able to handle a lighter load before heavier load or simple things before more complex things. But what we wanted to walk through today is, you know, how do you apply these accessory exercises, corrective exercises, and when should you be advancing these, and when should you be continuously, including them and kind of just more like the philosophical foundation as to like why we do a lot of these things.

 

Anthony Gurule  03:15

Now. As always, context is most important, right? When you’re talking about these exercises, being able to apply them at the right time, in the right place, with the right load, with the right intensity is what makes things really hard, right. And for many coaches or, or rehab professionals, that’s kind of the art behind it, of understanding the individual and where they’re at, so on and so forth. And so when you’re talking about applying it to yourself, it gets a little bit more not confusing, per se, but just a little bit more difficult, not having someone to kind of like have that external view of knowing what might be best for you. But as you start to learn your body more and more, you’ll start to understand where your deficits are and where your strengths are, and where we need to spend a little bit more time attention. But what we’re trying to provide here, if you will, is in giving these corrective exercises or these accessory movements.

 

Anthony Gurule  04:11

Often times we’re trying to enhance and improve the proprioceptive awareness that we have for our body. Now what is proprioception? Proprioception is essentially your body’s understanding of where it is in time and place. So for instance, right now, I, my body understands that I’m sitting on a bench. And right now I’m trying to be mindful of my posture. Not only because it’s a little bit more comfortable, but it also looks a little bit more pleasant than me just slumping in front of a microphone, right? So my body has this awareness of like kind of how I feel and what my posture and position is.

 

Anthony Gurule  04:51

Another example would be my shoulders down by my side, my shoulders up above overhead. Now, because I’ve done a good amount of shoulder rehab and strength, and, you know, focus and intention, I know that my range of motion outside of me hitting these massive earphones is pretty much at full flexion or AB duction where my biceps are pretty much at my ear. For a lot of us who don’t do that a lot, when we go through these range of motion exercises, and I say lift your hands up overhead, and they get to here. And you know, I might ask like, Hey, do you feel like your arms are reaching towards the ceiling, or as far up as they can? Or at full range of motion? You know, whatever the question might be. And they’ll say, Yeah, and I’m like, well, you’re actually only at about 100, and maybe 50 or 160 degrees, we want to be at 180. And so you show him that difference of 30 degrees of what they thought they actually had. And they they get very perplexed, you’re confused, because Oh, my gosh, I thought I thought my arm was straight up overhead, right?

 

Anthony Gurule  05:43

So we see that there’s a lack of understanding and proprioceptive awareness about their shoulder complex, at least in that context of moving the arm up overhead. So that’s, that’s just an example. Now, other ways we could think of proprioception is like a balancing exercise, right? doing like a single leg balance, we’ve taken off a point of contact. So now it’s more challenging for your body to balance  on a stable surface, such as the ground, which is one foot, so your body’s proprioceptive awareness feels itself tipping forward, backwards, and side to side. And it’s making these micro adjustments and corrections, to keep you balanced.

 

Anthony Gurule  06:23

Now, this is a really important concept, because oftentimes, these corrective exercises and accessory movements fall into this category, not just balance in general, but the greater concept of proprioception of how to fine tune our motor control to elicit the output that we want, right, because when we’re talking about fitness, or exercise, or working out or training room and sport, you are intentionally trying to do something, you’re intentionally trying to create a movement, you’re intentionally trying to push, pull, squat, you know, whatever as an outcome, right. So there is a motor control component to this. And the way in which we do that (control being the key word here) dictates efficiency, dictates strength, dictates power, dictates elegance, poise, whatever that might be, if you’re talking to you about something like dancing, right. And so the more repetitions you do, obviously, your ability to fine tune that motor control enhances. Now, if we’re at a deficit for whatever reason, let’s say easist example that you had an injury, right? The motor control component of that region in could, even globally, diminishes slightly, because you now have a broken kind of link in the chain, if you will. So when we’re talking about gross motor movement, gross, meaning like full body movements, and this goes beyond the thing that I get oftentimes irritated because it’s overused, it does make sense, but it is overused in the context of it is, everything’s connected to everything right, like, if your pinky toe’s broken, it’s going to affect the way that your left shoulder moves or something like that, you can make a strong argument for that.

 

Anthony Gurule  08:19

But what we what we mean realistically, though, is just like our body feeds off of other regions, right, so an example would be, if I’m going to kick a soccer ball, I’m running. So both feet are running so you know, classic movement that everyone does. But as I come to approach the ball based on the target, so now I have visual acuity problems here, like I have to fine tune and focus on something. So I now have to look at the ball and look at my target. And I have to know where the ball is while the ball is moving. And I have to be able to place my foot in the position that I wanted to hit based on where I want it to go against the target all of while, I have to be able to plant the opposite foot in a position that allows me to be stabilized so that I can torque about my stance leg, my hip, and then my torso pivots around. So you can see there’s a lot of moving parts when you’re talking about these kind of complex movements.

 

Anthony Gurule  09:17

And if I had an ankle sprain on either side, more importantly, if it was on my plant side, which is where I’m going to be absorbing all of my force, as I’m decelerating from running. That’s going to affect how all of this stuff comes into play. So when you have an injury, or we revert back oftentimes to these quote unquote, corrective exercises or accessory movements, to regain what was lost as a result of the injury. Now, it doesn’t always have to be an injury. It could be compliancy, right? I go through based on the season of life, I do a lot of the same things over and over because it’s effective for what I need right now. There’s a lot of holes in gaps within that, because I don’t do a lot of extra accessory correctives, I kind of do, you know, main compound lifts to suffice for what I need right now based on time, you know, goals on and so forth, or maintenance. And now, when, because of that compliancy of doing the same thing over and over, which is not wrong, right, there’s no wrong or right here, I will develop tightness in certain areas, because I may be sitting down filming more content or editing content, I might develop, you know, hyper mobility in some areas, because I’m doing the same thing over and over. And I get compliant with the movement and not having as much intention into it. This is just, you know, kind of rough examples, if you will. And so we see, oftentimes, we get this like creep of situations coming in, whether it’s hypermobility, or tightness or something like that. And thus, then we need to address those.

 

Anthony Gurule  10:59

So oftentimes, that’s what we see in our office. And oftentimes, because these aren’t really like overuse injuries, although they can be, we see someone come into our office with these like kind of dull aches and pains, it’s nothing really significant, that would elicit like, hey, we have significant tissue damage or an injury. But because of the compliance of what we’ve been doing, more times than not really, it’s tension, we’ve developed tension in certain areas, and then that tension affects how we’re able to move with the activities that we like to do. Thus, we create altered movement patterns that allow us to still achieve the task. But now we’re kind of taking shortcuts, whereas what we were able to do is very efficient, and very congruent with how maybe that movement should have been done. And now taking that shortcut, we’re trying to just work around the stiffness rather than dealing with it. And now we’re creating potentially even more issues down the road. So you got to kind of really re scrape everything down, and kind of build that back up.

 

Anthony Gurule  11:57

So that’s where these accessories or corrective exercises can come back into play. But what happens is, we oftentimes focus on the need to be correct in order for you to then progress to the next level. And in my mind, while that is true and beneficial, we do need to go to that next level, I think sooner than we think, to give the body context of to why the corrective, or the exercise, or the accessories are important and how it’s how it’s building that path or that step stone to the thing that you actually want to do. And so very often, and that’s where we look at progressions and regressions within, you know, movement patterns. So, you know, as an example, we could say, Hey, someone wanted to get back to, you know, Olympic lifting and doing like a barbell snatch, well, there’s an overhead squat component, there’s obviously an element of being able to be stable with your arm overhead, while you’re descending into overhead squat, which means that barbell is going to be shifting and your center mass is gonna be changing. So obviously, there’s a lot of complex things in that. And if you’ve suffered a shoulder injury, and that’s what you want to get back to, we have to find some ways in which the corrective exercises are going to help build you up to that. So, you know, it might not be overhead snatching right away, but a landmine press might feel fantastic and not elicit any pain. And that is similar to us being able to have a locked out overhead shoulder position, and I can transition my body into in a way in which I my arm feels like it’s more overhead, creating that compressive stability through the shoulder, and we can add that with, you know, a half lunge position or something like that. So it’s not the same, right? It’s not the same, but this can be considered an accessory or a corrective exercise leading up then to overhead squats and snatches and things like that, right. So the the nomenclature of accessories and corrective exercises doesn’t simply just mean, you know, foam rolling or, you know, isolated banded exercises or things like that, while that is a component of it and good, those could almost be more considered as like,  warm up exercises where we’re priming the nervous system, we’re releasing tension within certain areas so that the joints can move to the range of motion that we want to then perform the exercises that we need. Right. So and I don’t want people to get caught up in the you know, this, the semantics of like, what we’re trying to name these things, right, because I think that gets confusing.

 

Anthony Gurule  14:42

What I want you to moreso focus on is what were the real deficits that you that you need, and can we build right like a ladder or stepping stones to help you rebuild from that. And it is a constant game of going up and down.  I use the concept is like the game Chutes and Ladders, commonly you’re going to climb up and then you’re going to come down, because you’re always trying to find out, like where that next threshold is of being able of your capabilities. And when you when you’re knocking on that door, there’s gonna be a few times where you backslide a little bit, and you’ll get a little bit of aches and pains or, or, you know, whatever that is, and, and that’s okay, because then you know, okay, well, that path got me there fairly quickly. So I can recreate that path. Again, go back to the corrective exercises, the lifting patterns, the intensity, the sets and reps, things that I did. And then you just need a micro adjust whatever possibly causes you go down. And that could just be simply recovery or something like that, doesn’t mean you did necessarily anything wrong from a lifting or training perspective, might just been a recovery perspective.

 

Anthony Gurule  15:45

But I think adding these accessories and corrective exercises consistently throughout is beneficial, because the compliance factor that we had indicated before, and all of this, again, comes back down to goals, right? What are the goals that you want to be able to do? What are the pain points that you actually have, and if there’s things that are limiting you from being able to progress to those goals, and so on, and so forth, then yeah, those are the things you need to address.

 

Anthony Gurule  16:13

But from a timing perspective, you know, corrective exercises might be the thing that you need to focus on the most. Right, when you’re dealing with a certain season of life, in a certain area, and you’re having more pain or discomfort, or whatever that is, but yet you need quote, unquote, you need to train, and we hear this a lot, which is, which is there’s nothing wrong with it. Like, for my mental sanity, I need to go train. That is great. But we have to also, you know, take into consideration what training really is, right. training from a, from a global scheme involves a lot of things, it’s not just, you know, rubber hitting the road and pounding it, right, that is an element. And it’s great to do intense workouts and push yourself to the edge. But there might be a time and a place where you need to focus a little bit more on the collective and the accessories to help clean up some of the gaps or the limitations or some of the sticky spots, that’s then not allowing your rubber to the road training to be as effective. Right?

