SPORTS INJURIES
Ligament Injury in Sports and Referred Pain Patterns |
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The chief principle of Prolotherapy is that it treats the root cause
of chronic pain and sports injuries—ligament and tendon
weakness. The chief symptom of ligament and/or tendon injury
is pain. The pain is aggravated by activity when tension
is placed upon the ligament or tendon and usually subsides
when the tension is relieved with inactivity. Often the general
activity of the athlete is curtailed because of the pain.
Severe pain from muscle spasm can occur from ligament and tendon weakness because
the muscle is trying to stabilize the area. Chronic muscle spasms are almost
always an indication of underlying ligament weakness. If the ligaments cannot
stabilize the joint, the muscles contract to do it.
This is why treatments for sports injuries, such as physical therapy, electrical
stimulation, and massage, often help to some degree, by relaxing the muscles,
but do not cure the problem because the ligament laxity or weakness continues.
Prolotherapy to strengthen the underlying joint and ligament permanently eliminates
the pain.
The odd thing for an athlete is that sometimes the pain will totally dissipate
between attacks. During this period a physician can still palpate the region
and find the tender areas. When the tender areas are palpated, a female will
squirm, but a male will jump because of his lower pain threshold. This is called
a positive squirm and jump sign, respectively.
What most athletic trainers, orthopedic surgeons, and physical therapists do
not know is that ligaments can refer pain to a distant site. The more severe
the injury, the more likely a referral pain pattern will exist. Dr. Hackett determined
the referral patterns of the ligaments of the lower back, which refer to the
legs, after giving 18,000 intraligamentous injections to 1656 patients over a
period of 19 years.(Hackett, G. Ligament and Tendon Relaxation Treated by Prolotherapy.
Third Edition. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas, Publisher, 1958.)
He determined that often sacroiliac ligament injury refers pain down the leg
into the foot and is the reason for so-called "sciatica." Hip joint ligament
injury refers pain down the leg into the big toe. Thus if a person has the respective
ligament referral pattern, it helps the Prolotherapist determine which ligaments
should be examined. The tender areas, as determined by a positive squirm or jump
sign, are then injected. Ligament and/or tendon laxity (weakness) is one of the
only conditions in which the diagnosis is confirmed before treatment and verified
after each treatment. This one fact may be the reason for Prolotherapy's tremendously
high success rate.
The treatment involves a physician palpating the exact site of the injury, reproducing
the pain, and then confirming the diagnosis with the actual injections, because
an anesthetic is contained in the Prolotherapy solution. The pain is then usually
eliminated immediately after the treatment due to the effect of the anesthetic
being injected right into the source of the painùthe fibro-osseous junction.
Prolotherapy injections into all the tender areas will immediately eliminate
all of the sharp pain and tenderness if enough solution of sufficient anesthetic
strength is injected. Some people get so many injections that each injection
can only contain a small amount of anesthetic solution (higher levels would be
toxic). In such an instance, most of the pain will be immediately eliminated,
but not all of it. Relieving the pain immediately after the Prolotherapy gives
the athlete and the physician confidence that the injured structures have been
treated.
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