Saturday, March 10, 2012

Don’t Get Angerballs

I highly recommend watching the movie Playing by Heart if you are in need of a cathartic cry over love.  I was watching it the other night, just after talking with Kristi about the yuckiness of untreated trigger points.  In the movie, characters getting frustrated or upset are called “angerballs” and I thought it a fitting connection.

Trigger points are basically what we call “muscle knots,” though the tissue is not actually knotted.  A small bit of the muscle is contracted; a tiny spasm or miniature cramp.  These little points can not only hurt in their location, but also can cause pain in other areas.  This phenomenon is called “referred pain.”

Trigger point pain can refer to almost anywhere in the body.  Many of us have at one time or another experienced tension headaches, an ailment that may be caused by trigger points.  This effect of travelling pain can occur in almost any area.  The body is one connected unit and disorder in a specific area, such as the jaw, ear, or even bowel, may be compounded by trigger points.

There are two types of trigger points: active and latent.  Active trigger points causes pain at the site of the point as well as pain at another location in the body.  Latent trigger points are more stealthy; they may simply restrict muscle movement or cause muscle weakness and only be painful when pressure is directly applied to the point.

How do trigger points form?  Research suggests that an injury to an area of muscle or repetitive stress on the muscle can lead to the development of trigger points.  Surgical scars can contain trigger points.  They may occur in an avid sportsperson or someone working in a call centre.  Walking with a heavy backpack, holding a baby on the hip or doing one too many bench-presses and a myriad of other activities in our daily lives can predispose a person to these nasty little points.

There is clinical evidence that emotions can affect muscles, but you can prove it to yourself right now, no white coat required.  Imagine that it has snowed again and you are heading out in the -20 degree dark of the morning.  Your brow is probably furrowed, your shoulders hunched up and your lower back aches with the memory of shovelling snow.  Now, imagine yourself in a state of happiness…you’re lying on a hot beach with a cold drink.  How do your muscles feel?  Your back is slowly softening into the sand, you head lolls to the side and your limbs are like jelly.

Regardless of what caused the trigger point to form, it is an angry little ball inside your skin.  It is causing pain and affecting you in ways that you may not even know.  Left untreated, it can cause more trigger points to be created and overload your nervous system with messages of pain until your body is one whole angerball.  

You may not know that you have trigger points.  They can feel like a poppy seed or a frozen pea under the skin and it’s really only when they are touched that you become aware of their existence.  It feels so good to have your massage therapist find these little spots and presses them until the muscle releases.  The massage therapist is literally pushing your buttons.

Wouldn’t you love to have Devon or Ruth squishing those trigger points away while John Mellencamp sings the chorus of “Hurts so Good” in the background?



p.s. You can also ask Adam, the resident acupuncturist, about treating trigger points with needles.


This blogpost was written by a rocking friend of Prana's, Leanne Garon. And 100% loved and approved by me!



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