 

Anthony Gurule  17:20

And what is it going to be? Well, I mean, you could go on Google or YouTube and type in “accessory exercises for the shoulder” or “corrective exercises for the back of the hip, and you will get bombarded with a ton of exercises and information. That might be an awesome place to start. I mean, we post that same content on YouTube, to hopefully help someone find a little piece of nugget of information out there that could make all the difference wonderful, saves you a ton of time, money from going in. But that might not always be the case, right? Like we throw that out there just like hey, you know, this is something to try. But if you’re really, at this breakpoint, have mentally struggling with what to do or anything like that, it really helps having someone just go through an evaluation and realistically the the cost and the time that it takes to get that pinpoint evaluation, and then the exact information that you need to make the change really saves you a lot of time and money in the end as well. So you know, it really just kind of depends on the person like I am, I am guilty to a fault of being a DIY er and trying to tell I just run my head into a wall. And then I’m like, Okay, I can’t do it, I need to reach out to professional, right. Nothing wrong with that. And if you want to try that with your body, I love that like exploring, and trying to figure it out that again, comes back to the whole concept of proprioception, and awareness, the more you can explore your own body’s range of motion, strength capabilities, proprioceptive, balance, you know, all those things, the more input you’re going to have, and the more general awareness you’re going to have. So that when something is awry, you know, well, I can fix this or I can’t fix this or I know what to at least try and know, like kind of what avenue to at least go down so that when you then hit up a professional if you need it, you can say Hey, this is what’s going on. And I know what’s going on because of this, this, this and this and like that makes my life awesome. That makes my life so much easier, and that’s awesome, I get a sweet, I see where you’re at. Let me see if there’s anything else that you might have missed from just like, you know, because I can do more motion palpation and trying to figure out like specific joint range of motion limitation, so on and so forth if you’re in the office, and then we just kind of combine all that information together. But I’m a huge fan of that. And that’s that’s, you know, half the reason why we’re having this exact same conversation again, coming back to the awareness, the proprioception model, and using correctives or accessories to help facilitate that.

 

Anthony Gurule  19:52

now, again, very broad examples, but let’s use some examples here of or philosophy principles or philosophies, zero, but let’s use some specific examples to see if that helps kind of clear things up. So the shoulder, right, one of the more obviously, complex joints out there. So what would some accessory or corrections look like? Well, traditionally, we see, and this gets demonized, so I apologize, because I’m going to then kind of do that again. But banded exercises where we’re simply just doing like external rotation with a band pulling like this internal rotation point like this. And then it might be there, those are really good actually. Right, they can be fantastic for priming, the nervous system that’s activating the rotator cuff.

 

Anthony Gurule  20:41

It creates torsion and some compressive load, depending on the angle, and distractive load in the shoulder complex, which can help build up the resiliency of the tendons in the connective tissue, which again, fantastic, but it cannot be like the only thing, it needs to be expanded upon. So for instance, we can take that same concept, and crossover cemetery, or just wall mounted bands, or cable machines are great, because now I can do more complex movements where I might be doing like a face pull. So I’m grabbing cables that might be crossed, and I’m going to pull them up kind of towards my face. So I’m creating external rotation as I’m coming into AB duction and a little bit of flexion on my shoulder. So that’s a really good way to take that same concept and then add on to another level.

 

Anthony Gurule  21:28

Now going above and beyond that is how do we again, continue to strengthen the rotator cuff? Well, the rotator cuff is expanded upon and strengthened through compressive and distractive load. So we can then take that same concept and then maybe add it to like a TRX, where I’m using my body weight, and that body weight is trying to traction my arm. So I’m strengthening the rotator cuff through that. And I can do a face pole there. So I’m taking a higher load from the cables or the bands, and doing it more complex because now I’m adding a dynamic plank as I’m holding my body, you know, still, and I’m pulling that up through from their compressive loads, right? Why don’t need to go through an external rotation per se, but I can then add a crawling movement where I’m going through translation as I’m crawling against the ground, and I’m going to be having a compressive force. And as I’m crawling one hand has to go through kind of flexion and AB duction as I go above my head. And then it’s going to pull down using a little bit more lats than the upper back per se. But it’s going to be activating the rotator cuff to maintain good shoulder centration as I translate and pivot over my body over my shoulder, right? So it’s a completely different type of movement. Now this would all be indicative of like, well, what would I need something like this for? Well, it would depend very much on the sport. These are very common things that we do for bootcamp goers, CrossFitters, so on and so forth. Even just weekend warriors, as you’re talking about activities that you might be doing outdoors, right, like rock climbing, or mountain biking or anything like that. These are great just proprioceptive movements that can be used as accessories and/or correctives to enhance your awareness and capabilities around the shoulders, then of course, we would want to strengthen the shoulders through you know, push ups or TRX rows or pull ups or military press so on and so forth. But we sprinkled some of these in, to make it challenging, but to again, just put your body in a position in which it does not have a choice but to get that information and enhance upon it proprioception and again, awareness coming back to that same thing. So oftentimes, when we’re programming or giving these, they’re kind of just sometimes they seem silly, but they’re sometimes they’re just fun. But again, they’re they’re intended to be kind of challenging and novel, because that’s where you’re going to be getting new information. that compliancy coming back to that when you do the same thing over that information comes back to your head. And your body’s like, oh, yeah, I’ve seen that before. This is all good. I know what to do. Which is great. Because when you get to that subconscious level, when you’re looking at like the learning model, you don’t know what you don’t know, you now know that you don’t know you’re making intentional decisions to change that. And then it becomes subconscious, where you the changes that you were trying to elicit now are just done automatically.

 

Anthony Gurule  24:08

So yeah, there’s a certain element of skill and knowledge that you’ve just done it so many times. But it’s good to change the system, right? It’s good to shock the system and just give it a little bit of novel information, so that it becomes new, and then your body actually has to pay attention and process it. And that’s really what we’re looking at and what we’re trying to do. So if you’re adding corrective exercises or accessories in this manner, that’s fantastic. Keep going mix it up.

 

Anthony Gurule  24:34

If you’re not, this episode is again more for you. I think it’s a great thing to add. And again, if you don’t know what to do, you can start with Google. You can start with YouTube, you can start with a consult with someone and they can give you better suited movements for you, your goals, aches and pains, so on and so forth. But again, as I say before, as I said before, we love encouraging the exploration model of trying to figure out how your body actually moves, so on and so forth, and then see where you get and then, you know, ask for a little bit help to go above and beyond that, if you will. So, I hope this was beneficial. It was a reminder to myself that I need to add more of these correctives. And just kind of, you know, get back to the exploration play model of figuring out my body and then still, you know, reverting back to the basics and the foundation, the bread and butter of compound lifts, squats, deadlifts, swings, cleans, military press, so on and so forth. Because those offers so much bang for your buck, that if you’re doing those, you have more time to then go through this exploration model where, whereas not, again, not wrong, you’re kind of classic bodybuilding, where you’re hitting certain regions of your body with a lot of different exercises throughout, that takes a lot more time. If that’s your goal, nothing wrong with that, you know, bulk up, that’s awesome. But if you’re someone who’s trying to, which again, is more so speaking to the population that we treat, family, kids, busy, if you’re trying to like kind of pack these things in, the compound lifts that we just described, you get a lot more out of those full body movements, and then you have a little bit more extra time to spend on the correctives and accessories if you will.

 

Anthony Gurule  26:15

So I hope this was beneficial. Please make sure to like subscribe and share if you’re diggin this. Make sure to follow us on social media as we indicated on Instagram, @live.loud.life. You check out our website as well where we have a lot of this content also in blog form, depending on how you just want to consume the information that’s gonna be helping you and that’s www.liveloudlife.com.  no dots in between. Liveloudlife.com So thanks for tuning in, guys. We’ll see you next time.


How to Treat Shoulder Pain: Conservative Treatment Options & Rehab Programs

Condition Series: How To Treat Shoulder Pain

If you’re like me and you’ve ever had aching shoulder pain before, it can be super frustrating. Now, as humans, right, we depend so much on our hands. So what’s important is our hands are attached to our arm, which is attached to our shoulder. So anytime we are going to grab something, pull, reach, push, do what humans do, it becomes very frustrating when you have an achy or painful shoulder.

Now, this can be dealt with in a very easy, systematic way, if you know what to do.

Hi, my name is Dr. Antonio, I am the owner here at Live Loud Chiropractic and Coaching with my wife, Dr. Nichelle. We are based out of Lafayette, Colorado in Boulder County. Our aim and our focus is to help guide you to the adventurous life you are made for. And we do that through a number of different ways ranging from chiropractic and coaching. Now, in that middle is really where the magic happens, because that’s where we come together as a team to make a plan on how to actually dive in and deal with some of these common conditions such as lower back pain, neck pain, and in this case, shoulder pain.

PLAY VIDEO ⬇︎

Why You Have Shoulder Pain

Now, what’s important to understand about shoulder pain, and this is the same thing we say, with all the other issues that come into our office is outside of significant trauma, there’s a reason why you have pain.

What does that mean? Well, in the case of shoulder, we’re looking at repetitive use injuries. So in this case, or an example we might say is, “Well, I started having shoulder pain after joining a new a bootcamp class or CrossFit class, or some sort of workout class.” okay, well, we see a change in the amount of load in which the shoulder was actually experiencing. So it would make sense that that might be part of the problem. So we have to address treating something, i.e. like a shoulder injury, we have to understand the mechanism of how it actually started. Because if I simply just rub on the tissues, work on adjustments, and help you deal with the pain, what’s going to what’s going to prevent it from coming back, if you don’t address how it actually started in the first place?

if we take a step back, ask you about your lifestyle, ask you about your recovery, ask you about how what you’re doing for training and working out, how intense is it. all of these other factors that actually have more to do with your shoulder pain than simply what your spinal alignment looks like, that’s going to give us way better of an idea of what to do in the program and the plan to set you up with to actually deal with your shoulder pain. Okay?

 

Now, one thing that I do want to add to that is we are very much about maintaining momentum, right, you’re coming into us because you’re frustrated, you’re not able to work out, you’re not able to pick up your kid, you’re not able to get up and down off the floor, whatever that might be. And you feel like you’re not able to keep moving forward with life and/or you might be even moving backwards. we want to help you maintain that momentum. So we are going to encourage you to keep moving, to keep exercising as best as you can. But what we’re going to be able to do for you and help you through the coaching and the chiropractic assessment model, is help you look at the things that we know to be the main triggers for you, so that we don’t keep spinning around in this pain cycle.

Right. If we can break the pain cycle and get you out of there, then we’re going to be able to layer on top of that, better movements, better rehab, better strength, better mobility, whatever applies to you. And then on top of that, layer in our soft tissue skills, whether that’s dry needling, MRT or cupping, as well as adjustments so that we can maintain the proper range of motion and joint mechanics that you need for your body and especially your shoulder.

So if you have had shoulder pain before, or you have a chronic achy shoulder that you just can’t seem to get over, and or if you have a loved one that’s been dealing with a shoulder issue, constantly reaching over grabbing their shoulder, This video is going to be very helpful.

