The tough
part of massage therapy long-term back pain is chasing trigger points in the
quadratus lumborem. This is one of those
muscles that not only keep clients awake at night; it keeps the therapist up,
too.
I have done
prone QL massage, prone with approximation, prone with stretch.
I have
massaged the QL sideline with the olecranon. Sideline with directed relaxation.
Sideline with directed breathing. Sideline with heat and a tennis ball.
It feels
sometimes, that I have done everything except roller-skate to get those pesky
points.
Does some
massage therapist, somewhere, have a quick and easy method for releasing the
QL?
Not to pick
on the QL. The multifidus and the longissimuss and iliocostalis contribute to
the problems of repeating lumbar pain. I find that if those muscles are
skipped, they can recruit the QL back to tension and TrP.
And the
opposing muscle, the psoas, can be just as equally weak as the QL is knotted.
Bilateral weakness of the psoas and I will definitely have to roll my sleeves
up. It is going to be a bumpy ride.
It is some
consolation to know that QL problems tend to fester, painless and subclinical
for years. The massages are unwinding years of QL spasticity making up for a
lack of core strength.
That is a
little comforting, I guess. Time to sharpen my elbow.
2 comments:
Nice Post for all.
no need to use the elbow exclusively, use trigger point therapy and release the trigger points thru a level that is acceptable to client, and work with all the mms in the area (works with & opposing).
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