Muscular Inhibition



Muscular Inhibition

Muscle weakness/inhibition, is a shut down muscle that is receiving no, or distorted, neurological input

Muscular inhibition creates a situation of joint instability

Muscles tighten up to protect joint due to instability

Compensatory patterns develop causing joint limitation, misalignment inappropriate and distorted movement patterns

If left untreated it will become a structural issue. (un-balanced tires.)

The weak get weaker and the strong get stronger

Strengthening inhibited muscleclature is not possible if not receiving proper neurological input.

1. Activation of muscle utilizing digital palpation at origin and insertion elicits neurological stimuli via afferent pathways

2. Tightness is secondary to weakness. Tightness=Symptom Weakness=Cause

“Functional Training will only reinforce compensatory patterns unless the weak links are not first identified and eliminated” -Greg Roskopf

“Strength is the ability to produce force with control in any given situation”

–Bill Leavitt

“You are only as strong as your weakest component” –G. Roskopf

Control

The missing but consistent link

Comes from CNS

Training the connection between the brain and the muscle

Motor learning: A motor pattern, (movement), must be learned, rehearsed, engrammed, (encoded), and mastered before it can be intensified.

Proper progression is the key to neurological integrity

Synchronized movement is not possible without progression, intension, and focus

Range of motion without control = Injury

1. Never add external instability to internal instability (balance apparatus)

The Integrated System

Force > Bone > Connective Tissue > Joint > CNS > Muscle > Heart

Can you have one without the other?

Is there an order?

CNS is always the overriding factor!

A joints structure actually determines a muscles role

Respect of joint structure to maintain integrity

Do not violate.

2. Cannot have mobility without stability

3. Dynamic Stabilization

Connective Tissue

Types?

Elastin vs. Plastin Do you want them to stretch?

Duties? What if they did stretch?

Can they stretch?

S T R E T C H I N G

Why are you stretching?

What are you stretching? And how do you know?

Are there any structural limitations that you do not know about, you cannot see?

Disruption of innate neurological protective mechanisms? (spindle, GTO)

4. Temporary results coming in the form of increased but instable ROM enhancement?

Are you qualified or bordering on malpractice? (stretching IS manipulation!)

Think about ROM Training (producing strength in positions of weakness using isometrics, or MAT)

Resetting CNS to accept and allow ROM (Isometrics, MAT) Neuromuscular Negotiation

Types of ‘stretching’ (PNF, AI, passive, contract-relax, etc.)

Muscles are disciples of the CNS

Don’t treat something that does not need to be treated! (know JROM’s and respect them)

Stretching Quotes (research summarized)

“Joint mobilization refers to movement of the joint through its established range. Joint manipulation is movement of the joint beyond its established range. Consider these definitions when it comes to ‘stretching and the legal/ethical boundaries that accompany your specific professional education, skills and liability. A key for a professional is that we do not treat things that do not need treatment. Understand the difference in procedures for maintaining joint range and improving joint range.”

-Purvis

“Although in many instances lack of flexibility obviously limits performance and the voluntary correction of postural defects, experimental evidence indicates that improvements in performance and posture do not result from increases flexibility nearly as often as has generally been supposed. In fact, excessive flexibility sometimes sacrifices desirable stability and support, and may predispose a joint to injury.” -Rasch

“Although static stretching has been found to be effective in causing an acute increase in the ROM at a joint, research indicates it can also produce a significant acute decrement in strength, and power production.” ¹

“As little as two minutes of static stretching can impair power performance.” ¹

“Increasing muscle temperature by submaximal exercise would be more important than stretching for decreasing the risk of soft-tissue injury” ¹

“Given the lack of evidence in favor of static stretching during warm-up for injury prevention, it seems justifiable to exclude this component from the warm-up for strength and power activities.” ¹ Strength & Conditioning Journal Dec. 2002

“There is limited scientific evidence about the benefits of stretching, and recent research is challenging some long-held beliefs about the use of stretching prior to exercise” –Shrier & Gossal

“If the stretch is perceived as dangerous, the intrafusal fibers contract causing the extrafusal fibers to contract, thus stopping the stretch and preventing injury”. –McArdle, Dalton, Katch ³

“When they sense too much tension on the muscle, they cause a reflex inhibition of the muscle, causing the muscle to relax thus protecting the muscle and tendon from injury caused by excessive load.” ³

“A protocol of prolonged, static, passive stretching can inhibit VMC, (voluntary muscular contraction), which may be partially caused by decreases in muscle activation and strength.”

-Behm

“Intense static stretching of the prime movers, prior to a particular skill in which the prime movers would be used should not be undertaken in events that require a maximal strength output.” –Kokkonen et al.

“The authors concluded that the stretching treatment impaired active force production, which may be because of mechanical changes, such as increased tendon slack.” –Rosenbaum & Henning

“Based on this research, it appears that the muscle, the tendon, and/or the muscle tendon unit becomes weaker and is less able to produce high intensity force or has a period of time during which the muscle stays stretched. There appears to be a lag period after stretching, during which, if the muscle is contracted, it must ‘take up the slack’ before the peak tension is reached.” -Fowles

et al.

Stretching through normal physiological motion in the anatomical planes to restore joint motion without addressing joint play is not only less effective, it borders on malpractice.” - Purvis

“The greater the difference between ones AROM and PROM, the greater the opportunity for injury.”

-Rasch

“ROM without strength or control = Injury!”

“Muscle contraction or reflex activation of motor units during intentional stretching of a muscle creates a resistance to the stretching procedure and makes stretching more difficult and possibly ineffective.” –Joint Structure & Function

“A key concept in performing PROM for anyone other than a trained health care professional is not to impose range but to utilize the range offered or allowed by the body.” RTS

“AROM: is the process of performing the ROM independently under the power of the muscles surrounding the involved joint. In the fitness world this ideal for evaluation, functional parameters, and flexibility enhancement.” RTS

Isometrics & MAT™

Iso (same), Metric (length). Contraction but no visible movement

Least stressful and most controlled form of exercise when dealing with injury or limitation.

Reciprocal Inhibition: activate agonist to inhibit tonicity of antagonist

Pre-requisite to isolated strengthening exercises

Gamma Biasing: Stimulation of Gamma pathway for contraction instead of Alpha fibers, (due to lack of movement) Initiates alpha-gamma co-activation. AKA as spindle biasing.

Sets the stage for neurological facilitation and integration

5. Find limitation and start there. 30% patient effort progressing to 75% of available strength into direction of muscle action. 6 reps for 6 sec.

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