Shoulder Evaluation & Assessment

Alright, so we’re gonna be walking you through what a shoulder evaluation and you know, expedited treatment would look like. So essentially, what we’re going to be deciding through our evaluation, obviously, your history is going to be determining the direction of where we’re going, as indicated in the intro to this video, when we see a peak or a spike or a change in load, or a change in exercise program, whatever that is, we’re gonna see common areas that are aggravated more.

And those are typically impingement type of syndromes, bicep tendonitis, rotator cuff irritation, those are going to be your three kind of primary focuses. Now the reason why those are happening, that’s what we have to decide and dive into. We’re trying to determine the underlying causes of those, it’s very easy to diagnose what is irritated, but it’s harder to figure out what are the actually precipitating factors that led us to that.

Looking at range of motion, proper range of motion for the shoulder blade, shoulder, thoracic spine and the neck are going to be our most critical things to look at.

Basic Shoulder Range of Motion

  1. Take both arms straight up overhead. We’re looking for 100 degrees of flexion. And ABduction as she comes up, and we want to see if she can get that nice and vertical. We’re also looking for any catching points, or painful parts within that arc.
  2. Next we’re looking at internal-external rotation and extension of the shoulder. So she’s going to take this hand, reach behind her head and touch this opposite shoulder blade. So we want to again, look at nice vertical arm here.
  3. Right arm underneath over to here. Great. So now we’re looking at internal rotation of her shoulder and extension. And we want to look at shoulder blade movement here.
  4. Left side underneath over to here and we’re looking to see you know, comparatively side. Do we need symmetry? No. You do not need to chase making sure both sides are symmetrical. We are asymmetrical human beings.
  1. Tip the chin down, touch her sternum.
  2. Extend back, as far as you can.
  3. Look over your right shoulder. Awesome, look over left shoulder.
  4. Ear to shoulder, tipping side to side. Wonderful.
  5. Stand feet together. And she’s going to look over her right shoulder. And then she’s going to twist her whole body to the right. I’m looking at ankles, hips, low back, mid back and neck with this gives me a good global range of motion. Good, back to neutral look left, turn left.
  1. Keeping legs straight, toe touch, we want to look for thoracic spine flexion here.
  2. Come back up, arms up overhead, and then lean back as far as you can. So we want to look to see what our extension looks like.

 

Modified Sphinx

1. Come up on your hands and knees. Cat cow. we’re getting a good global assessment of how the spine moves.

2. Move your feet forward just a little bit. Sit your butt back towards your heels. Now move your hands back a little bit, this is going to be you can go back a little bit further. By moving her hips back, that locks the lower back from being able to move more.

3. Now in this position, because again, we’ve locked out the lower back, we can go through the other ranges of motion. So obviously, we get a little bit of hip shift, but from here, I can really start to see how the spine bends side to side. So we’re kinda like windshield-wipering the spine here and going side to side.

4. Now next is we want to look at rotation again. So there’s a way for us to isolate more about the rotation that we want to see from the mid back. So from here, you’re going to put one hand behind your neck, and then your other elbow is going to drop down.

Now, as indicated, right, some of the main things that we run into bicep irritation and impingement type of syndromes. And impingement is something that will happen with range of motion as you come up overhead, it’s the level that how it’s a level of impingement that could be created in an issue as dictated again by the scapular limitations that we might see.

 

Looking at How the Shoulder Blades Move

So what we’re going to look at here is how the shoulder blades should actually be moving. So as we already were showing, as this arm comes up overhead, we want to see how far this goes. Now, if that shoulder blade is pulled down, and back or too tight, she’s not going to be able to, to raise it as high. So we’ll test this right just as a as a proof of concept. So if I hold her shoulder blade, and I say now take your arm up overhead, you can see how it just kind of stops, right. So we oftentimes do this unintentionally, because we’ve been queued, keep your shoulder blades down and back, thinking that’s the more stable position. But in doing so that actually limits your range of motion. So if I’m locking this down, because I was acute, or I think that’s the better way to do it, and this is coming up and over, you’re basically banging your your arm or your humerus, the ball up into the socket roof. And that creates impingement sensitivity, whether it’s a rotator cuff, the bicep tendon, so on and so forth. So we want to make sure that that shoulder blade is moving well, this is this is one of the primary things that is oftentimes overlooked, we focus on massaging bicep tendon, working on the rotator cuff, the upper trap, and not knowing that we actually have to queue and promote that scapular range of motion.

So some of the things that we talk about is making the arm long. So if she’s here, and let’s just say for instance, she was actually having a pinch here, one of the cues that helps prevent that and or improve her symptoms is by simply asking her to make her arm long. So I’ll say, hey, try to reach out. So in doing so, you’re actually going to promote scapular protraction. And that’s this lateralization of moving away from midline, as opposed to pointed down and back.

Now, this is still stable. Yes, pulling down and back is stable for rows and other things like this. But we have to now train this. So if she was to make a fist, and now to say, make your arm long, and now resist me, she’s craving stability through a protracted shoulder blade position. Okay? Now, this is critical, because more times than not is we just don’t have the stability out there. So we think pull down and back to make us tighter. So that’s something that we have to we have to test out and make sure that that is an appropriate position. Now, this is also important for the rotator cuff because the rotator cuff muscles, they all start from the shoulder blade. So the relationship from the rotator cuff from the shoulder blade to the actual ball, right your arm, the head of the humerus, needs to be defined and improved.

So if I’m again, retracting, but yet this is wanting to come out, well, you see this battle between the rotator cuff muscles, the shoulder blade is being held back, the arms trying to go up and the rotator cuff muscles don’t know what to do, they’re not able to stabilize and adequately hold on to the shoulder if we’re having these opposing forces. So this is another reason when we’re looking at rotator cuff injuries, that we have to improve the scapular mechanics to improve the whole relationship on how everything is moving.

Now, outside of that, if we’re looking at rotator cuff issues, we’re going to do our standard testing of hey, resist here, resist here, fine. This helps us again, determine the exact tissue or the exact area that is angry. Again, that is the easy part that it’s very easy to find, hey, this is the this is the issue that everything’s kind of stemming from, but we have to understand and know why. And more importantly, what are the things that we’re consistently doing on a routine basis, whether it’s at home, whether it’s in your workout, whatever that is, that’s consistently insulting the tissue and making that wound or injury quote unquote, fester and linger. So that’s more important than actually understanding the site of pain. of understanding what you should and should not be doing from an acute injury to a sub acute injury or a chronic injury to allow you to progress further forward to be able to do more things.

Compression

Make a fist. Scaption is going to be about 45 degrees off the midline. Now, what that simply means is the head of the humerus is going right in line with the socket, and the shoulder blade from this position.

So this essentially gives the rotator cuff and a lot of the muscles the best force tension relationship, meaning it’s at its strongest point, right.

So for compression, all we’re starting with here is just hey, resist me, I’m gonna push down against her as she fights this. And this is a compressive load into the shoulder. So this allows us to first initiate what a conversation of compression resistance actually looks like. And then we would put her under load, such as a bottoms up carry, or in a plank position, anything in which I’m pushing into her body through a compressive force, and she has to resist that and maintain the shape and the positioning that we want.

Now, you might feel shaky in these positions, and that’s okay, that’s your body’s, that’s your body working with your muscles to figure out how much load or how much strength that it needs to present with what it’s being asked to do.

Distraction

Trust fall. you’re just gonna lean back. Okay, so from here, you can see that there’s traction from her shoulders, right. So if we had a suspension trainer or something set up, go ahead and pull your hips towards me a little bit. Now just bend your elbows and do a row. So pull up right now lean back, right. So this is just a mock kind of what a row would be on a suspension trainer, a TRX. So this is perfect, though, because I’m creating distraction from her shoulder. And she has to resist her body being or her arm being pulled away from her. This strengthens the rotator cuff more than almost anything else that we can do outside of these like just single exercise of internal external rotation.

So these are phenomenal to be able to build more resilience than strength, because we have to be able to pull ourselves up from the ground, or we have to be able to push ourselves up on the ground and starting with these basic exercises are wonderful for rehabbing and retraining the shoulder complex.

Now outside of that, what we’re also going to do is carries, right. we talked about distractive loads, if I was to just grab a couple of weights, couple dumbbells, couple kettlebells, that’s constant distractive load down into my arm. And if I just simply resist that, and walk for distance, as if I was like carrying a wheelbarrow, that’s a great exercise for building a lot of strength and load into the shoulders, and not compromising ways that might be pinching or adding to that.

Downward Facing Dog & Plank Exercise

A full plank has a lot of compressive load. Now what a lot of people have trouble with shoulder pain is getting up into that position. So we can train this by going through compressive loads into a downward facing dog position. So from here, all she’s going to do is lift her hips up towards the ceiling. Right? Now we see a somewhat vertical position here.

So I can retrain an overhead position that might be troublesome with the dumbbell or pressing weight through a compressive load that she’s able to control. Then she’s gonna come back to a plank, right? And now she’s in control.

 

Conclusion

So if this is something you’re dealing with shoulders are pesky, right?  it’s a ball and socket, so it gives us a great amount of mobility. But because of that, it makes it more complex when dealing with these injuries. Especially if you’re someone who’s hyper mobile, we oftentimes just hear “Stretch, stretch stretch,” you’re oftentimes going to see the need for doing more stability training so that the shoulder feels comfortable while going through ranges of motion. And then we can layer in mobility on top of that.

So if you found this to be helpful, and you’re dealing with the shoulder injury, please do not hesitate to reach out to us. If you have a family member again who’s dealing with something like this and they’ve just kind of been put through the wringer. We’d love to have a conversation with you or that family member or a friend to help them regain shoulder mobility and function so that you guys can live a loud, adventurous life. Thanks for tuning in guys.


How To Heal A Disc Herniation Without Drugs or Surgery

Condition Series: How To Heal A Disc Herniation Without Drugs or Surgery

If you have been told that you have a disc injury, disc bulge, disc herniation, or anything to do with a disc within your lower back, this video is for you.

Oftentimes, when we hear disk injuries, disc bulges, and disc herniations, and most of us think that means immediate surgical consultation or immediate surgical needs. Now, in some cases, it is very pertinent and important to be co-managing this with an orthopedic surgeon. But for the majority of cases, that is not the case. So my goal here today is to help reassure you and give you some confidence in your body and in your back, if you have been told that you have a disc injury, a disc bulge or a disc herniation.

I’m Dr. Antonio Gurule with Live Loud Chiropractic and Coaching. My wife and I have owned Live Loud  Chiropractic and Coaching in the Lafayette, Colorado in Boulder County area for seven years. I’ve suffered with this. I have treated many patients with disc bulges and disc herniations. In addition to myself, and what we have done through all of our education and learning and teaching and trial and error of working with people is helped to come up with a system that helps you determine:

  1. If it is a disc herniation or disc bulge
  2. The severity of that
  3. What to do next

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The Problem with Disc Herniations

You have to have a proper assessment and evaluation to determine what are the triggers and the things that make things worse. Disc injuries usually don’t respond well to rotation and flexion. That being said, if you were to be picking something up where I’m flexing over and bending forward, that is going to be compression of your spine under flexion.

