Saturday, June 3, 2017

Yoga: Common Injuries and Prevention

Sports Injuries: 
  • From a recreational athlete to a pro, the most common reason for sport related injuries is overuse and abuse. Most injuries arise because athletes disconnect to their body
  • The best prevention is to become aware of your body, its shape, how it feels, range in the joints, and its symmetry. Sports create asymmetries because they are one side dominant, it's your job (as a teacher) to recognize imbalances in your students, before they become an injury. 
  • Here are top 10 most common sport related injuries and yoga poses to prevent them.

  1. Hip pain
  2. Hamstring pulls
  3. Knee injuries
  4. Shoulder pain
  5. Low back strain
  6. Wrist problems
  7. Ankle sprains
  8. Achilles tendonitis
  9. Plantar fasciitis
  10. Neck strain

Hip Pain


  • Hip pain is due to a lot of stop and go movement like in soccer, jarring moves like in tennis, and pounding the ground like in running. The simplest tool is to keep the hip open in all directions. 
  • Diagnosis: Lie on your back and relax completely. Make sure to release your legs and let them flop apart. Slowly lift your head without changing the positioning of your legs and take notice  which way your toes are pointing. Do they point in the same direction or does one foot point out and the other foot points straight? If they point in the same direction, that means one hip is completely relaxed. If they point in different directions that means the hip of the foot pointed straight up is tighter than the other hip and needs some attention. (etc)
  • poses:

  • Pigeon pose
  • Frog pose
  • Hero's pose
  • Standing forward bend (modified with knees bent)
Hamstring Pulls
  • Most hamstring pulls are from tight hamstrings. This muscle group and it is a group is the source of frustration for many athletes. They are so strong and thick it takes diligence and time to open them up. It will not happen over night.
  • poses
  • Standing forward bend with bent knees to protect the back
  • Wall lean standing forward bend
  • Plow pose
  • Straddle forward bend
  • janu, etc.
Knee Injuries
  • Pigeon pose
  • Pigeon with quad stretch
  • Double pigeon
  • Frog
  • IT band series
Low Back Pain
One of the most common reasons for pain, stiffness, or limited range in the low back is tight hamstrings.  Since the hamstrings originate on the sits bones, if the muscle is tight it pulls down on the pelvis, tipping it incorrectly and causing you to compensate in order to be upright. Another reason for low back pain is weak abdominals.
  • Seated forward bend
  • Wall lean forward bend
  • Seated twists
  • Seated leg cross twist
  • Boat/ boat pull ins
  • Forearm plank hold

Yoga: anxiety and depression--practices

Practices: Based on the idea that anxiety and depression, which often co-occur in various relationships are all examples of hypersensitivity of the nervous system which causes to effects:
  1. hyper-reactivity (either up or down)
  2. disengagement (retreat from one's body and bodily experience)

Inside each of us, there's a mind-body communications network that contributes to the patterns of anxiety and depression. This network includes the autonomic nervous system, the enteric nervous system (also called the gut microbiome), the immune system, pain modulation pathways, and the connective tissue matrix.
Treatment Perspective: Reduce hyper-reactivity and disembodiment through practices that increase embodied awareness and internal control.
  • asana
    • in truth, any asana which challenges, but does not frustrate a student can work toward these joint goals. But the following postures tend to increase specific emotional and mental responses, so can be used to direct responses in clients:
      • energizing (used when mood is low, energy is low, feelings of powerlessness
        • backbends!
        • any movement or action involving the upper body
        • expanding the chest
        • lengthening the spine
        • uddiyana banda
        • standing postures in extension
        • eyes open
        • rigorous practices which increase endorphins  and reduce stress hormones
      • Grounding postures (used when mood is anxious, irritable, feelings of spiraling out of control)
        • forward bends
        • balancing
        • mula banda
        • standing postures in flexion
        • closing the eyes or focusing drishti
        • RESTORATIVE postures and practices.
        • inversions (non-challenging)
    • pranayama
      • energizing
        • bastrika
        • kapalabhati
        • ujjayi
        • rapid breathing and breath holding on inhalation (kumbacka)
        • adjusting the DESHA (for inhale)
      • calming
        • nadi shodana
        • slow breathing and breath holding on the exhalation
        • ujjayi
        • adjusting the DESHSA (for exhale)
    • Visualization and other meditative techniques (good for all mindfulness training/improvement of a sense of embodiment once symptoms of anxiety or depression are alleviated)
      • breath awareness
      • breath meditation
      • breath visualization (including adjusting visualization to control the impact of breath)
      • Nonattached observation techniques

