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Chapter 13 E-materials



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Appendix 13.1 Self-attribution and problem solving




B Patient encouraged to recognise his achievements and problem-solve


Physiotherapist: ‘Hi, nice to see you. You’re looking looser and straighter; your head’s moving more freely!’


Patient: ‘Oh, is it? I feel much sorer than last week’.


Physiotherapist: ‘So, you’re moving better, but it’s much more painful. Why do you think that might be?’


Patient: ‘Well, I don’t know, that’s why I asked you!’


Physiotherapist: ‘What makes it particularly sore?’


Patient: ‘I think it’s some of the exercises. I know they’re helping, I’m freer, so I don’t want to stop them, but whenever I do the turning exercise it seems to set off that awful muscle spasm’.


Physiotherapist: ‘That’s a good link to have made. What do you think could help?’


Patient: ‘Well, I’m trying to relax, but it’s not easy’.


Physiotherapist: ‘Great, and relaxing isn’t easy to start with. Show me how they are going’ (patient does neck rotation, but with tension in the neck and slightly in the shoulders).


Physiotherapist: ‘What are you feeling?’


Patient: ‘Well I’m trying to relax my shoulders’.


Physiotherapist: ‘Yes, I can see that, that’s good. Anything else?’


Patient: ‘It’s tight round here (touches right C1 area) and actually that’s where it’s really sore’.


Physiotherapist: ‘Yes, it’s really hard to relax where it’s really sore. Is there anything else you’ve tried to help relax up there?’


Patient: ‘Well maybe I could do a smaller exercise to that spot to loosen it up, like the nodding exercise’.


Physiotherapist: ‘Mmmm Good! I think you’re on the right track there. Keep going like that, it will come eventually. Are you pleased with how it’s going?’


Patient: ‘Yes, it’s been stiff a long time, so I suppose that’s pretty good!’


NB Notice how both physiotherapists acknowledged the pain without reinforcing the pain talk.








Case Study 13.1



Background


30-year-old female passenger involved in a rear-end collision while waiting at traffic lights a week ago.


She reports the headrest adjustment was loose and low, so her head went back over it before whipping forwards. The seat belt stop jerked her neck to the left.


There was little pain immediately, so she refused to go to hospital but saw her GP the next day after waking with a stiff neck and increasing neck and back pain. The GP gave her dihydrocodeine and anti-inflammatories and told her to ‘take it easy’.


She now complains of severe pain and tenderness over the whole posterior neck and neck muscles, particularly around and right of C6/C7/T1 and T4–T7. Her old back injury pain has returned with pain across L3/L4. She has had a background headache for days and a constant feeling of a lump in the throat, worse when swallowing.


She finds it extremely hard to get comfortable at night, many times having to sit up because of ‘unbearable’ thoracic and C/T1 pain which aggravates her headache. She has noticed tingling in all fingers, right hand slightly worse than left.


She wears a scarf wrapped around her neck and reports wearing an old neck collar at night.


On assessment all movements look very painful and limited; undertaken with caution and muscle guarding/spasm.


There are no red flags. Her reflexes are normal, and lateral movement of the hyoid bone, cricoid and thyroid cartilages are normal though painful.


When asked what would happen if she moved further she says the pain would be unbearable – she has experienced moving too quickly too far: ‘I don’t want to do that again!’ She admits to being concerned about further damage: she’s sure the original accident tore muscles and damaged joints or the discs ‘it hadn’t hurt much to start with, so I must have been in shock’. She thinks the tingling in her fingers means she probably has trapped nerves.


She admits to getting down about the pain: the lack of sleep, worries about the effect on her work, wondering how long it will go on for, and whether it will ever get better. This is the first time she has felt down like this.



Treatment




Reassurance that her neck is healthy, just very sore as she has been in an RTA. Similarly the muscles at the front of her throat would have been yanked on as her head was not fully stopped by the headrest.


Acknowledgement of her pain: muscle spasm can be extremely sharp and painful, and pain and sensitisation following injury is normal but pretty unpleasant. Her throat likewise is normal; the lump will be the sensitisation as well as perhaps some muscle spasm though this should settle when normal movement is regained.


Given a brief explanation of post-injury sensitisation in the CNS, and that the neck is immensely strong: touch and normal movements are not damaging even after a whiplash. The pain is not a sign of further damage; pain worse later rather than immediately is hypersensitivity – just as happens with sunburn. The process of healing briefly explained, with the need for gentle then progressive movement to reduce pain, limit stiffness and muscle spasm and encourage strong repair.


She is now at the subacute stage however so encouraged to start moving as normally as possible, as this would NOT cause more damage and would help speed up tissue recovery. Taught to do gentle relaxing movements to other joints first then to the affected joints: helping the muscles to be more relaxed when beginning painful movement. Now it is not acute she is encouraged to try out both heat and ice: which works best to reduce the pain and spasm? Encouraged to build up her general activity: take the stairs to her 4th floor flat, not the lift.


Since immobilisation increases pain and encourages muscle spasm on movement, she was praised for getting up in the night and encouraged to use this, together with relaxation and regular changes in position as a strategy until the pain eases further. Her sleep is interrupted so she was reassured relaxation and rest are almost as good and she would soon find she could sleep for longer.

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Nov 5, 2016 | Posted by in MANUAL THERAPIST | Comments Off on E-materials

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