6 ways physiotherapy can relieve aches and pains

Many people lump physiotherapy into the same category as less proven "alternative treatments" and it’s often confused with massage or chiropractic therapy. But physiotherapy is different. Could it work for you?

6 ways physiotherapy can relieve aches and pains

Source: Best Health Magazine, September 2009. Photo: Masterfile

It was the prospect of being forced to give up cooking that made me try physiotherapy. My hands and wrists had ached ever since I’d binged on note taking by hand and on my computer in graduate school.

My doctor gave me a blood test to rule out rheumatoid arthritis, but she had no idea what to do next. My husband, Andrew, had been urging me for years to try physiotherapy but I assumed I had the kind of permanent damage that nothing short of surgery could address. Plus, it would not be fully covered by my provincial health plan.

But I knew that if my hands got much worse, I wouldn’t be able to cook’or make a living as a writer’so I finally made an appointment with a physiotherapist.

The results are hard to exaggerate. I left that first session with a diagnosis of tendonitis and instructions for three stretches. The exercises were easy but they relieved so much muscular tension that I looked forward to my thrice-daily ritual. In weekly sessions at the clinic, my physiotherapist stretched my shortened muscles and added strengthening exercises to curtail future problems. I experienced some pain relief within days and a near-total return to normal after just two months.

I realized that physiotherapy can even treat long-term problems, and that I wasn’t looking at months and months of expensive treatment’in my case and many others, appointments taper off rapidly once the problem is identified and at-home exercises begin. Here are some of the ways physio treats a variety of conditions and diseases.

It can help bad knees

Last fall, Can­adian researchers at the University of Western Ontario published a landmark study showing that physiotherapy combined with medication was just as effective as arthroscopic surgery in treating osteo­arthritic knees. ‘Many arthritic joints are helped by work on flexibility and strength,’ says study co-author Dr. Robert Litchfield, an orthopedic surgeon and the medical director of the university’s Fowler Kennedy Sport Medicine Clinic. Physiotherapists can often remove the source of the knee pain by identifying a cause such as muscle tightness around the knee, and treating it with exercises or stretching. ‘We’ll do a biomechanical assessment looking at everything from muscle tightness to weakness to how joints move’if they move too much or too little,’ explains physiotherapist Greg Alcock, clinical and research coordinator at the Fowler Kennedy clinic. ‘Based on that, we’ll prescribe an appropriate course of action that may include exercise to calm [the inflamed joint or muscle] or address the factors contributing to the problem.’ If the problem derives from an imbalanced gait, physiotherapists can prescribe orthotics (shoe inserts that correct alignment problems). ‘Physiotherapists are very good at looking at the whole picture, while surgeons might just look at the joint,’ adds Litchfield.

It teaches breathing techniques

That whole-picture approach doesn’t stop with the musculoskeletal system (the joints and muscles we use to stand and walk). Physiotherapy also addresses conditions in the autonomic nervous system’the involuntary muscles and nerves that control our organs. Patients with asthma or sleep apnea, for example, can be treated by cardiovascular physiotherapists, who may use breathing control exercises’a simple one might be blowing up a balloon’or focus on improving the mobility of chest and neck muscles through stretching and strengthening programs.

It can relieve pelvic floor dis­orders

One fast-growing area of practice uses physiotherapy techniques to address pelvic floor disorders, which can occur when pelvic muscles tighten, shorten or fall into spasm after pregnancy, childbirth or abdominal surgery. ‘The pelvic floor muscles are involved in sexual function as well as bladder and bowel function, and they help support the spine and abdominal organs,’ explains physical therapist Robin Christenson, the founder of Womanology, an integrative therapy clinic in Irvine, Calif. Dysfunctions can manifest in conditions such as painful intercourse, urinary or bowel incontinence, or general abdominal or groin pain. ‘These problems don’t show up on MRIs or ultrasounds,’ says Christenson. She typically uses a massage technique called ‘trigger point release’ directly on the affected pelvic floor muscle to relieve the spasm. She also integrates core strengthening exercises and relaxation techniques through Pilates.

It combats obesity

Another burgeoning field is ‘lifestyle’ physiotherapy, such as preventive health care and management of chronic pain. Winnipeg physiotherapist Lia Arniel often works in conjunction with physicians to treat obese patients, in part by making it easier for them to exercise. ‘We educate them about the physical impact that excess weight has on the musculo­skeletal system’the physical backbone of our bodies,’ she explains. In addition to addressing problems such as sore knees and tendonitis through traditional physiotherapy techniques, physiotherapists can design personalized exercise programs that won’t overtax vulnerable joints. Even something as simple as helping patients select shoes with the right support and conditioning can help to get sedentary patients moving again. Similar principles apply when working with patients whose mobility has declined due to aging or the side effects of chemotherapy.

It can relieve chronic pain

Depending on the cause, a program of physiotherapy can ease chronic pain by strengthening the muscles that surround painful joints or muscles. A Danish study of women with osteoporosis whose chronic pain was linked to spinal compression fractures found that patients used significantly less pain medication and reported improved quality of life after just 10 weeks of a physiotherapy program designed to improve balance and stabilize the lumbar spine.

It can cure back pain

Problems such as poor posture, muscle strain or arthritis can cause back pain. Treatment will depend on the source of the problem, but some common principles apply. Paul VanWiechen, director of exercise physiology at the Cleveland Clinic Canada in Toronto, advises a three-fold approach: weight management (to reduce stress on joints), muscle strengthening (to improve mobility and reduce recurrence) and ‘re-patterning’ of muscles. That involves changing the coordination of all the muscles in a particular area, usually through a series of dynamic exercises. ‘There are about two dozen muscles in and around the lower back that really matter,’ he explains. ‘Strengthening two or three doesn’t have as much of an effect as teaching all 24 how to work together.’

How to make physio work for you

Stretches and strengthening exercises done at home are crucial to treating most problems. That’s where physiotherapy can lose adherents. ‘A lot of my clients want to be fixed yesterday’they don’t want to put a lot of effort into it,’ says Karen Orlando, a physiotherapist and the owner of ProCare Rehabilitation in Toronto. It takes time and practice to stretch or retrain muscles that have a long-established bad habit. But doing so can prevent a recurrence of the injury.

When I was tempted to skip my exercises, I’d remember that the effort and money I was investing might help prevent more extensive and expensive interventions. That’s something our policy-makers should keep in mind, as physiotherapy’s potential to keep our aging population mobile and healthy becomes even more relevant.

This article was originally titled “A Hands-On Approach,” in the September 2009 issue of Best Health. Subscribe today to get the full Best Health experience’and never miss an issue!’and make sure to check out what’s new in the latest issue of Best Health.