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Reviews
Nerve Mobilization with
Doug Alexander
Reviewed by Andrew
Lewarne
This DVD is a must-have for anyone that is serious about any
type of manual therapy including massage therapy. It takes you on a
no nonsense journey that supplies the anatomy of potential neural
dysfunction and treatment techniques for the rehabilitation of that
dysfunction. Doug has supplied the map for the upper limb but
practitioners will have no difficulty extrapolating from that and
applying these techniques wherever they suspect neural
entrapment.
I applied the assessment and techniques the same day I viewed
the video and with a remarkably good results. There are good
reasons for the efficacy of these techniques. First and foremost
they are presented in a fashion that allows them to be incorporated
within a treatment such that you can assess, treat and reassess
without breaking the flow of the work.
An
example in which these assessment and treatment techniques were
particularly useful occurred with a new client 3 days ago. She had
been preparing for her daughter’s wedding and was concerned about
her weight and so hopped on the treadmill with a set of 8lb hand
weights. She sensed this might not be the best idea, but had a
momentary lapse in judgment. She woke up the next day with left
sided numbness in her thumb, pain in her forearm and pain in the
lateral upper arm and underneath the shoulder blade. I performed
standard assessment including range of motion of the shoulder,
neck, glenohumeral joint, elbow and wrist with all the accompanying
special tests i.e. Adson’s, Wright’s, etc. These testing protocols
gave a general idea of specific structures to treat yet the all too
common problem remained; the client will not allow themselves to
release enough for truly passive movement testing. Because of this,
the exact origin of the pain and/or discomfort is often difficult
to assess. The client activates their muscles (even a little bit)
and it changes the results just enough for “Location” to be
compromised.
The overall direction for the treatment was clear so I decided
to wait and apply the tension tests within the treatment. This
allowed for me to treat the posterior areas of concern as well as
getting her used to my touch. I feel that this allowed the client
to build trust and afforded me an opportunity to demonstrate when
and where she was holding tension without being aware of the
fact.
By the
time we moved to the anterior structures she was ready to allow
passive movements to be truly passive, which in turn meant that I
could more accurately determine the compromising structures. The
combination or stacking of positions that occurs in the Nerve
Mobilization assessment protocol showed me that compression
occurred in the scalene triangle (no surprise here) and that the
Pectoralis Minor was also involved (again no surprise). What did
come as surprise was that the strongest reaction came with the
compression through the Pronator Teres via supination of the wrist
and elbow. This allowed me to identify and treat the most
significant muscle as far as the median nerve was concerned!
One of the aspects of these techniques that I appreciate the
most is that they can be mixed and matched once you understand the
basics of nerve and muscle anatomy along with the action of the
various muscles. It is not hard to begin to grade the various
structures you are testing i.e. maintaining nerve traction and then
reducing the number of stretches to identify which is the most
provocative. In other words you can re-check in the opposite
direction from your initial testing which allows for a full circle
effect in your treatment. I finished my initial set of techniques
with a gentle sustained traction of the median nerve.
I spend a lot of time in my practice educating clients and I
found it easy to explain the why’s and where for’s of what I was
doing. In my experience this always helps because the client
becomes engaged in the process. This is often the first time they
have been an active and informed participant in their own
healthcare.
There are also various spin-off benefits. For example, it is
impossible to explain what a lymphatic technique is without going
into the role of the lymphatics in our overall health. Most clients
have only heard of the lymphatics in combination with “Toxins”,
“Cancer”, and “Surgery”. “Lymphatic” is an often confusing and
scary term for people, whereas the technique is both calming and
soothing. I found the use of such techniques as milking (which was
new to me) and nodal pumping supplied an effective and enjoyable
alternative to standard fold and hold and dragging techniques.
Doug also makes the point that you can’t rush
assessment and treatment. This is a point that I believe needs to
be heard. Too many therapists have told me that they don’t get
results fast enough and so they refer out and lose the opportunity
to see a treatment plan through to its logical conclusion. There is
an old saying in Tai Chi, “It takes 20 years to learn Tai Chi, 25
to learn it quickly.” The same applies to treatment!
I found the glide techniques were an interesting addition
especially the reminder work shown for the Radial-Ulnar joint
(often over looked in tennis elbow presentations). The work that
was demonstrated through the Tunnel of Guyon reminded me very much
of the work taught to me by a couple of osteopaths. Indeed, I find
that the use of osteopathic listening technique combined with a
gentle compression, followed by gentle traction (what the
osteopaths call a “decompression”) allows for effective tissue
release. In the case of the techniques demonstrated on the DVD, the
anchor and gentle bowing techniques achieve very much the same
result.
It is not a great leap to see that these techniques and
assessments could very easily be applied with active and resisted
movements to resolve issues of scar tissue entrapments. Include the
addition of hydrotherapy and you have a very valuable set of tools
for a wide variety of clientele
My only critique, and it is a small one, is that Doug
occasionally lets his voice slip into that therapeutic range that,
while soothing, does lull the listener so that some meaning can be
lost.
All in all I think this is a valuable addition to any
practitioner’s library.
Andrew Lewarne: Registered Massage Therapist, National
Strength and Conditioning Association Certified Personal Trainer,
Former Examinations Officer of the College of Massage Therapists of
Ontario. Andrew works at The Body Wise in Toronto. Click on web
site link below to contact him:
Buy
the Nerve Mobilization DVD by clicking here:
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