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Spring projects

Sheree DiBiase/Lake City Physical Therapy | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 8 months AGO
by Sheree DiBiase/Lake City Physical Therapy
| May 14, 2014 9:00 PM

I don't know what it is about spring but when it comes, everyone around here seems bound and determined that the hibernation of the winter is over and they are ready to get some work done. They are stacking slash piles, cleaning outside windows, putting in patios, cleaning out their garages and getting their gardens ready for planting, along with biking, running and hiking Canfield. Everyone is outside doing something, and I am sure that this week there are some backs, necks, shoulders and knees that are mighty sore.

In physical therapy, we often see an increase in injuries this time of year due to everyone loving the good weather and being anxious to begin their springtime projects. Everyone goes out with great enthusiasm and pretty soon, the hauling of fences and rocks for the new yard takes its toll. We see a lot of tendonitis, sprains and strains. Suddenly Advil is your new best friend, and we wonder how this project that was supposed to take two Sundays now has taken four whole weekends. We also wonder why our elbows are now talking to us 24 hours a day.

A common injury at the elbow is called "tennis elbow." It can happen because of tennis, but most often it happens because of a repetitive activity that you have been doing that strains the common extensor tendon of the elbow. This overuse syndrome occurs when we irritate the tendon and cause a localized inflammation. If you think of how a rope frays with overuse and becomes weak, this is exactly what happens to the tendon.

Often you will have pain when you touch the area, when you lay on it, when you stretch out your arm, or when you try to pick up something even as light as your coffee cup. So there goes the projects right out the window - and we were hoping to have them done before Memorial Day.

Well, here is where physical therapy can help a tendonitis, a sprain or a strain. Any time there is an injury, the body's natural response with a muscle, joint or tendon is to send fluid to the area. We call this the inflammatory response. This is an important part of the process because it means the body has recognized that something is just not right and it needs to be alerted.

The problem is that often the inflammatory response has occurred, but the next step of proliferation and then healing has somehow not been allowed to happen. So the body is caught in the inflammatory circle and healing is not occurring. When we were young, the process of moving through these stages of healing an injury happened efficiently and with little to no assistance. However, after about the age of 28, this process slows and often the body needs help.

Physical therapy plays an integral part in promoting the stages of healing. It utilizes all types of interventions, from electrical to mechanical to light energy, to facilitate tissue healing. All types of tissues heal at different rates and with different interventions. Thank goodness for cold laser therapy, which is wonderful for tendonitis and muscle strains. Transverse friction massage on tendonitis is amazing to assist a tendon in healing. Soft tissue mobilization works well to assist a shoulder with stiffness, and then joint mobilization works wonders on that back and neck that is stiff.

Whatever you are doing this spring, remember that your body is trying to tell you something if you are achy, stiff and sore, and reaching for the Advil every night for more than a week. Most likely, you need to use your ice pack, rest, and compress and elevate whatever is talking to you. If you find that after two weeks of self-care you are still struggling with the same thing, you really need to contact your physical therapist.

In our state, you are allowed to see a physical therapist without a doctor's referral - unless, of course, your insurance requires you to do so. So don't let your sprain or strain land you behind the eight ball on your home improvement projects. Come in and see your physical therapist today and we will get you back on track.

Sheree DiBiase, PT, is the owner of Lake City Physical Therapy. She and her staff would love to get you back on your DIY projects as quickly as possible. Please call for an appointment in Coeur d'Alene (208) 667-1988 and in the Spokane Valley at (509) 891-2623.

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ARTICLES BY SHEREE DIBIASE/LAKE CITY PHYSICAL THERAPY

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Victoria Sweet was a physician in the world of modern medicine in San Francisco, but in her book, God's Hotel, she discovered that premodern medicine had some very important concepts when it came to the power of the body to heal itself. The body appeared to have this natural force or ability to perform a magical act as it was healing itself. The body merely needed the "best" environment in order for this to happen well. In the premodern medicine world they used the natural cures, sunlight, good food, fresh air, exercise, a good night sleep, herbal remedies and the "tincture of time." They felt that as long as it had taken for the disease to come to be with a person, then it would take just as long for the person to be healed of the disease. "Vis Medicatrix Naturae," according to Sweet, is really "the remedying force of your own nature to be itself," to turn back into itself when it has been wounded.