And that is what’s going to be putting the most load on the disc. If a disc is trying to heal from an injury, it’s going to be very hard when you keep pushing on that disc and eliciting more pain and damage. If that’s not being addressed from your PCP, your physical therapist or your orthopedist, then what’s the use? Just putting medications, drugs and, you know, maybe some core stabilization exercises on there is not going to help, you’re going to keep spinning yourself in the loop by recreating more pain. the more pain you create, you’re going to be more sensitive to the pain, which only heightens the amount of pain that you feel. And all of a sudden you’re stuck in this loop.

Disc Herniation Assessment

Today we’re going to walk through a basic example of what a disc examination and assessment might look like. And some of the common cues that we give for movement and some of the common active rehab movements that we give early on and throughout to help you get over the disc injury.

Now again, this is the basic example that helps. This is in no way intended to say that this is for you. Because every disc injury is different in how it happens, the chronicity of the cycle will change and dictate what we need to do. You need a custom plan to help you once and for all get over the disc injury to create more confidence so that you can lead a healthy, active loud life. And if you’re interested in that, please follow along and I think you’ll enjoy this video.

Flexion Intolerant Low Back Pain

So as we already indicated, the more common presentations of lower back pain that we see are what we refer to as flexion intolerant low back pain. Now flexion intolerant, low back pain simply means your back does not tolerate flexion. How is flexion presented out throughout the day? well bending over to pick things up. We have to also consider though when you’re sitting, right and we kind of slump. compression is where things most gets sensitive or irritated when we’re talking about flexion intolerant low back pain.

Now with that, as we already indicated in the intro, these are commonly seen with disc injuries. Now disc injuries does not mean herniations, it does not mean bulges, you can have an annular tear, or some sort of disc sensitivity from an injury, and or from trauma-based and or repetitive based loading patterns that create a essentially desensitized disc. So these are the important things to understand. And what we’re going to try to show today is how we tease out or understand that this is more disrelated, or some sort of compression and flexion irritation.

Now, if you already have been told you have a disc injury, and has been confirmed or an MRI, the good part about that is we can expedite that and just understand the sensitive patterns, as we already indicated, we want to know how sensitive is inflection, whether that’s standing or sitting, load, so on and so forth. But if you’re unsure, and you just have this this back pain that’s been either chronic subacute or whatever that is, we want to determine what is actually the sensitized issue and what are the positions and movements again, that are craving this recurrent pattern of pain that you’re not able to get out of.

Because once you understand that, then we can very temporarily splint this so that we can allow the body to not become so sensitized to that pain cycle, and then reintroduce that later on.

The example that we commonly use is if you had a cut on your knuckle and you kept bending your fingers, that scab or that cut would essentially keep opening up in prolonging the healing process. Whereas sometimes you might need to actually splint or hold that finger straight for a while to allow the healing process to occur. And then after everything’s healed, we regain mobility and function back to that. That’s essentially how we treat disc injuries and these flexion intolerant lower back injuries.

So what we want to look for is, again, what are the positions that are most problematic for you? And then we have a few early intervention tools that I’m going to share with you today that will help you in that early sensitive or painful process.

Now, again, these are great for this early intervention, they’re also very well used and beneficial for just kind of like a daily spinal mobility or scrub, even if you’re not having pain. And if you’re someone who commonly is bending over a lot, labor workers, even those that are more sedentary in a desk position.

 

Movements for Looking at Range of Motion

  1. Bend down and attempt to touch toes. Any pain there?
  2. Feet together, arms up overhead, and then lean back. But we do have to keep in mind, if this hurts so much, what your body will commonly do is throw you into an extension where oftentimes you’re kind of walking around like this, because you don’t want to go forward.
  3. Heel drop test. Stand up on the toes, and with legs straight, drop hard on the ground.
  4. Compression of the spine. Sit at the end of the table, sit up nice and tall, then grab the end of the table and pull yourself down. Any issues?
  5. Still seated, kick one leg out in front of her and hold that up. Any tension? Does that go down the leg? Does it create burning symptoms, numbness on and so forth?

 

When we’re looking at disc mechanics, the disc sits in between the vertebral bodies. So if we flex the spine, round it, and add that compression, we want to see if there’s more sensitivity. More likely than not, if it’s a disc injury, we’re going to see with that compression and flection and these types of movements, increases a pain, potentially symptoms down leg if it is more of a disc herniation or bulge. And that’s what we need to determine for the extent of the injury.

 

Basic Movement Patterns for Herniated Discs

Now, in knowing all that, what do we do, right? Well, we already know that the disc is injured, and we have a flexion base injury. So this is where we come into the knuckle model, right? We need to temporarily help her “splint” this so that we don’t keep putting more and more pressure to the back of the disk where the injury is.

 

These are great for two main reasons. They help reduce the pain sensitivity, and help with the healing process.

  1. Hip Hinge

The reason why this is important is we’re always bending forward, right, you’re bending forward to pick something up, you’re unloading the dishwasher, you’re washing your face, your hands, we’re typically in a bent over flexed position. If this causes pain, we need to get to a position here where I can load more of my hamstring and my hips to reduce the load on the lower back. The lower back is still being loaded here. But the but the load is reduced.

  1. Supported Squat

So in our office, we have a suspension trainer or a TRX. You can also use rings or anything like that. At home, though you might not have that equipment. So what we use is a banister, or a kitchen sink, and you’d essentially just hook your sink, she’s going to be using my hands though to just demonstrate this moment.

Stand with a wide, open stance. Holding on to your support, lean back into your heels a little bit, not just your hips, like your whole body leaning back like you’re waterskiing, right?

So there’s two ways in which I try to coach this. So what I want you to try to do is, don’t let your hips go backwards as much, I want you to try to go straight up and down.

Now the second way we coach this is I want you to waterski more, so I want you to really set your hips back away from me. Really move the hips away from her hands. So in doing this, we’re actually decompressing the lower back.

But hands are anchored this way, what’s in the middle? lower back. So on each rep, that lower back is getting a little bit of traction and a little bit of decompression to help relieve a lot of the tension and aches and pains that we get from that compressive feeling of having these lower back injuries.

  1. McKenzie Extension Variation

On the ground, get onto your stomach in an upward-facing dog motion. Shift your weight into your hands and let your hips drop gently. Do multiple reps.

Conclusion

So again, these are the basics. First and foremost, understand pain. Second of all, work on some of the stabilizing muscles that help stabilize the lower back so you feel more comfortable.

These are kind of like your core exercises, but done in a specific way so that we’re not again picking at the scab, then we look at mobility for the mid back and the hips to make sure we have everything we need, then that’s our foundation of getting back to strength, power, agility, or whatever sport or activity that you enjoy doing.

It’s got to go through this progressive plan. We layer in again, soft tissue, dry needling adjustments, all the things that help act as a catalyst. But if I can give her these tools, she’s able to control her pain, so much better at home. And then it doesn’t feel like this end, this end diagnosis, “oh, I have a disc herniation. And all I can do is take medications and sit around.” No, we say this is your medication. These things work oftentimes better than muscle relaxers and ibuprofen and drugs because it maintains your mobility and it gets your body more confident about how to move rather than just sitting and waiting for the pain to return only to come back super stiff and weak.

So if you want to deal with your low back in a very progressive yet conservative way, this is this is how to do it. If you want to just take drugs and wait till it works, that’s totally fine. But most people want to get back to their life. And if you want someone advocating for you to help you through a disc herniation, disc bulge, or disc injury, we’d love to be that advocate and that support team for you. If you found this helpful, please feel free to reach out to us. If you have a family member who is dealing with low back pain, which is extremely common, and they’ve been through the wringer over the years, We would love to have a conversation with them to see how we can support them, whether in the office or even virtually having a consult or conversation over the computer. Thanks for tuning in guys, live loud.


How To Treat Neck Pain: Conservative Treatment & Exercises

Condition Series: How To Treat Neck Pain

Typically, it’s estimated that roughly three out of 10 people currently are experiencing some form of neck pain, discomfort, or upper back pain. Now, based on how we live in Western society, I actually think it’s slightly more. But there’s a lot of reasons from that as to why we think this is happening.

Now, argumentatively we’ve been reading books and reading newspapers and looking down for many years outside of the cell phone, but with the way modern technology is and how much more time we actually spend on computers, we’re actually seeing our world lives in this box. Right? Currently, you are watching this video on an iPad or an iPhone or your computer and our world lives right here. We very rarely, often look outside of this box where we live in. And that is, I think, a lot of the reason why we are experiencing a lot of neck pain.

Now, what do we do about that?

My name is Dr. Antonio, I am the owner here with my wife of Live Loud Chiropractic and Coaching. We are based out of Lafayette, Colorado, in Boulder County. Our big focus is to help guide you to the adventurous life you are made for, to help build stronger families and a stronger community.

Now, that is oftentimes very challenging when you’re dealing with pain. So not only are we trying to push and be very proactive about an active lifestyle, sometimes we have to deal with the pain and discomfort that is preventing us from enhancing our life and being able to do the things that we want to do.

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The Problem with Neck Pain

Now neck pain is one of those things that really wreak havoc on people’s lifestyles and their daily activities because so much of our proprioception and awareness, and our senses come through our head. If you can’t turn your head and your neck very well, it’s very hard to see, it’s very hard to hear when you want to be able to turn your head, right? So these are the important things that we want to address when we’re looking at neck pain.

Now, as we always state, we are very much about setting an example about a patient, active care model, meaning we need you to move–we need you to play an active role in this process. It is not simply just adjust, soft tissue work, and all of a sudden things go away. Because what you have to know and consider is outside of major trauma; major trauma–automobile accidents, falls, so on and so forth. There is a reason why you are starting to feel neck pain.

What does that mean? Well, it might be the way you’re sitting eight hours a day, it might be the way that you’re moving, it might be the way that you’re exercising. We have to determine what changes need to be made. Because if I simply just do adjustments and soft tissue work, and you go back to the same lifestyle that got you here, what’s to say it’s not going to happen again?

Our role is to make sure that you’re set up for success. Not just turn into this model, which is adjust, fix something which makes it feel good. Come back when it hurts. That’s the old model. That’s the old chiropractic model. That’s the old PT model. It’s very much a band-aid. “I Hope the pain gets better, come back and see me when it’s getting worse.”

 

I want to set our patients up for success. And I know you want success too. What is success? Well what are the goals you want to be able to do? Hike, walk, play with your kids, wrestle, jujitsu, weightlifting, I don’t know, it doesn’t matter what it is, but we want to meet you where you are to get there.

Now, as we already stated, changes need to be made. If we don’t change the behavior or the lifestyle that elicited the pain in the first place, again, outside of trauma, then we’re not going to get anywhere. So what we’re going to do today is walk you through what a what a neck complaint, examination and assessment looks like, and the common ways that we help treat neck pain.

