Trigger point therapy is a proven therapeutic technique used for the relief of soft-tissue and myofascial pain and muscle dysfunction, including pain from repetitive strain injuries, accident trauma, and sports injuries, as well as fibromyalgia and related conditions. With The Trigger Point Therapy
Trigger Point Therapy for Low Back Pain : A Self-Treatment Workbook
β Scribed by Mary Biancalana; Bernard Filner; Sharon Sauer
- Publisher
- New Harbinger Publications
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 282
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In Trigger Point Therapy for Low Back Pain, author Sharon Sauer, a protege of trigger point therapy founders Janet Travell and David Simons, presents the first in her series of comprehensive trigger point therapy manuals. These manuals are designed to provide relief from muscle pain using both trigger point massage and other never-before-published techniques developed by Travell and Simons.
β¦ Subjects
Backache -- Popular works. ; Back -- Massage. ; Myofascial pain syndromes -- Popular works.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This is a useful book for anyone in chronic pain. There are few resources like this one, which empowers the reader to understand the problem and offers the tools to manage it.
<div><p>Trigger point therapy is one of the fastest-growing and most effective pain therapies in the world. Medical doctors, chiropractors, physical therapists, and massage therapists are all beginning to use this technique to relieve patientsβ formerly undiagnosable muscle and joint pain, both cond
<div><p>Trigger point therapy is one of the fastest-growing and most effective pain therapies in the world. Medical doctors, chiropractors, physical therapists, and massage therapists are all beginning to use this technique to relieve patientsβ formerly undiagnosable muscle and joint pain, both cond
If you have pain, it's important to understand where it's coming from-but finding the source of your pain is more complex than it seems. Trigger points, contracted portions of muscle cells, can refer pain to other areas of your body, so the trigger points that cause your pain may not be located in t