Kelsey Hanlon, PT, DPT
1456 Ferry Road
Suite 601
Doylestown, PA 18901P:215-489-3234
Healing, Function, Recovery, Health
Kelsey Hanlon, PT, DPT
Since the #COVID19 #Pandemic began, life has certainly changed. One major adjustment for our patients is the daily use of #masks when leaving their homes. Masks are necessary to keep each other healthy and mitigate risk during COVID-19, but individuals with pre-existing balance issues need to be aware of how they may further impact their #stability. When individuals struggle with #balance, especially due to #VestibularDisorders, they rely heavily on their vision to help them navigate their environment. Having a mask on can impede peripheral vision and our ability to quickly scan the area around our feet. If you or a loved one has a history of falls, make sure they are taking the appropriate measures to increase their safety including using an assistive device, avoiding trip hazards, and consider scheduling them for a #Balance tune-up with one of our vestibular specialists at #WWSPT!
Another issue we have discovered is that many of our senior citizens with varying degrees of hearing loss watch the mouths of those they speak with. You may find yourself or a family member asking “What?” a lot more often. If you have hearing aids, make sure you are wearing them especially when leaving the home since you can no longer read lips. Having diminished hearing does decrease our balance and can predispose one to falls. If you have a family member that has hearing loss, make sure you are speaking loudly and make eye contact with them when you speak so they know you are talking. Also, make sure that the other senses can be optimally used, i.e. no walking in the dark or dim lighting, use your assistive device, tidy up around your environment to avoid tripping, and have that balance issue assessed at our practice.
Be proactive about your #health and #safety and we welcome you at our practice for a thorough #BalanceandGaitAssessment! You’d much rather treat a balance dysfunction before it turns into a fall or a more serious consequence of falling. Contact us to schedule an appointment.
Dr. Jenna Mclane
WWS Physical Therapy & Vestibular Rehabilitation
If you’re like me, your back aches from time to time (and occasionally really lets you know it’s there, maybe with a vague pain in one of your legs to go along with it).
Or maybe it feels like your back aches all the time.
Why does your backache? Is it because you did too much? Or is it because you didn’t do enough?
Whether it is because you did a lot or because you haven’t been doing enough, your back just wants to let you know it exists so you take care of it. The tissues in our bodies need to be used and stressed in order to maintain their strength, health, and properties of movement. Prolonged lack of use is not good for our bodies, but neither is a sudden, dramatic increase in use. Either one can cause injury and pain.
For example, many people develop low back pain just from sitting at work or sitting in their car on a long trip. Other people develop pain after lifting something awkwardly or repetitively. Either way, there are movements and exercises that you can do to improve the health and happiness
of your body’s joints and muscles so that your back stops sounding the pain alarms in your brain.
“Motion is lotion” is an excellent maxim to remember. Moving your body not only nourishes the muscles and tissues in your joints, but it also exercises the nerve pathways and areas in your brain where these joints and muscles are represented and activated. This is why, for example, if you practice a particular movement hundreds of times, it is possible to get better at it!
If you’ve been sitting a lot, you probably need to get up and move more. Our bodies were made for movement—not for prolonged sitting. Sometimes, after sitting for a while, I feel a “twinge” in my low back when I go to get up. I think of this as my back’s way of asking me to please move more or to sit differently next time.
Some say that perfect posture is a myth and that “the best posture is the next one.” Anyone posture or position held too long can be hard on your body. If you are going to sit for a while, try a little rolled-up towel behind your low back. Adjust it and see how it feels.
While “back in the day” bed rest used to be recommended frequently in medicine, I rarely recommend it for acute low back pain. Even in the acute phases, it can be beneficial to do what movement you can, even if it is slow and gentle at first.
Often, if there is joint pain from stretching or sitting in one position, it can feel relieving to position or stretch the joint in the opposite direction. This is like keeping a set of scales balanced. For example, it is not inherently bad to sit slouched, but if you sit slouched for a few minutes, you will probably want to stretch the opposite way for a few moments too. This can be done by standing up and leaning back as far as you can go or by lying on your stomach and propping yourself up on your forearms. The discs between your vertebrae bring fluid in and out by putting pressure on them, so it is healthy to apply this pressure in different ways rather than in one way for a prolonged period.
I have heard it said that you should take your joints through their full range of motion at least once a day, which seems like an excellent idea. Ideally, you can do this in ways that are interesting and enjoyable, rather than simply systematically moving each part of your body. Activities such as yoga, Tai Chi, and many sports put many joints in your body through good ranges of motion and use multiple muscle groups, which will help improve your strength and balance.
If you can’t do these classes right now because of the COVID-19 pandemic, try looking for videos on YouTube. I recommend Yoga with Adriene for beginner yoga.
Or you can go to the WWSPT website or our YouTube Channel (WWS Physical Therapy and Vestibular Rehabilitation) to see videos of basic stretching programs, including part of a basic lumbar extension program that we use for some patients with low back pain.
Whether your pain just started a week ago or you have been having pain for years, a physical therapist can help guide you through movements that will help decrease your pain and improve your function in a safe way.
YouTube link: https://www. youtube.com/watch?v=VnrIre5 1hGs&feature=youtu.be
We strive to provide an environment of recovery and healing for our clients, to allow them to advance their health and return to function, recreation or sports. It is our belief that Physical Therapy is the initial link in the healthcare system for Musculoskeletal and Balance related issues and we are the true experts on exercise. We look forward to a long term relationship with our patients and their families over their life span and hope to become their practitioner of choice for acute musculoskeletal issues, neuromuscular issues as well as reoccurring events limiting their Wellness. We want to be a part of our patients Healthy living and Healthy aging.