Treating Neck Pain

Now, I’ll say it again, what we do is layered on top of everything else. What does that mean? Well, I can do adjustments, I can do soft tissue care. Whether that’s MRT, whether that’s dry needling, or cupping, etc. And then that’s going to be only supplemental to the active care model that we would need you to be a participant in.

What does that mean? Well rehab care might include strengthening exercises, very commonly for the neck, this is strengthening the upper back with more pulling. We’re going to talk about posture awareness. We are not very strict on posture, but we like to highlight the role in which posture plays with neck pain so that you have a better awareness about how it influences it. When you have more awareness and you understand it then it’s going to apply better rather than simply saying, “you need to have better posture.”

We oftentimes get so many people saying I know my posture sucks, but they don’t even know what to do about it, or why it sucks and what that means. So that’s going to be part of the process and part of the conversation.

But today’s video is simply to help show you how we go about this and some of the ways that we can help someone with neck pain, address the issue, set up a plan, and more importantly, look at that end range goal, and to help build that plan to the end range goal outside of just slapping on band aids and saying come back when it hurts.

So if you have neck pain, I know this video will be very important to you and will have a lot of great tips of showing you what a proper assessment, evaluation, and treatment plan should look like. And if you have a loved one, family friend, or co worker that has been experiencing neck pain, you peek over and they’re always rubbing their neck or doing something like this, I highly encourage you to share this with them. This is something that can really change someone’s life by getting the right direction, and the right care, and the right provider to help dig them out of this hole, which can sometimes feel very daunting. So thanks for tuning in, guys, and I hope you enjoy.

Examination Process for Neck Pain

There’s a number of different ways in which neck pain can start. But again, outside of trauma, there’s usually a reason or an indication as to why it’s happening. And that’s first and foremost what we have to understand and discuss with the patient through our consultations and our history and the examination. But now what we’re going to be doing is actually breaking down the examination process.

1. Sit up nice and tall and bring chin to sternum.

Perfect, we look at how does everything flex over? How does everything look on the backside? Any pain?

2. Look up towards the ceiling and extend back as far as you can.

This one’s always interesting, right? As we already indicated, everything we look at is in front of us. very rarely are we looking completely up, completely down, or over to the side, right? Even when we’re looking at our phones, it’s never just straight down. So we want to start looking at those end range positions to see how much mobility do we have there, And does it elicit pain?

3. Look all the way over right shoulder. Then look all the way over left shoulder.

4. Ear to shoulder, ear to shoulder.

What we commonly see, right, people think ear to shoulder, that’s the same thing, that’s shoulder to ear. We want to look at pure cervical range of motion.

5. Take the right hand, reach behind her head and touch the shoulder blade.

Switch sides. Oftentimes, you see a lot of upper trap tension with neck pains, we want to see how does her shoulder mechanics work since the upper traps are such a major player with shoulder mechanics.

6. Now I’m going to push down on the spine there, check for symptoms.

7. Then I move the head sideways, add compression, and then tip it back a little bit, add compression and then just straight back, add compression.

Okay, so next, if that is the case, if someone having this pain down their arm, then we can look at does distraction improve it. So I’m simply just trying to lengthen her spine there. For some of you that are having ridiculer pain down your arm or a pinched nerve better known as, this could elicit a response of improvement and that would be a good sign, and something important for us to know.

So that’s how we differentiate the type of pain that we have. We’re dealing with localized joint pain or something more of a pinched nerve that’s going down the arm.

Non-Weight Bearing Evaluation for Neck Pain

This allows me to palpate and feel how the joints move and operate. So if someone during their active range of motion have them moving themselves, they don’t have a lot of good range of motion, I can now test it non-weight bearing to see if it feels any different.

Start to feel around. This allows me through my hands to feel if there’s specific areas that seem to be stuck, or kinked, if you will, and that’s where we’re going to try to focus our treatment. that treatment could be the active treatment that we give her, or the manual treatment that we’re going to do for her. 

Ask for any tender spots, how does that feel? Because that’s going to give us an idea of certain muscle groups or muscle bellies that need to be addressed.

  • Soft tissue work
  • Dry needling
  • Cupping
  • Manual therapy

 

We’ll be doing our standard adjustments, which would have been essentially be if I feel stuck spot, I’m going to basically just try to have a wiggle. And we’re just going to do small adjustments like that. Very light, very delicate adjustments, that elicit movement in the stuck joints where we need them to start moving.

Now outside of that, right, we have to look at the movement side. So here’s a few things that we do.

 

Movements to Help with Neck Pain

  1. Chin Tucks

simply put, your chin is going to move back and forth like it’s on a drawer slide again, a drawer side does not go up and down, it simply goes forward and backwards.

What we want to make sure is just the head is kind of tilting and moving back and forth to allow the chin to move back and forth. We don’t want to see a lot of movement from the back or the lower back or the mid back from here, it should be simply just coming back and forth from the chin.

Now similar to what we did for our lower back exercises, sets of 12, 15 and 20 seem to be a sweet spot.

  1. Movement Mapping

Movement mapping is exploring all the corners of range of motion that your neck should have. We don’t force any range of motion, but this gives us a good proprioceptive awareness and map of what range of motion is limited.

What this looks like: we start off with just the basic cue. So chin down, chin up. Chin down, chin up, we get an idea of what we’re doing. Now we’re gonna say go chin down and hold. Okay, now I want you to turn your head like you’re saying no when you’re down. So we can take all those joints through flexion. And now add some rotation, well, what we can then do is go down again, and we can say ear to shoulder. Right, so now it’s a little bit more lateral flexion.

Now, we can combine all of those together and say, chin down, ear to shoulder. Now, hold that and then turn no. But we’re really challenging a lot of the joints within the neck to see what their movement is. And this is actually very therapeutic, because we’re starting to loosen up a lot of the tight joints that have not moved in a certain way, in a long time, more range of motion that you have and more mobility, oftentimes, you’ll see a significant reduction in pain as itself.

  1. The Dissociation Exercise

in addition to what we just described as the upper back strength, having significant influence with neck range of motion, we can now dissociate those two movements, so that we can make sure that the neck can move independently of the upper back. All you need is a band.

Hold one end of each band, straight arm pull the arms away from each other. Hold back here. So now in doing this, you feel all these muscles are tight, right? So it’s gonna feel a little weird. But now move your head by almost doing that same kind of movement mapping side to side up and down.

So here we’re setting the stabilizers, we’re setting the back the way that it should be set, and then we’re asking the neck to move independently, which helps loosen up a lot of the tight joints and muscles that are dependent on that upper back support.

 

Conclusion

It always starts with proper evaluation and a movement criterion first to determine what triggers are constantly picking and irritating at it so we get out of that negative feedback loop. Then we put on the movements, the movement mapping the chin, tuck some of the basic things that help you scrub out and maintain better range of motion within the neck joints and muscles, as well as then layering on the soft tissue care whether that’s MRT, dry needling, cupping, and adjustments to help sweeten the deal and supplement more motion and more pain reduction, if you will.

So if you are dealing with neck pain, I’ve been there. We’ve been there. it sucks but it really limits a lot that you can do. And no one wants to walk around all day all stiff-neck not being able to drive and do other things. So if you’ve been dealing with this for a while, please, please give us a call. We’d love to help take you through this good evaluation and help you set you up with a better plan of success. Once and for all, stop neck pain.


How to Treat Lower Back Pain

Condition Series: How to Treat Lower Back Pain

It’s estimated that 70% of Americans will be suffering from some form of lower back pain at some point in their life. Now, if you have experienced low back pain before, you know what it’s like, and you’ve been there before, if you haven’t, I hope that it doesn’t happen for you, but this is going to be a short informational video about addressing some of the common lower back conditions that we see across the United States as well as in our office.

Hi, my name is Dr. Antonio Gurule. I’m a chiropractor here at Live Loud Chiropractic and Coaching. We are based out of Lafayette, Colorado, just outside of Boulder, Colorado, in Boulder County.

Today we’re going to dive in and show you what we do here at Live Loud Chiropractic and the philosophy and the approach that we take to lower back pain.

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Our Approach

We focus on a movement methodology, a movement mentality. Meaning, movement first. If I can show you and prove to you, and help you gain confidence in the way that you move, especially if it’s painful movements that are exacerbating or triggering your pain, then you’re gonna have a lot more confidence going around your daily activities.

As an example, parents, if you are a new parent, or if you’ve ever been a parent, when you have a new baby, you are constantly bending forward, whether you’re sitting on the couch, or a loveseat, whether you’re bending over to pick up your baby leaning over a crib. And in order to change diapers, you oftentimes will experience some lower back pain or tightness.

So that’s our whole process. That’s our whole methodology, is helping you find those different nuances of movements that help reduce the triggers in the amount of pain that you’re experiencing. And then we’ll layer on top of that better ways to improve your mobility or your strength through a active rehab process.

And then on top of that, we’re gonna layer in obviously, the things that we’re good at, which is manual therapy, whether that’s soft tissue treatments, such as using our hands or our thumbs, whether that’s dry needling, cupping, Graston, scraping, and then on top of that, obviously being chiropractors is being able to perform adjustments to help maintain the mobility and the movements within the joints that we want.

Now, this is a group process, we have to be working at this together. Oftentimes we get individuals coming in expecting a chiropractor to fix them, when that’s the whole reason why they’re stuck in this feedback, this negative feedback loop and not being able to get out of it, because they’re expecting a quick fix–an adjustment or a muscle to be worked on in order for this to get better.

We have to remember that there is more to this outside of trauma or an accident, but even then there is a rehab process that needs to happen that got you into this in the first place. And movement, skill acquisition, strength, endurance, and mobility is going to be the way for you to get out of it, and stomp on that back pain once and for all.

Evaluation for Lower Back Pain

The most common back pain that we see, at least in our clinic, and that most people experience is what we refer to as flexion intolerant back pain, meaning your back does not tolerate flexing forward very well.

What does our movement assessment and evaluation look like? As well as the orthopedic assessment, And some of the common ways that we treat lower back pain, again, as a layer on top of the mobility, rehab, and movement that we already talked about.

  1. Bend down and attempt to touch toes. Does this create any symptoms? Does it cause any pain?
  2. Go down, touch your toes. and let the head drop as well. Does that increase any tension or pain anywhere?
  3. Go feet together again, arms straight up overhead both sides, and extend backwards as far as you can. Any pain or symptoms there? We also want to look for any dumping.
  4. Feet together. Look over your right shoulder, and then turn your whole body to the right. So twist shoulders and hips. We’re looking for good global range of motion within the hips, the spine, and the feet. Any symptoms there? Then look left, turn left.
  5. Sit down and grab either side of the chair. Keeping yourself nice and tall, pull yourself down into the chair. Any symptoms with that? This creates compression of the spine.
  6. Still seated, slump into your lower back. Grab this chair, and I want you to pull yourself down. For most that are having symptoms here, this would elicit more pain, again, helping us through the diagnostic criteria of determining what part of the spine in the tissue is most irritated or sensitive.

