I like to think that osteopathy is a partnership approach to
solving problems with both the Osteopath and the patient being involved in the
process. So it’s always nice to hear that a patient has acted on their own initiative.
I’ve recently been treating a patient with a painful
shoulder and she’s been making steady progress but I was surprised when she
came to clinic and announced that she’d solved her shoulder problem by getting
her hair cut short! She went on to explain that since a young child she had
always had the unconscious habit of twiddling her hair with her right hand.
When she wasn’t thinking about it whilst just sitting watching TV she’d fall in
to the habit of fiddling with her hair.
It makes sense that when osteopaths start treating a patient
with a particular problem not only do they have to come up with an idea as to
what they are treating in the form of a diagnosis but we also like to think
beyond that to figure out what caused the problem in the first place and what
aggravates it. Most patients are looking for pain relief or better movement but
unless the potential cause of the problem is identified it’ll happen again and
again.
In the case of shoulder problems classic aggravating factors
might be carrying a heavy shoulder bag, holding a young baby repeatedly over
one shoulder or using a computer mouse for long hours. Of course an aggravating
factor that I’ll now bear in mind is having long hair and twiddling it!
The thing is that with a lot of the aggravating factors that
are associated with using the arm we have to remember that arms are quite heavy
things. If you lift your arm above your head for a while it’s fine but leave it
there for any length of time and things are going to ache and complain under
the weight of the arm itself even if it’s not holding on to anything. So when
folk sit at their busy, cluttered desk in front of the computer holding on to
the mouse, unless the arm or wrist is resting on the desk the arm and the
shoulder are going to get tired and they’re going tighten up and ache. And the
same goes if you’re sitting in front of the TV twiddling your hair!
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