Sports Injury

Sports Injuries

One advantage of being a clinic that treats difficult pain conditions, is that it makes the more acute and mechanical injuries far easier to diagnose and treat. Sport Injuries, while traumatic at onset, can be rehabilitated very well if they are diagnosed and treated correctly, right from the beginning.

How do we treat Sports Injuries differently?

A common mental mistake that people make, including many in the medical and allied health professions, is that they treat sports injuries somewhat differently to other pain patients. This is evidenced by the fact that the rate of surgeries, scans and medical inventions (such as injections) appear to be higher in sportspeople than in the community. At the very least, the media reporting around sportspeople undergoing scans or surgery would make it certainly appear that way.

Given this, when you have an injury on the sporting field, you may be tempted to have early scans, injections or visit a surgeon – when in actual fact, there are treatments that are as good as (or better) that are offered.

We treat sportspeople like everyone else. Sportspeople are human, they have work, they have families, and the pain and restriction from their injuries have the same emotional impact as anyone else.  

Common
Concerns

People with long-term sports injuries commonly report:
  • They are forever poking, prodding, rubbing, rolling and stretching their tight muscles, but nothing seems to reduce their pain long-term
  • They are taking too much time to do their home exercises and stretches, but not making any great progress
  • Mental Health Issues are starting to make a negative impact - like performance anxiety, feeling that they are letting the team down or not being able to keep up like you used to
  • Coaches don’t believe how much their physical restrictions are impacting their performance, especially if things seem to be going "OK" but not at 100%
  • Immense anxiety and fear about performing certain movements or completely avoiding movements or activities altogether
  • Starting to feel like their quality of life is affected by their pain – it stops them from getting the most out of their performance.  
  • Feeling weak in their spine or joints, like they could “go” at any moment... despite doing all of the exercises and stretches they've been told to do
  • Dissatisfaction with their current medical and health plan – especially if they have had surgery, injections or other medical interventions and the pain hasn’t resolved.  

Symptoms
We Treat

If you experience the below, it is very likely that we can help you:
  • Acute Injuries to muscles and joints
  • Sharp pain when you try to run or move too fast
  • Soreness after exercise that is over and above what you would consider "normal" - especially in the back or neck
  • Post Concussion Neck Pain, Headaches and Migraines
  • Neck and shoulders that are so tight that they “feel like rocks”
  • Hip Flexor, Back, Calf and Hamstring tightness
  • A sore and stiff lower back that feels like you can't fully extend or rotate
  • Pain that stops you from exercising for as long as you want to.

Do you have a Long-Term Sporting Injury that isn't improving?
Find out if we can help by clicking the button.

Our
Diagnoses

Our clinic is built around the effective treatment of pain and reduced function – plus all of our clinical staff have been involved in numerous sports at local, state and national level.  We totally understand that longstanding pain from sporting injuries can only be treated fully if the diagnosis is correct first. And when we say diagnosis, we don’t just mean giving it a label like “tendinopathy”, "muscle imbalance" or “tightness”. We mean:
  • Teaching you what the precise causes of your sporting injuries and pain are – taking into account all of the known factors that could be contributing to your condition – discs, joints, ligaments, muscles, mindset – the works!
  • Appreciating the impact that your injury and pain has on you, your teammates, your coaches, your family and your life
  • Having an awareness of how not being able to perform at your best is impacting your mental health, your ability to play or work, and your overall quality of life
  • Assessing the strength of your back using the MedX Lumbar Extension Machine, and other muscles using the best equipment possible
  • Being aware of the social, cultural, financial and personal barriers that have meant you haven’t been able to get on top of things yet.  (Including all the Politics that comes with playing Team Sports!)

Our
Solution

After our diagnostic process is completed, we provide the most comprehensive treatment plan to help get things back on track. Your treatment plan is tailored individually to your goals (no “cookie-cutter” treatment plans), your individual condition, and your personal circumstances. Your treatment plan will include:
  • Goals set for the individual outcome that you want - including return to sport, or individual athletic goals
  • The expected number of sessions and how long it will take
  • The exact treatment tools and methods that will be undertaken in the clinic through the journey
  • The lifestyle changes and exercises that you will need to complete in your own time to give yourself the best chance getting a good outcome
  • The dates for when a full re-assessment will be undertaken to ensure you are still on the right track.  
There is an increasing amount of information dedicated to all of the different types of sporting injuries we treat - in fact we have consulted with athletes from numerous professional, National and International sportspeople.  You can find out more information tailored just for you and your injury by searching our blogs, and visiting our Facebook Page.  Click below to explore more.