 

Non-Weight Bearing Evaluation

So oftentimes, commonly, what we see with lower back pain is we can get referral pains on the back of the leg or the hips.

  1. Straight leg raise.

This helps assess the neural tension of the sciatic nerve in the back of her leg. So I’m going to have you just relax this leg on my shoulder here. First and foremost, we want to see if this elicits any pain or creates any symptoms. From here, I’m going to simply ask her to tell me when she feels the first sign of tension in her hamstring.

  1. Now I’m going to pull the toes up.

Does that change the tension? More intense? And does it go anywhere else down the calf down the feet, or anything like that?

  1. Heel drop test. Stand tall and just plop down. With my leg straights, I’m basically trying to send an impulse or an impact up through my spine.
  2. Testing for Facettes Syndrome. Give yourself a big hug. And essentially, I’m going to kind of move her around to determine if there’s any sticky spots or spots that create pain for her in that lower back area, or the facettes.

 

Movements to Reduce Lower Back Pain

Decompression. All you need is a banister, a rail, a doorknob, or a sink in which you can hold on to.

  1. The Supported Squat

We’re gonna face each other with a nice open stance, like we’re gonna be doing squats, and hold hands. So by her hanging on, if you notice from that profile view, her butt is essentially moving her hips in the opposite direction of her hands. If I was to draw a straight line down from her hands to her hips, we see a relatively straight profile here. what’s in the middle? Lower back. So hips go one way, hands go the other. That offers a little bit of decompression or traction in the lower back.

  1. Hinging Pattern

Hips go back, spine stays nice and long.

Widen Your Stance. Spread the feet apart a little bit more, and then toe out. Do the same hip hinge, but your stance is now wider. This actually gives her a little bit more range of motion, allowing her to go down to the ground more.

  1. Extension-based Movements

Use your hips to shift your hips back and forth.

If you’re able to just bend that those joints back and forth nice and easily, it creates this pump, which allows the joints and everything to kind of get re lubricated and loosened up without eliciting pain.

  1. Modified Upward Dog

This is going to be very similar to the classic Upward Facing Dog movement. The only difference is we’re not actively trying to lift ourselves and create extension, we’re going to try to do this in a more passive manner.

Get on your hands and knees, and walk your hands forward just a little bit. Shift your weight more into her hands and let your hips drop to the floor. This creates a nice bit of extension in our lower back, and then we’re going to come back up. Perfect, and we’re gonna go back and forth. The sweet spot for these reps seems to be about 20. When you do about 20 of these, everything seems to loosen up really nicely.

 

Manual Therapy Care for Lower Back Pain

So we’re going to briefly walk you through palpation and care, manual therapy care for lower back pain. Alright, so after we’ve done the movement assessment, we’re trying to determine what movements feel good based on the pain you’re experiencing.

Major focus is the movement in the mid-back and the hip.

How do we work on this? Well, we work on soft tissue as we normally would, working digging into trigger points. we would go through the adjustments that you would obviously expect from seeing a chiropractor.

And especially when we’re talking about the hip, we want to make sure that we’re seeing good hip range of motion. There’s a number of stretches that we can work on and give. And there’s obviously certain areas within the soft tissue around the hip complex in the lower back, that can help unlock the hip joint as well.

Chiropractic Adjustments for Low Back Pain

So we’re just going to do one lower back adjustment here. Now, a lot of times people are concerned, is this going to be aggressive? Is this going to hurt? it really just depends on obviously, the provider you’ve seen, obviously, growing up with my wife, Nichelle, and learning how to adjust gentle from an early age. That’s our whole focus. if adjustments aren’t for you, obviously, we’ve described a number of different tools that will still help you. That’s why we do not focus solely on adjustments, because it’s not for everybody.

Conclusion

Here’s the plan. Figure out the movements that are painful, figure out the things that are painful, figure out the joint dysfunctions and the areas that are not performing as we would like to see and set up a plan on how to gain mobility, gain more strength, and gain more confidence so that you can systematically scale those and progressively load that to get stronger and stronger and more mobile.

That’s how you beat lower back pain and really create a better long term plan for that. Please do not hesitate to reach out to us with any questions. Again, our goal is to guide and support you to that adventurous life that you are made for, and we want to be an advocate through being that coach and leader, as a provider for you.


The Silent Symptoms of Concussions and Brain Injuries With Mary Finck DPT EP|64

Live LOUD Life Podcast
Lafayette Colorado

Episode 64

The Silent Symptoms of Concussions & Brain Injuries

With Dr. Mary Finck PT, DPT, CBIS


Tune in with Dr. Antonio and physical therapist Dr. Mary Finck as they discuss concussions. How to identify the silent symptoms, manage micro traumas, and treat concussions. 

Episode Highlights

4:03 – Silent symptoms of concussions

7:00 – How micro-traumas come into play

8:00 – Big tells of concussions

10:00 – Outside resources for healing- nutrition, diet, rehab, exercise, etc. 

17:00 Example of treatment for pediatric patient

30:00 How to correctly fit a helmet


About Dr. Mary Finck PT, DPT, CBIS

Background:

  • Doctor of Physical Therapy
  • Certified brain injury specialist
  • Owner of Roots Physical Therapy & Wellness
  • Mother

Connect With Dr. Mary Finck 

Roots PT Website: https://www.rootsptandwellnessco.com/ 

Anthony Gurule  00:09

All right, welcome back guys to the Live Loud Life podcast. My name’s Dr. Antonio, your host of the Live Loud Life podcast, and today we have our good friend, Mary Finck.

Mary Finck  00:19

Hello, yep, yep.

 

Anthony Gurule  00:21

Talking about brain injuries and concussion rehab. So she’s a physical therapist, I’m gonna let her obviously spew her credentials, her specialty, so on and so forth. But I think this is going to be an awesome episode. This is not anything that we we deal with here as far as a rehabilitative process. So I think it’s going to be a lot of great information. And interestingly enough, which I don’t know if you have any specific statistics on this, but how many just head injuries we get. I know for me playing sports, talking about before the podcast, how many adolescents and kids actually suffer from brain injuries, brain injuries, concussions, so on and so forth. But we’re gonna dive into it. So welcome.

 

Mary Finck  00:59

Great, thanks. Yeah. Thanks for having me. Business credit. Yeah, yeah, so. So I’m Mary Finck. I’m a Doctor of Physical Therapy. And I’m actually a certified brain injury specialist through the American Brain Injury Association, which pretty much meant you just had to do a lot of training and experience and hours to be able to like take a test and say that you provide specialty care to this population. So I originally got into treating brain injuries because my dad had a TBI, which is a traumatic brain injury from a rollover car accident when I was in high school, and it changed his personality, and he had headaches, and we unfortunately lost our business and our home. So it was quite an impact. Yeah. So that’s how I kind of got into this. And then I realized we started understanding what was going on with him and what happened and the loss that we suffered, because we call this like an invisible injury. Because you can’t see that anything’s wrong with you. It’s just our brain controls everything about our body. So if it’s injured, it can affect a lot of things. So then I kind of, you know, went to college, played basketball, blew my knee out, got to do PT myself, and then around the same time, started understanding what injuries my dad had sustained, and that like PTs helped people with brain injury. So that was kind of when I went that direction, like 2006 to 2009. So just kind of worked in all different settings and like rehab at Craig Hospital, literally like helping people walk again and get out of like a vegetative state, more severe injuries. And then the past seven or eight years, I’ve been more in like outpatient and helping with people with like kids with concussions and car accidents and stuff like that.

 

Anthony Gurule  02:51

And what’s your…? In case I forget. I will forget to ask at the end. Business Name plug.

 

Mary Finck  02:57

Oh, yeah, yeah. So my new business is Roots Physical Therapy and Wellness. And we’re in Louisville, Colorado, and the website’s rootsptandwellnessco.com. So Colorado. So I’m really excited to get this up and running and help like more of the community and a diverse population.

 

Anthony Gurule  03:18

So first question, I wanted to spin off of  and plug, or spin off and come back to some of you had said is the silent injuries, right. So these are the big things. And obviously, a rollover accident. Pretty clear to see especially if someone has an abrasion or something on their head. Right. Okay, you hit your head, you probably suffered from some sort of injury right? Outside of those. And obviously, there’s a range of, you know, severe versus to acute, but yet small. What are some of the silent symptoms and things that you see, see or hear, you know, or evaluate or assess that you look for? Yeah. And that someone who is not as versed at understanding those silent signs, what should people be looking for?

 

Mary Finck  04:03

Sure yeah, that’s a great question. I mean, just to kind of give more of a broad answer, because this could be something you could look for in your children that might have like a concussion or a spouse that was in a car accident or someone fell off the ladder or whatever. But I would say a lot of fatigue headaches, blurry vision, dizziness, balance, like difficulty speaking or like memory issues. We kind of sub categorize head injury into physical, emotional and cognitive. And then there’s like a huge energy reserve and when your brain isn’t functioning and all those areas, your energy reserve gets tapped, and then there’s like extreme fatigue. Like acutely after a concussion, why someone would vomit is more of like a labyrinthine concussion, which is what I treat as a vestibular therapist, is your inner ear organ has all these really fancy hair follicles and things that stimulate like your brain to know where your your head is in space. So that just gets like super shook up. And then people feel like they got off a roller coaster. So if you’re vomiting, like, consistently after a concussion, you have a pretty substantial labyrinthine concussion. But definitely, it can be kind of minor. My daughter unfortunately has had like four. And it, you know, affected her ability to read because it can affect like the eye movements, which is part of what I retrain. your ability to focus attention. So kids with like ADHD, many of them have had history of concussions, and there’s no correlation there. And like overstimulation, like kids with like sensory processing issues like just getting like hyperacusis or overstimulated. So I mean, everything, if it’s a very severe injury, it’s going to like cause weakness or paralysis on one side of the body, or you wouldn’t be able to, like, walk without a walker, or, you know, like more severe and more visually obvious symptoms. But that’s usually not the case. And most people in that situation got help quickly, which is part of the problem is that people do not get help, because they don’t know that there’s something wrong.

 

Anthony Gurule  06:15

Yeah, so they’re, I mean, that’s hence the the silent thing. Because you’re just going about your everyday life. What um, I’m just trying to think back too, because I started going through the rolodex of how many concussions I think I’ve probably had. a number from micro–and this is the question I wanted to bring up–is how do you see micro traumas come into play? So for instance, my my sport I played was soccer. Headers. One after the other and you get some of those–call it ring your bell, right? We kind of just hit. and I didn’t I didn’t lose, vomiting or anything substantial. But how do you see micro trauma or the micro dosing of the sub level injuries add up? Or is it not as significant?

 

Mary Finck  06:58

Well that’s what CTE is, or Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy is like these accumulative sub concussive blows and like football, soccer, fighting, whatever, hockey. but it’s not necessarily like reported incidents of concussions. But these repetitive sub concussive like quick lead, quick stars, and then it got better. that we’re seeing, usually an athlete’s like within 10 years of stopping playing their sport, that then there’s like headaches and anger, and dysregulation of emotions and memory issues. So that is something that is like, more growing awareness of that there is like a pretty substantial problem here. And it’s causing people, you know, a lot of these guys end up, you know, physically abusive, in jail, or committing suicide, unfortunately.

