- Sep 20, 2009
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I have been working with a female client (61 yrs old). She suffers from pain all over. May have fibromyalgia (though she's skeptical about that), may have Lymes disease (repeatedly tested negative, but just last week started antibiotics from her doctor anyway ... seems awfully late to be starting on that, but whatever).
She was in great physical shape and very active until two years ago and is still slim today. While on vacation (in Greece?) she suddenly started having strange symptoms, intense pain that inexplicably traveled back and forth between her arms, shoulders and wrists. It seemed the pain moved every few days or couple of weeks back and forth from point to point. At one point it occurred to her to stop taking the cranberry supplements she was on and the pain dissipated. Physical therapy also helped, but she still suffers from "frozen shoulder" type symptoms, noticeably restricted ROM.
1.5 years ago she took a misstep and twisted her knees. An MRI showed osteoarthritis in her right knee and right shoulder. The left knee is similarly achy and stiff. She has had physical therapy on her knees but still suffers some.
Her sternum aches, as does the front of her neck and the back of her legs. She believes she suffers from hypothyroidism (is just starting to see an endocrinologist). She feels like when she is moving she is "ripping" muscle fibers. She's also started suffering from a sleep disorder where she wakes up after two hours and can't go back to sleep.
Naturally, I decided to start tackling her structural issues with pelvic stabilization. We did the battery of hip, ankle/knee, shoulder and cervical spine assessments. She made a lot of progress with the pelvic stabilization over two sessions, so last time she came in we started on the shoulder protocol. That's where I got stuck.
When I did the assessment, the discomfort she described with either pain at the deltoids or deep within the shoulder capsule. She complained of no other discomfort as we assessed. Her abnormal shoulder numbers were:
Flexion (ideally 180˚)
R- 150˚
L- 155˚
Abduction (ideally 180˚)
R- 140˚
L- 45˚
Lateral/External Rotation
R- 70˚
L- 70˚
(close to 80˚ normal)
Horizontal Adduction
R- 130˚
L- 130˚
(close to 140˚ normal)
The following were normal:
Extension
Adduction
Medial/Internal Rotation
Horzontal Abduction
There was bone-on-bone like end feel to her shoulders (as much as I could tell at the low ROM; it was definitely not a normal end-feel).
So anyway, I proceeded to the shoulder protocol, but as soon as I got into the joint capsule work I couldn't abduct her arms beyond about 140˚ without her having pain deep in the shoulder capsule. I did the lateral and medial plunge-rotate-decompress (lateral at the maximum abduction caused a "pinching" sensation, so I would back off), but I could never get past the less-than-ideal abduction.
We did try moving forward to the next step, but that was only painful for her so I abandoned that idea right away.
In frustration I finally told her I couldn't proceed and was sending her home. She knows I am still studying this work and is a really nice woman, willing to work with me. I've done this exact same work on several other clients with good results, so I suspect something else is going on (perhaps the osteoarthritis? Lyme disease?). I told the client I was going to do some more research and see if could determine a way to proceed with the shoulders.
So at this point I'm stymied and am seeking feedback or suggestions. Your thoughts would be appreciated!
She was in great physical shape and very active until two years ago and is still slim today. While on vacation (in Greece?) she suddenly started having strange symptoms, intense pain that inexplicably traveled back and forth between her arms, shoulders and wrists. It seemed the pain moved every few days or couple of weeks back and forth from point to point. At one point it occurred to her to stop taking the cranberry supplements she was on and the pain dissipated. Physical therapy also helped, but she still suffers from "frozen shoulder" type symptoms, noticeably restricted ROM.
1.5 years ago she took a misstep and twisted her knees. An MRI showed osteoarthritis in her right knee and right shoulder. The left knee is similarly achy and stiff. She has had physical therapy on her knees but still suffers some.
Her sternum aches, as does the front of her neck and the back of her legs. She believes she suffers from hypothyroidism (is just starting to see an endocrinologist). She feels like when she is moving she is "ripping" muscle fibers. She's also started suffering from a sleep disorder where she wakes up after two hours and can't go back to sleep.
Naturally, I decided to start tackling her structural issues with pelvic stabilization. We did the battery of hip, ankle/knee, shoulder and cervical spine assessments. She made a lot of progress with the pelvic stabilization over two sessions, so last time she came in we started on the shoulder protocol. That's where I got stuck.
When I did the assessment, the discomfort she described with either pain at the deltoids or deep within the shoulder capsule. She complained of no other discomfort as we assessed. Her abnormal shoulder numbers were:
Flexion (ideally 180˚)
R- 150˚
L- 155˚
Abduction (ideally 180˚)
R- 140˚
L- 45˚
Lateral/External Rotation
R- 70˚
L- 70˚
(close to 80˚ normal)
Horizontal Adduction
R- 130˚
L- 130˚
(close to 140˚ normal)
The following were normal:
Extension
Adduction
Medial/Internal Rotation
Horzontal Abduction
There was bone-on-bone like end feel to her shoulders (as much as I could tell at the low ROM; it was definitely not a normal end-feel).
So anyway, I proceeded to the shoulder protocol, but as soon as I got into the joint capsule work I couldn't abduct her arms beyond about 140˚ without her having pain deep in the shoulder capsule. I did the lateral and medial plunge-rotate-decompress (lateral at the maximum abduction caused a "pinching" sensation, so I would back off), but I could never get past the less-than-ideal abduction.
We did try moving forward to the next step, but that was only painful for her so I abandoned that idea right away.
In frustration I finally told her I couldn't proceed and was sending her home. She knows I am still studying this work and is a really nice woman, willing to work with me. I've done this exact same work on several other clients with good results, so I suspect something else is going on (perhaps the osteoarthritis? Lyme disease?). I told the client I was going to do some more research and see if could determine a way to proceed with the shoulders.
So at this point I'm stymied and am seeking feedback or suggestions. Your thoughts would be appreciated!