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Most Active Triggerpoint Therapy Practitioners

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donald piranty
Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States
AUTO, HOUSEHOLD, SPORTS AND INDUSTRIAL Accident and Injury Trauma PAIN RELIEF AND ELIMINATION. also treating Back Pain, Whiplash, Migraines and ...
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Andrew Wolfe LMP
Arlington, Washington, United States
Professional licensed massage practitioner in Private Practice since 1987. Specializing in medical massage therapy.Preferred medical provider; most ...
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Gina Mortellaro-Gomez
Denver, Colorado, United States
Our purpose at Healing Traditions Oriental Medicine is to restore the body’s innate sense of balance & wellness through using the ...

Most Recent Triggerpoint Therapy Practitioners

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Genie Goykhberg
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Intuitive Physiognomist. A well rounded Healer with over 50 different modalities. A new way of Healers, those with a keen intuition and a very ...
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Awaken Wellness
Columbia, Maryland, United States
Helping you awaken to the fullest possibilities of life. Awaken Wellness helps people to awaken to their bodies capacity to heal through the use of ...
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Kristin Greiner
Carrboro, North Carolina, United States
I have been practicing therapeutic massage in the Chapel Hill Carrboro area since 2007. Each body brings its' own challenges to the table and I work ...

Triggerpoint Therapy

Trigger points or trigger sites are described as hyperirritable spots in skeletal muscle that are associated with palpable nodules in taut bands of muscle fibers. Trigger point researchers believe that palpable nodules are small contraction knots and a common cause of pain. Compression of a trigger point may elicit local tenderness, referred pain, or local twitch response. The local twitch response is not the same as a muscle spasm. This is because a muscle spasm refers to the entire muscle entirely contracting whereas the local twitch response also refers to the entire muscle but only involves a small twitch, no contraction. The trigger point model states that unexplained pain frequently radiates from these points of local tenderness to broader areas, sometimes distant from the trigger point itself. Practitioners claim to have identified reliable referred pain patterns, allowing practitioners to associate pain in one location with trigger points elsewhere. Many chiropractors and massage therapists find the model useful in practice, but the medical community at large has not embraced trigger point therapy. Although trigger points do appear to be an observable phenomenon with defined properties, there is a lack of a consistent methodology for diagnosing trigger points and a dearth of theory explaining how trigger points arise and why they produce specific referred pain patterns.

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By Gina Mortellaro-Gomez
...iety of Treatment methods including: Acupuncture, Chinese Herbal Medicine, Asian Body Work, Dietary Therapy and Meditation. For more information on Chinese Medicine, the Clinic of Healing Traditions ...