Mindfulness is the ability to inhabit the body and be present with bodily sensation as it fluctuates from one moment to the next. Physical exercises that increase awareness of sensations arising from within the physical body can help people to feel in control of their bodies and re-inhabit themselves in ways that encourage feelings of control.
Classes/yoga practice should always move slowly and are geared toward increasing awareness inside the body. They must integrate breath with each movement, since the breath is the connection between the mind and the body. This is the key to teaching mindfulness and learning embodiment.
Additionally, because tension in our muscles and connective tissue, or fascia, amplifies nervous system activation, practice should release connective tissue and give people an experience of 'not depression' and 'not anxiety'.

This is the same with the pain response, people need to learn to experience NOT PAIN, inorder to gain a sense of embodiment and control over pain.

Yoga: Treating anxiety & depression---evidence


Studies suggest that this practice modulates the stress response.
  • Since the 1970s, meditation and other stress-reduction techniques have been studied as possible treatments for depression and anxiety. 
  • Yoga, has received less attention in the medical literature, though one national survey estimated, that about 7.5% of U.S. adults had tried yoga at least once, and that nearly 4% practiced yoga in the previous year.
  • Many of the studies evaluating yoga's therapeutic benefits have been small and poorly designed. However, a 2004 analysis found that, in recent decades, an increasing number have been randomized controlled trials — the most rigorous standard for proving efficacy.
  • Available reviews of a wide range of yoga practices suggest they can reduce the impact of exaggerated stress responses and may be helpful for both anxiety and depression. In this respect, yoga functions like other self-soothing techniques, such as meditation, relaxation, exercise, or even socializing with friends.

Taming the stress response

  • By reducing perceived stress and anxiety, yoga appears to modulate stress response systems. 
  • This, in turn, decreases physiological arousal — for example, reducing the heart rate, lowering blood pressure, and easing respiration. 
  • There is also evidence that yoga practices help increase heart rate variability, an indicator of the body's ability to respond to stress more flexibly.
    • In 2008, researchers at the University of Utah presented preliminary results from a study of varied participants' responses to pain. They note that people who have a poorly regulated response to stress are also more sensitive to pain. Their subjects were 12 experienced yoga practitioners, 14 people with fibromyalgia (a condition many researchers consider a stress-related illness that is characterized by hypersensitivity to pain), and 16 healthy volunteers.
    • When the three groups were subjected to more or less painful thumbnail pressure, the participants with fibromyalgia — as expected — perceived pain at lower pressure levels compared with the other subjects. Functional MRIs showed they also had the greatest activity in areas of the brain associated with the pain response. In contrast, the yoga practitioners had the highest pain tolerance and lowest pain-related brain activity during the MRI. The study underscores the value of techniques, such as yoga, that can help a person regulate their stress and, therefore, pain responses.

Improved mood and functioning

  • Questions remain about exactly how yoga works to improve mood, but preliminary evidence suggests its benefit is similar to that of exercise and relaxation techniques.
    • In a German study published in 2005, 24 women who described themselves as "emotionally distressed" took two 90-minute yoga classes a week for three months. Women in a control group maintained their normal activities and were asked not to begin an exercise or stress-reduction program during the study period.
    • Though not formally diagnosed with depression, all participants had experienced emotional distress for at least half of the previous 90 days. They were also one standard deviation above the population norm in scores for perceived stress (measured by the Cohen Perceived Stress Scale), anxiety (measured using the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory), and depression (scored with the Profile of Mood States and the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, or CES-D).
    • At the end of three months, women in the yoga group reported improvements in perceived stress, depression, anxiety, energy, fatigue, and well-being. Depression scores improved by 50%, anxiety scores by 30%, and overall well-being scores by 65%. Initial complaints of headaches, back pain, and poor sleep quality also resolved much more often in the yoga group than in the control group.
    • One uncontrolled, descriptive 2005 study examined the effects of a single yoga class for inpatients at a New Hampshire psychiatric hospital. The 113 participants included patients with bipolar disorder, major depression, and schizophrenia. After the class, average levels of tension, anxiety, depression, anger, hostility, and fatigue dropped significantly, as measured by the Profile of Mood States, a standard 65-item questionnaire that participants answered on their own before and after the class. Patients who chose to participate in additional classes experienced similar short-term positive effects.
    • Further controlled trials of yoga practice have demonstrated improvements in mood and quality of life for the elderly, people caring for patients with dementia, breast cancer survivors, and patients with epilepsy.

