Get more out of your therapy

By February 3, 2014Therapeutic Techniques

Ever wonder what the ‘pros’ are doing when they get hurt or what therapy are they getting for their tight muscles and aches and pains?

The answer is the same as you! Most professional athletes get a combination of therapies, including chiropractic, ART, acupuncture and massage therapy BUT where they differ the most is they know what their weaknesses are and use specific low tech exercises to correct those weaknesses.

Weaknesses are not the same as a weak muscle, let me explain.

In order for any athlete to perform at their peak and be most resistant to injury, they must have optimum movement.  Without optimal movement, an athlete is putting “fitness on dysfunction.” It is the equivalent of building a house on a weak foundation.  They are performing advanced level activities even though they are inefficient in their fundamental movements.

When we lack a solid foundation of functional movement patterns, we then compensate with poor movement patterns. As a result, muscle tightness and injuries may never heal 100%, or optimal performance may never be reached.  Therefore, Functional Movement Systems is widely used by athletic programs to discover and correct these weaknesses and to help athletes stay healthy and compete the best they can. At ACHC, Dr. Knapp and Dr. Sly use this same system to screen, assess, and treat their patients and athletes, allowing maximal therapeutic effect, optimal performance and decreased risk of injury.

WHAT IS THE FUNCTIONAL MOVEMENT SYSTEMS?

Functional Movement Systems is made up of the Functional Movement Screen (FMS) and the Selective Functional Movement Assessment (SFMA).

The FMS is a ranking and grading system in which documents movement patterns that are key to normal function. Screening these patterns identifies functional limitations and asymmetries, generating the FMS Score. The FMS Score is directly linked to the most beneficial corrective exercises to restore mechanically sound movement patterns, track progress, and change the exercise prescription as movement improves.

When pain is present, or when performance of an FMS test produces pain, Phil and Paul then use the SFMA. The SFMA is a comprehensive clinical assessment to classify movement patterns and direct manual therapy and therapeutic exercise interventions. It captures tightness, weakness, poor mobility and poor stability, which may be remote from the area of pain.  This allows for the most efficient and effective treatment to remove the pain and reduce or resolve mobility and movement-pattern asymmetries.

Here at ACHC we want you to get the most out of your treatment and maximize your potential. Contact us to find out how you can get more out of your therapy!

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