모던칼럼
근육의 guarding에 관련 한 에릭 달튼 글..( 저자의 허락을 받고 올림니다. 무단 복사 배포 금지)
Pain – Spasm – Pain by Erik Dalton, Ph.D.
When the brain senses bony instability or tissue damage in-and-around the spine, split decisions are made that help determine the extent of threat to the individual and what actions need to be taken (Fig 1). Layering the area with protective muscle guarding is one such decision. It’s the brain’s reflexogenic attempt to prevent further insult to the injured tissues. By ‘splinting’ the area with spasm, the hypercontracted (shortened) muscles effectively reduce painful joint movements. This is a common source of spasm clinicians address day in and day out… but how does it develop?
Recall that when a joint is moved beyond its acceptable range of motion (physiologic barrier), the facets can become locked open on one side or closed on the other causing loss of joint play (Fig 4). Contrary to popular thinking, the secondary muscle changes that result in the deep groove muscles from joint blockage do not always result in hypertonicity or spasm. Dr. Stuart McGill found that when a lumbar facet joint became displaced and fixated during a lifting incident, the multifidus on the side of the fixated facets began to atrophy within 24 hours (Fig 5). Regardless of the reason for loss of joint play, when vertebrae are not free to move, muscles assigned the job of moving them (prime movers) cannot carry out their duties and are substituted by synergistic stabilizers, i.e., the brain sends in the subs when a key player is injured. The final stage of dysfunction occurs when the middle layer and deep myofascial support systems collapse due to joint dysfunction and the load is shifted to global (outer layer) dynamic muscles such as the erectors, obliques and lats.
To help maintain flexibility, joint capsules require daily or at least frequent elongation to avoid cross-linking of collagen fibers. Articular stretching and myofascial mobilization techniques help therapists restore and maintain capsular elasticity by preventing cross-linking. Long-term joint fixations are a primary cause of reduced flexibility as calcium deposits infiltrate the capsule and associated periarticular structures. As edema collects at the injured site, protein is deposited outside the arterial capillary walls. Soon, chemoreceptors are stimulated and the area becomes a feeding-ground for chemical waste products and accompanying fibrosis. | |
Minimizing the accumulation of nociceptive tissue irritants at the injured capsule is the desired result of Myoskeletal mobilization therapy. Adding soft-tissue capsular work not only helps restore range of motion and joint-play to frozen spinal, hip and shoulder articulations, but normalizes afferent messages to the brain; thus reducing protective muscle guarding around the dysfunctional joint. |