Benefits of controlled breathing

  • A type of controlled breathing with roots in traditional yoga shows promise in providing relief for depression. The program, called Sudarshan Kriya yoga (SKY), involves several types of cyclical breathing patterns, ranging from slow and calming to rapid and stimulating. (kundalini technique)
  • One study compared 30 minutes of SKY breathing, done six days a week, to bilateral electroconvulsive therapy and the tricyclic antidepressant imipramine in 45 people hospitalized for depression. After four weeks of treatment, 93% of those receiving electroconvulsive therapy, 73% of those taking imipramine, and 67% of those using the breathing technique had achieved remission.
  • Another study examined the effects of SKY on depressive symptoms in 60 alcohol-dependent men. After a week of a standard detoxification program at a mental health center in Bangalore, India, participants were randomly assigned to two weeks of SKY or a standard alcoholism treatment control. After the full three weeks, scores on a standard depression inventory dropped 75% in the SKY group, as compared with 60% in the standard treatment group. Levels of two stress hormones, cortisol and corticotropin, also dropped in the SKY group, but not in the control group. The authors suggest that SKY might be a beneficial treatment for depression in the early stages of recovery from alcoholism.
Potential help for PTSD
  • Since evidence suggests that yoga can tone down maladaptive nervous system arousal, researchers are exploring whether or not yoga can be a helpful practice for patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
  • One randomized controlled study examined the effects of yoga and a breathing program in disabled Australian Vietnam veterans diagnosed with severe PTSD. The veterans were heavy daily drinkers, and all were taking at least one antidepressant. The five-day course included breathing techniques (see above), yoga asanas, education about stress reduction, and guided meditation. Participants were evaluated at the beginning of the study using the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS), which ranks symptom severity on an 80-point scale.
  • Six weeks after the study began, the yoga and breathing group had dropped their CAPS scores from averages of 57 (moderate to severe symptoms) to 42 (mild to moderate). These improvements persisted at a six-month follow-up. The control group, consisting of veterans on a waiting list, showed no improvement.
  • Researchers at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., are offering a yogic method of deep relaxation to veterans returning from combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. Dr. Kristie Gore, a psychologist at Walter Reed, says the military hopes that yoga-based treatments will be more acceptable to the soldiers and less stigmatizing than traditional psychotherapy. The center now uses yoga and yogic relaxation in post-deployment PTSD awareness courses, and plans to conduct a controlled trial of their effectiveness in the future.
Cautions and encouragement
  • For many patients dealing with depression, anxiety, or stress, yoga may be a very appealing way to better manage symptoms. Indeed, the scientific study of yoga demonstrates that mental and physical health are not just closely allied, but are essentially equivalent. The evidence is growing that yoga practice is a relatively low-risk, high-yield approach to improving overall health.
some references from above:

Brown RP, et al. "Sudarshan Kriya Yogic Breathing in the Treatment of Stress, Anxiety, and Depression: Part I — Neurophysiologic Model," Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine (Feb. 2005): Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 189–201.
Brown RP, et al. "Sudarshan Kriya Yogic Breathing in the Treatment of Stress, Anxiety, and Depression: Part II — Clinical Applications and Guidelines," Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine (Aug. 2005): Vol. 11, No. 4, pp. 711–17.
Janakiramaiah N, et al. "Antidepressant Efficacy of Sudarshan Kriya Yoga (SKY) in Melancholia: A Randomized Comparison with Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) and Imipramine," Journal of Affective Disorders (Jan.–March 2000): Vol. 57, No. 1–3, pp. 255–59.
Khalsa SB. "Yoga as a Therapeutic Intervention: A Bibliometric Analysis of Published Research Studies," Indian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology (July 2004): Vol. 48, No. 3, pp. 269–85.
Kirkwood G, et al. "Yoga for Anxiety: A Systematic Review of the Research," British Journal of Sports Medicine (Dec. 2005): Vol. 39, No. 12, pp. 884–91.
Pilkington K, et al. "Yoga for Depression: The Research Evidence," Journal of Affective Disorders (Dec. 2005): Vol. 89, No. 1–3, pp. 13–24.
Saper RB, et al. "Prevalence and Patterns of Adult Yoga Use in the United States: Results of a National Survey," Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine (March–April 2004): Vol. 10, No. 2, pp. 44–49.
For more references, please see www.health.harvard.edu/mentalextra.

Sunday, April 30, 2017

Hands, Wrists & Elbows

tennis elbow (tendentious)

  • self palpation with wrist movements
  • ice :( (hand squeeze hurts)
  • stabilize upper arm and move forearm over (laterally) and squeeze hand
  • same as above with hand turned back
  • Laurie sequence


neck

  • SUPPORT HEAD AND MAINTAIN DECENDED SCAPULA
  • head mobility
    • chin tucks as warm-up
    • extensions (watch range)
    • side bending with chin tuck
  • avoid head forward posture
    • head is too heavy (neck hurts)
    • test: shoulders and head against the wall
    • massage suboccipital and hold shoulders to extend neck
    • with towel or hands support shoulder depression for extension

shoulders: Rotator cuff etc



four muscles with both move and support the shoulder joint. tests see if any of the four movements are impaired at all:

rotator cuff tear

  1. lateral thumb down lift with resistance (empty can test)
  2. drop arm test (self-test) to let down slowly
  3. elbows at 90 degrees resistance in
  4. lift away in internal rotation
impingement
  1. lift are grab right shoulder and lift up
  2. hawkins /kennedy test (funky chicken movement)
  3. mears test: hold down shoulder blade, internally rotate arm and lift
  4. moores test: externally rotate with them on their back. Lift arm over their head, then bring to ear and internally rotate (straight arm)
treatment:
stretching
  • shoulder squeezes
  • dd on a chair walking back and forward
  • chest openers (doorway lean, 1 or two arms- variations)
  • arms behind back
  • heartbench variations
strengthening
  • ustrasana superman/goal post/T/ reverse Y (lifting arms
  • resistance band-external rotation elbows in/internal rotation
  • chest opening
tendonitis

Scapula problems:
look to increase mobility in the shoulder blades
size

  • head mobility
    • chin tucks as warm-up
    • extensions (watch range)
    • side bending with chin tuck
  • avoid head forward posture
    • head is too heavy (neck hurts)
    • test: shoulders and head against the wall
    • massage suboccipital and hold shoulders to extend neck
    • with towel or hands support shoulder depression for extension
Bursitis (inflamation)
NEEDS REST

McKenzie Approach
  • centralize pain and then relieve it
  • method
    • supine: chin back

Saturday, April 29, 2017

psoas

Is the psoas HYPER or HYPOtonic

psoas goes from T12 attaches to all the veribrae and disks and goes underneath the pelvis bilaterally. responsible for hip flexing and side bending ( inter-faces with iliacus)

Diagnosis

  • look at tilt of pelvis...anterior or posterior?
  • one knee in and one leg straight in supta pada gustasana---if leg will not go down it is a tight psoas. 
  • more extreme openings in supta eka pada virasana
  • knee drops in flexion with resistance
stretching psoas
  • ajanay/ add side bend
  • supta virasana
  • supported and unsupported backbends
  • thai pulls
  • splits/supported splits on chair sitting or standing
  • cogra with HIPS ON THE GROUND
  • bounds backbends


strengthening

  • chair marching
  • standing marching
  • with weights
  • squats on ball prone/one or two legs
  • knees in blankets on floor (or furniture sliders)