A BETTER WAY TO LEARN

Devise

Langue

black november - 30 days of sale

Claim Your Free Course

Buy one get one free. Add any two courses to your cart and we'll automatically discount the lower priced course by 100%!

 

Low Back Pain

 

 

Paul Townley, Physiotherapist, Shows Some Techniques for Treating Back Pain

 

 

There are a number of muscles that may be implicated in low back pain:

  • Deep spinal muscles (small) - multifidus
  • Lumbar erector spinae
  • Gluteus medius
  • Hamstrings
  • Rectus abdominis
  • Quadratus lumborum
  • Iliopsoas 

Added to this hardware is the software that the brain uses to coordinate and sequence movement.

The above-mentioned structures feed information to the brain in a constant stream, providing orientation (proprioception) as well as force and direction (velocity).  The brain then responds by organizing movement sequences in functional units.

These functional units mainly consist of a prime mover (agonist), an opposing muscle force (antagonist), and other muscles that either fix the local joint (fixators) or help the prime mover (synergists).  Eighty-six percent of low back pain is mechanical and may come from any one of the following structures:  bones, discs, facet joints, ligaments, and/or muscles.

 

 

 

Treating Low Back Pain with Dry Needling - Paul Townley 

 

 

To summarize, the anatomy and structures of the lumbar spine consist of various elements:

1) The spinal column of the axial skeleton is made up of vertebrae consisting of, for simplicity, three joints:  two facet joints on each side and posterior to the vertebral body, and the joint between the vertebral bodies, consisting of the disc and cartilage end plate.  These joints have their various ligaments.

2) The neural structures—such as spinal cord, nerve roots at the various segmental levels, and the cauda equina (the collection of nerves at the end of the spinal cord).

3) The muscles and fascia or myofascia surrounding the spine.  Obviously, there are blood vessels in the area, but we are more involved in addressing the joints, myofascia, and nerves.

 

Erector Spinae with Trigger Points

 

Iliopsoas with Trigger Points

Quadratus Lumborum with Trigger Points

 

 

share this article

Myofascial Expert Online course
accredited continuing education

Myofascial Expert

$99.95

Dry Needling for Trigger Point Release
accredited continuing education

IMS/Trigger Point Dry Needling

$179.95

Pregnancy Massage Online Course
accredited continuing education

Pregnancy Massage

$59.95

Massage Cupping Course
accredited continuing education

Massage Cupping Diploma

$295.00

1 / 4
trusted by
NAT Global Campus

The Gold Standard in Continuing Education and Online Training

300+ COURSES INCLUDE

Massage Therapy, Sports Massage, Strength and Conditioning, Stretching, Mobilisation and Manipulation, Cranio-Sacral Therapy, IMS Dry Needling, Acupuncture, Acupressure, Trigger Point Therapy, IASTM, Resistance Training, Bowen Therapy, Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy, Podiatry, Oncology Massage, Sports Nutrition, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Somatic Therapy, Prenatal Bodywork and Massage, Anatomy, Biomechanics, Clinical Reasoning, Pilates, and Yoga.

Multi-column

Continuing Education

Great courses at inflation-busting prices. You won't find better value anywhere.

NAT Diploma Courses

NAT Self-Paced Diploma courses are designed to help you boost your career.

Membership

Get unlimited access to all online CE/CPD courses, live events, webinars and more.

CE CPD Accredited Courses Massage Physical Therapy Chiropractic
CE Accredited Courses NAT Global Campus

Ask a Health Question or Start a Conversation

join our free community forum
black november - 30 days of sale

Claim Your Free Course

Buy one get one free. Add any two courses to your cart and we'll automatically discount the lower priced course by 100%!