 

Anthony Gurule  07:52

So on that note, because if you’re dealing with cognitive issues, which obviously could fall into the category, or should fall into the category of PT, but oftentimes people go to neuro, or PCP, and then you’re dealing with emotional things, so people go to a therapist, or something like that. What are some of the big tells outside of Yes, I played a sport or Yes, I think I’ve had trauma, that would indicate that a post, sorry, a previous concussion might be the actual leading factor. as opposed to an actual issue that can be handled with therappy. Make sense? Like, what are the things that you’re trying to diagnose? Or look at right? Say, this is the reason why I think it’s more so from the concussion?

 

Mary Finck  08:39

I mean, a lot of that kind of twofold answer would be diagnostic. So like making sure you get a brain image, there’s no tumor or MS, or something else that can affect brain function. And like cause and effect, like mechanism of injury like this is when things started changing in my life. But sometimes it can be such an accumulation of concussion and like after one concussion, you’re two times as likely to get another and after a second, you’re like eight times as likely to get a third. So like, it just becomes like this terrible snowball effect. But statistically, it just grows and grows and grows. So some people don’t know, a second sub concussive blow if the first one didn’t heal is going to result in additional or worsening or even new symptoms and like even more of a longer recovery.

 

Anthony Gurule  09:31

and that was so that was gonna be the question, which I think you answered. So because the brain tissue has not adequately healed, that makes you more susceptible to the next, just like another just like an injury we would see on the body. What is healing really look like outside of just, outside of just time? What are some things that you’re doing to help healing? What are some of the outside resources that you promote for healing ie nutrition or something like that?

 

Mary Finck  09:58

Right. Absolutely. Nutrition and like any anti-inflammatory diet, and there’s certain supplements that are good. trying to just get like a healthy. like you, I always tell patients you got to put good gasoline in the car to drive the car, right? So and then just identifying the areas of deficit because we call this like a snowflake injury not one is the same and each person is a different person. So then add an injured brain. So trying to if there are like severe emotional issues, was there, is this a result of like abuse or a car accident? Do we need to do like trauma therapy? so making sure people get like the right emotional therapy. cognitive therapy is usually done by like either a speech therapist or occupational therapist. And that’s more helping with like getting back to school and getting back to work and memory issues at tension like why usually say more of the marbles, what I do is more the physical dimension of retraining, vision, dizziness, balance, coordination, and then trying to get all of the systems working together. Because even though that brain lesion might be like a disconnected nerve, we know neuroplasticity has the ability to heal. So we just kind of find out. I always tell my patients like find a way around the traffic jam. So we’re just trying to find a new way. And sometimes after enough time, you’re just like, Okay, this is how it is, how can you modify or change your life around that?

 

Anthony Gurule  11:28

that’s a good point, I use a very similar concept where it’s just like multiple roads to Rome, or sometimes you run into a roadblock. You have to just switch how you’re doing something temporarily. Hopefully we can get back on the main highway. Not always. So one thing I have heard, and I don’t know any sorts of amounts or numbers, but using obviously goes within the anti inflammatory conversation, like omegas and high fat diets, not diets per se, sorry, adding higher fat content, good, healthy fat, right? How does that come into play?

 

Mary Finck  11:59

Yeah, so there’s a lot of research with like ketogenic diet and stuff like that with like brain recovery. The hardest thing for someone that is like truly injured is like, there’s so many elements about their life, like sometimes I can’t go to school, I can’t go to work. And so adding like some, like more complex diet is hard. So I usually just try to tell people like, you know, limit soda, limit sugar, or try to eat foods that come from the earth, and like trying to make it more basic, because it’s just too hard to then also add a huge dietary change on top of like, manage the rest of their life. Just like a general way in this population, specifically, because you could get into like, a lot of nitty gritty with that, and the research and everything, but just trying to keep people like generally eating healthier. And drinking enough water too.

 

Anthony Gurule  12:47

for sure, which is so funny to say don’t drink soda, don’t eat excessive amounts of sugar.

 

Mary Finck  12:51

Right? Just so easy to just do that. But some people don’t even know that’s a problem. And then you talk about inflammation. And you talk about like, limiting to less than 20 grams of sugar. And a lot of people don’t even know that the soda they’re drinking at 76 grams of sugar. So it’s just education.

 

Anthony Gurule  13:08

So as a side note, which, Nichelle always (my wife) always kind of points out for people that are consuming or having trouble with sugar just to put it in content, context, how much a gram of sugar is, so four grams of sugar is essentially like one sugar cube. So when you’re looking at the sugar content of anything you’re eating, divide that by four and that’s how many sugar cubes you’re consuming, right? So when you look at literally whether a bottle of soda, and it’s like 76 grams, right? Just literally how many sugarcubesyou’re just drinking down. And that’s the and that’s the that’s the big killer for so many things. It’s just liquid calories, but like liquid sugar. just so much easier to consume and just guzzle down. Imaging. so I came across, I don’t know if it’s wavy or walk– Is it WAVi?  Yeah. So boulder-based group. I did a scan. Obviously, it didn’t have a post scan before. They said I passed with flying colors. I don’t know what that meant, per se. What are some of the scans people should be looking at getting? Obviously, you mentioned the MRI, you know, looking at lesions, tumors, different major space occupying thing, but what are some of the other scans that provide you the good information of how cognitive brain function is actually performing.

 

Mary Finck  14:23

There aren’t really a lot to be honest, like there’s your answer. I mean, a lot of the times people get in an accident or they have more severe head injury, they went to the emergency room, they’ll do a CT to make sure there’s no bleed. Then usually neurology or primary care if there’s more substantial red flags, which would be like severe loss of control, double vision, severe memory loss, like more significant symptoms would order an MRI to get more detail of the brain tissue. But these are like cellular level changes. So it’s not showing up on a lot of imaging. So the WAVi I believe is showing like EEG signaling. But a lot of what I do is visual and vestibular. So there’s something called a V and G–video and a stagger gram. So we order that a lot to check like ocular tracking, because your eyes are controlled and controlled by your cranial nerves, and only that comes from your brain. So if there’s dysfunction in the eye, or there’s a dysfunctional like eighth, the eighth cranial nerve to the vestibular system is not working, then we can use those objectives to test for that. But a lot of the times, we don’t need the testing to like treat the patient, we just like treat the patient, not the image, but we’re trying to rule out anything more severe going on, you know, because I have had patients like, well, they had this brain tumor they didn’t know of, because they got in a car accident, they got a brain MRI, never would have known that was there before because they were functioning pretty well, right? Or, you know, MS come up like a time or two. So it’s just trying to rule out something else. But even like with my dad, his imaging was all normal. And then three years later, that like diffuse axonal injury showed up on a scan. So that the biggest thing is just as is not showing up.

 

Anthony Gurule  16:13

So are there any? Are there any blood marker indicators?

 

Mary Finck  16:18

I know they’re doing research for don’t using that as an indicator in the emergency room. But I don’t think that’s mainstream yet to my knowledge, but

 

Anthony Gurule  16:27

I didn’t know if there’s a sort of like specific thing that would be leaching out that would indicate…

 

Mary Finck  16:31

they’re trying to test for emergency room like protein levels, I think or something but I’m not sure. Because I don’t work in that acute setting. Like what is standard. Usually, most of the time these patients don’t even have imaging done in the emergency room unless there’s like significant symptoms.

 

Anthony Gurule  16:48

So that makes sense. So I’m curious, and I know you had mentioned kind of piggybacking and going a little bit deeper into the therapies you provide, right? So obviously, you’d mentioned, it’s a multifactorial approach, right? You got to look at this, you got to look at this, because there’s so many elements, and there’s only so much you can do from one end, but you focus on the physical. What does that retraining really look like? Yeah, especially when you’re dealing with eye movements, and so forth. I know, you had mentioned previously like balance, so on and so forth.

 

Mary Finck  17:20

Depends on the patient.

 

Anthony Gurule  17:22

Let’s use a.. Um

 

Mary Finck  17:24

I give you like a pediatric, like a kid example. And like an adult example or something.

 

Anthony Gurule  17:29

If you’re okay with sharing, like, how you’ve been treating your daughter.  Kind of like what have you been doing for her? Because obviously reading if you’re having trouble tracking with your eyes, that can make it more challenging.

 

Mary Finck  17:39

So my daughter is a perfect example of like childhood concussions going on notice, especially because I was like, Okay, I’m not going to blow this out of proportion because of what I do. And I kind of just pushed her to go back. The research shows like this group of kids goes back to school, this group of kids sits in a quiet room in the dark. And the group of kids that goes back to school gets better faster. Like you use the brain to heal the brain. Still, these days, people are getting advice, like sit in a dark room. And like, yes, for the first day or two of mental rest. Yes, appropriate. But that is not like how you treat a brain injury these days.

 

Anthony Gurule  18:17

Because that still is a common suggestions, When, and it’s no different than like someone saying like rest like the right protocol for an ankle injury. It ould be beneficial for the very acute, right? When would somebody know that they are okay to get out of the dark room and start being reintegrated?

 

Mary Finck  18:36

Just trying to do that and see how the body responds, like trying to add…

 

Anthony Gurule  18:41

Like the body’s response would be like dizziness…

 

Mary Finck  18:43

…headaches, stuff like that. Yeah. So just trying to slowly add back life in. Knowing that it’s not going to just be like it was, you know, most concussions clear in like seven to 10 days and then more pos concussion is like two to four weeks. So if we’re going longer then to a month, then you have more like substantial, lingering symptoms. But that’s only 10% of the population like most concussions heal. But that’s like the 10% of the population I treat, for sure. Yeah. Which I really think that that data might be different. It’s just because it’s not recognized. It’s not a recognizable injury.

 

Anthony Gurule  19:17

The one thing we always say to is like when you’re looking at statistics, right? And we’re slightly biased because we work in specialty fields. But for the patient, when you’re looking at a statistic, you are that statistic, right? So it feels like it’s 100% because that is you.

 

Mary Finck  19:31

That’s right, that’s right.

 

Anthony Gurule  19:32

And that in it sometimes feels a little bit more skewed because they’re just like, oh my gosh, I’m one out of 10 people, this must be really bad.

 

Mary Finck  19:40

Right? Right. Right.

 

Anthony Gurule  19:40

Yeah. On this spectrum, higher. But it doesn’t also mean it’s horrible.

 

Mary Finck  19:47

Right, right. And yes, and like trying to get people to identify with like, who they are as a human being and not identify with like their injury or their brain injury or their back injury but like, trying to make sure people don’t know I’ll identify with this new diagnosis. And that they put themselves in their human first is like super important, I think in general. But going back to like the testing and stuff, yeah.

