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The Myoskeletal method simplifies assessment of painful neck, low back, shoulder, arm, and hand conditions by looking for A.R.T. = Asymmetry, Restriction of motion, and Tissue texture abnormality. Treating pain without improving posture is generally regarded as a quick-fix and, at best, only a temporary solution for helping our clients in need. Fortunately, the work of the great biomechanical researcher Vladimir Janda, M.D., has gifted the massage bodywork field with two very powerful tools for identifying muscle imbalance strain patterns that cause body asymmetry leading to pain.
It is no surprise that researchers find Janda's dysfunctional upper and lower crossed postural patterns in approximately 75 percent of all massage therapy clients reporting chronic neck, back, scapular, and hip pain. Since 1998, Dalton's "Dirty-Dozen" Myoskeletal Technique formula has proven amazingly successful in correcting these painful agonist-antagonist muscle imbalance patterns.
The Sensorimotor system functions as one entity, integrating the central nervous system (CNS) and musculoskeletal system. The muscle4s are often a “window” to the function of the CNS. The CNS regulates two phylogenic subsystems: the tonic muscle group and the phasic muscle group. Each group of muscles has a predisposition for facilitation (tonic system) or inhibition (phasic system). Any change within the Sensorimotor system (due to pain, pathology or adaptive changes) will be reflected by compensation or adaptations throughout the system. This leads to systemic and predictable patterns of muscle imbalance. Dr. Janda has defined the characteristic Upper Crossed Syndrome, Lower Crossed Syndrome, and Layer Syndrome. These muscle imbalances often lead to changes in movement patterns, most notably seen with hip extension, hip abduction, shoulder abduction, push-up, cervical flexion, and trunk flexion.
Anatomy Trains® Myofascial Meridians is a revolutionary idea for understanding whole-body patterning in posture and movement. Anatomy Trains is a new map of the 'anatomy of connection' - precise fascial and myofascial links through the body that lead to new holistic strategies for identifying and resolving complex underlying problems.
This Anatomy Trains site is an on-going inquiry into the significance of form - how we take in, use and change with 'in-form-ation'. From the individual cell to the social and cultural context, we are interested in morphogenesis, as well as morphostasis and morphokinesis - how we get stuck, and how we mature and grow out of such restrictions.
Learn the Anatomy Trains concept by taking a tour of the origins and disposition of the fascinating fascial net. We look at its components, its embryology, and its properties in human functioning. By viewing the fascial net as a whole, we see how the body can be seen as a variety of 'tensegrity' structure, where the dynamic interaction among bones, muscles, and the connective tissues produces our stance, movement, and 'attitude'.
The 'rules of the game' are laid out, and then each of the 12 myofascial linkages are explained and illustrated while they are being built onto the skeleton. These common diagnostic elements, and some simple stretches to expose tensions in each line.
www.anatomytrains.com...