 

Mary Finck  20:13

But so she initially was climbing and she hit her head on a bar and like got really dizzy and that that lasted about a week of like a lot of dizzy and like I couldn’t take her in the grocery store because all the visual stimulation, she was getting like super dizzy and seemed to clear pretty well. And then only a few weeks later, my son who was, I don’t know, 15, 16 months like threw a glass vase that shattered on her head. It was about like a centimeter thick base. Luckily, she wasn’t like cut. But that was like sunglasses on for days. Like she slowly seemed to get better. And then she just tanked in school. And it was like her reading levels went down and she couldn’t focus because she said the kids it sounded like the kids were hammering her head because she couldn’t focus on all the noises coming in. And her attention was worse. So she actually wrote a book. It’s called my invisible injury, a story of kid concussions. it is not published, So if anybody is a publisher, I got a good book. There’s not another kid concussion book out there. So mommy published it on Shutterfly and sells like cash copies. Yeah, but we’ve sold probably, like 80 copies of this book, but I just I just, it’s not like mainstream yet. Yeah. But her story was to tell other kids like that this is what happened. And this is what a concussion is about. And this her last concussion, she then maybe a year later flipped out of the hammock and fell right on her head. And she couldn’t walk for two hours. So like that was substantial, like there was motor loss, right? But then she kind of cleared, so trying to retrain like the eye tracking and the convergence and the balance and trying to like, recreate the pathways that are injured is just more part of like how what I test and then that kind of helped guide my treatment. But when people get more advanced, you’re integrating balance with vision exercises and having them do cognitive things at the same time, like make a list of fruits and vegetables. That’s like high level vestibular concussive therapy, like you’re getting back to normal at that point. Because the multitasking can pretty much tank like in the research, the multitasking gets really hard. And when you start doing more than two things with a head injury, so

 

Anthony Gurule  22:30

Do you start to see changes? Also just thinking because your background with CrossFit and everything else. Or people start to see changes based on their metabolic, I guess, output changing? If they get back to exercising, breathing harder, How does that come into play?

 

Mary Finck  22:50

So that’s like a huge piece, because there’s something called like the buffalo concussion protocol, which is trying to like get hyperperfusion of oxygen to the brain through exercise for healing. And that’s kind of the concept of like hyperbaric oxygen treatments. And like why people go to sea level and feel like a normal person. Again, there’s just like, more oxygen, because we’re at Mile High here. But yeah, like, as soon as we can get exercise back in like that is ideal, because it will help the brain like in an athlete is going to naturally just heal better, because they already have such a high function of vestibular system and cardiac output and all of that. But yes, and so in this protocol, we measure like heart rate and symptom response and oxygen levels, and like, take them through, like progressing, getting every minute, a little bit harder. And then there’s just like a threshold, we call that like, your, your sub Max threshold is when you got symptoms. So then we have people exercise it like 80 to 90% of that heart rate. So trying to get people back to exercise.

 

Anthony Gurule  23:54

And on top of that, outside of maybe that, do you see, do you do you give any specific breathing exercises to help facilitate that?

 

Mary Finck  24:04

Absolutely. Antonio.

 

Anthony Gurule  24:09

That was not a question we asked before. But do you then help coach that through the metabolic efficiency as well? Like, does that help if they start that sub, or that that threshold? Right, right, oftentimes, that threshold, at least when someone’s clean, clear, it’s it’s almost your aerobic capacity threshold when you switch to more hyperventilation right? So if someone’s starting to get symptoms, assuming that that heart rate is at a sub threshold from their arobic capacity, cueing breathing, so that they’re more efficient, allowing them to maximize that heart rate?

 

Mary Finck  24:41

Absolutely. I mean, part of how that pulls in so much is like because when you have a trauma to the head, you’re gonna go into sympathetic, you have your sympathetic and your parasympathetic. So you’re going to be sympathetically over driven and a lot of head trauma is a result of direct trauma like an accident or something hit my head or, so the body’s like going to get stuck in that state. Yes. So trying to teach people, I actually give breathing stickers out. So I have people put stickers like on their wall, on their phone, in their car. So they’re like visually reminded to like, do the “in your nose for four, hold for a second, out of your mouth for six,” or whatever, however you teach your breathing, like, just just breathe. but mindful breathing will calm and activate the parasympathetics to be able to because a lot of, this is kind of a whole nother topic, But like Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome–POTS, or dysautonomiam, is very common with concussion, because like the brain-heart regulation is off. So people get like, heart palpitations, they get like, they can’t regulate temperature. So there’s this huge, like weird body response, and people don’t know what’s happening or that that has anything to do with a concussion. So trying to like retrain the parasympathetics. And exercise will help reset the parasympathetic.  It’s pretty, pretty complicated topic of concussion. But yes, essentially, like if you’re breathing more mindfully throughout the day, you’re going to have a better response, like when you’re trying to exercise for sure.

 

Anthony Gurule  26:17

but I think it’s so important too, because most people want to get back to some sort of physical activity. And I could see that being a very strong rate limiting factor, because you know, and the fact that you integrate that in so very, very soon or suddenly, is very good, because we often see, right, it’s just like, and it’s the same we talked about, like don’t do anything for your low back until you feel like you’re healed. But then that gap from when you feel better to what you want to be able to do is too great. Yeah. And then you start just yo-yoing.

 

Mary Finck  26:47

Yeah, so I have a I have a good example of that one. So I had a girl that she was a veterinary surgeon was like traveling and a wild dog ran in front of her on her bike, and she crashed and got a head injury. Well she came for her hamstring injury. but she had her sunglasses on and she couldn’t be in the waiting room, she couldn’t fill out her paperwork. And so I was like, I think I can help you with your concussion too. And so this was like a very high level elite biker. But she was scared because of her PTSD, or getting on a bike to get back on a bicycle. So she decided to take up running, but she wanted to run Hundreds. So so what we did was like just slow integration, like and so she slowly added her miles, like she slowly, she couldn’t run in the dark, because she got so dizzy and disoriented. So I had her like, put a headlight on and just start walking around her neighborhood a few laps at night. So it’s just like, slowly, like that’s an extreme example of getting to like a sport. I think she’s done like seven or so Hundreds at this point. And she can like practice again, I don’t think she does surgery, but she practices as a vet again. But it was just like, sometimes it’s such a slow process, trying to give people hope that like not to give up because it can it can be really rough.

 

Anthony Gurule  28:07

But no, I think that’s actually, it’s funny. You mentioned like slow process. And obviously, when you’re talking about brain injuries, the processes, I’m assuming, much slower than like other outside tissue healing, just because they’re toleration for certain things a lot different. But the way you describe it, realistically, I think is important for everybody is that that’s that’s the rehab process for anyone. It’s the stepping stone mentality, we’re building a pyramid, the pyramid, the foundation of the pyramid, is all the boring shit that nobody likes to do. But it sets the foundation for everything else. Everyone assumes. And whether it’s 100 mile race or elite type of thing is the tip of the pyramid. For some people, for some of our patients, honestly, it’s gardening like yeah, like the thing that they want to be able to spend their time and do. But yet and what comes to mind is this patient who I have, who is 77, suffered from back injury. And everyone told her well don’t do anything that hurts your back. So for six months, she hasn’t done anything. Now she can’t even get out of chair, she can’t even kneel down and garden. Like we have to go back to our foundation. So the example you gave is beautiful because it’s the same for anything else. And it’s all about managing what’s tolerable. understanding the threshold of symptoms. And you laying out the symptoms that people should be mindful to think about is important for realizing what your threshold is.

 

Mary Finck  29:32

Yeah, I would say another really important note is like the emotional effects because just imagine like your brain not feeling right and your body not working and like the suicide rate and young kids with like multiple concussions like there’s absolutely correlation, so like just encouraging parents to like be very mindful what’s happening with their kids and sports and like getting people the right help because it just comes to a point where people just feel like they don’t I don’t know how to be in control anymore, right? They just can’t like, be, you know, have another day of headaches or be able to like, “I can’t focus” or whatever it is.

 

Anthony Gurule  30:09

And layering on top of that, right. The stress have already being, depending on the age, a student athlete, right, you know, playing college. This has been phenomenal. I learned a lot of great stuff to look out for. Any last little tips that you try to spread, as far as like brain health and awareness that we can leave people with?

 

Mary Finck  30:31

Yeah. How to check if your helmet fits right. You know this?

 

Anthony Gurule  30:36

I don’t.

 

Mary Finck  30:37

So if you’re putting on your kid’s helmet, and you put it on, and you tighten the back, then you have to strap it enough to pass the Shake, shake test. So if you shake your head and the helmets moving around, it’s not going to be very proficient, but helmet’s just gonna prevent a skull fracture, you can still get concussed within a helmet. But if the helmet’s just floating around all over the place, it’s probably going to be a little less effective. And then like finding a concussion, concussion provider, just looking for people that have the experience, because there’s a lot of people getting into concussion care, which is great. But if you don’t know exactly how to treat this population, you actually can make people feel a lot worse. So making sure people have like, extensive training in this area.

 

Anthony Gurule  31:23

So obviously, if people are local, you have that provider here in the Boulder County, Broomfield County, Weld County area. But if someone’s not local, Do you do telehealth?

 

Mary Finck  31:36

Yeah, telehealth within my licensed states. So I think I’m licensed in like five different states. But you can always just reach out and I can help someone fins. There’s Concussion Compass–is a good foundation. And then you can look for providers in that area.

 

Anthony Gurule  31:54

Now, I did have a question about the helmets real quick. Yeah. MIPS. You know, helmets have so MIPS technology, the part that attaches to your head, and the actual shell can actually slide and move a little bit. And it’s supposed to help disperse energy. Is that even…?

 

Mary Finck  32:11

I mean, it’s it’s propably how you fall, angle, force, the brain, whose brain? I would say it’s probably better than, like, not having that. But yeah, it’s just like jello floating around in there. And as soon as it shakes it, just yeah, it just can get injured. So just do the best you can do and gotta live life.

 

Anthony Gurule  32:34

Don’t be scared.

 

Mary Finck  32:35

Yeah. Don’t be scared. Just yeah. Because anything can happen at any time.

 

Anthony Gurule  32:39

Well, thank you again.

 

Mary Finck  32:40

Thank you. Yeah.

 

Anthony Gurule  32:43

And we’ll put again, we’ll put all the contact information. So if you guys are local, where you can find Mary here, Boulder County, Weld County, Broomfield County, so and so forth. But I mean, I just encourage you guys, I have healed from my injuries, took time off, did the things. And I’ve been, you know, trying to be mindful is if certain things come up, could it be a result of that? Fortunately from my injuries, I have not suffered from a lot of major things. But there are so many people that are dealing with the silent injuries. So hopefully this provides you guys with a little bit more context, a little bit more research, provides you also with some encouragement that something actually could be and is going on, because oftentimes, as you said, the silent things get swept under the rug. You didn’t see anything on this. We didn’t see any of this like, it must be in your head. Well it is! What are we gonna do about it?

 

Mary Finck  33:37

Thank you. Thank you. Yep, that was great.