Which Athletes have we treated in the past?
Find out the different sports and injuries we have covered.

FAQs

By Chris Fawcett 21 Jun, 2022
If you've been living with long term neck pain, neck stiffness, neck weakness or have difficulty turning your neck– then this blog is going to rock your world. Our patients with neck pain often report: Stiffness, soreness and aching pain Difficulty turning their head in different directions Feeling like it constantly needs to be stretched Feeling like their head is 'too heavy' for their neck Referred pain from the neck into their shoulder/s and/or arm/s Referred pain from the neck into their head causing headaches Generally, when you have pain in your neck, the muscles adjacent to where the pain is, start to not work as well. It's like your brain cheats by moving in a different way so it doesn't hurt. However, the muscles that it doesn't use anymore become inhibited, and rarely used. When those muscles are inhibited, they become less strong. The joints adjacent to those muscles become stiff and tight, and you may not be able to move and rotate your neck freely, easily or without pain. We want to do two things when we're solving a neck issue. 1. We're wanting to get the neck moving first, and 2. We're wanting to get it as strong as it possibly can be. There are two sections of the neck that we need to focus on. The first is the top of the neck and the second is the bottom of the neck. Now the top of the neck is responsible for most of the turning and nodding. Then the lower neck, there’s a bit of movement in tilting, a bit of turning, a bit of looking up as well. It basically just comes along for the ride. When people are stiff through their neck, there's some kind of imbalance between the top of the neck moving and the bottom of the neck moving. For example, those suffering with neck pain, will often only use the top of their neck to look upwards, rather than using the entirety of their neck. So firstly, we need to ensure the patient has a nice even movement between the top of the neck and the bottom of the neck. We can do that by number of different ways and means. Once we get the movement, we need to make sure that the muscles are strong enough to be able to perform the movement over and over again, without the muscles becoming fatigued and becoming sore. We want them to become really strong and less inhibited. How do we strengthen the Neck muscles? The most efficient way is by using our wonderful piece of equipment, the Multi-Cervical unit . Now it's called the Multi-Cervical unit because you're able to move and lift weight in all different directions. Up, down and sideways, plus you can combine movements – for example, having the angle positioned sideways whilst moving upwards, or you could be positioned forward but move your head towards your shoulder… and so forth. So, this bit of equipment is able to strengthen the muscles in whichever direction where you have the most restriction in terms of your strength. Think of it like this, a whiplash accident for example, people aren't typically hit square on from behind - where their head completely straight. Often, their head is turned a bit, or they might have been thrown around a little bit in one direction or another. Another example, is those people that have wry neck pain – it’s likely to be more rotational rather than extension movements. This is how we tailor the treatment program to each individual – the most important thing is getting the muscles strong in the direction that needs it the most, as well as gaining a bit of global strength. In addition to using the machine, we teach you exercises at home to maintain the strength in between sessions and of course, to self-manage over time. When it comes to neck pain, we can make things more complicated than what it needs to be. We can do little exercises that are tiny little nods, we can do all sorts of joint positional things, closing eyes and using all sorts of different manoeuvres. For some people that works really well, but I'm talking to vast majority of people here with persistent pain (the most common cases of neck pain and neck stiffness) , these are the top 2 things you need to do. 1. Get the neck moving well with reduced pain. 2. Get the neck strong. If you do those two things and keep it simple and have a strategy over a period of time, you are more than likely going to get the results that you want. You'll be able to do the things that you want to do, much more often, without the burden of needing to change your schedule, change work, change work setups, worry about seats in your car or be scared about checking blind spots. The strategies and techniques that we do here at the clinic can help you and guide you to get the result that you need. Not sure if we can help you out? That's totally ok! Feel free to fill in our Neck Pain Questionnaire, which you can do so by clicking here . We will have a look over the form and contact you via your preference. We will ask a few questions that will give us a good idea if we are able to help, and then recommend if it is worth coming in for an assessment. I hope this information is helpful. We would love to help you and your neck pain, like we have thousands of others. To start the process, simply fill in our questionnaire here . Or for answers asap, book in our one-hour consultation and we can tell you exactly what is going on and what you can do about it! Click here .
By Chris Fawcett 15 Sep, 2021
Did you know there is a little known secret relationship between breathing and neck pain? We have a lot of people who come to us with neck pain, tight shoulders, a generalized feeling of tightness deep in the neck or other issues with respect to neck pain. It doesn't matter how many massages they get, how much needling, how much manipulation, chiropractic, physio…. It’s just a never-ending pain and tightness that comes through the neck. This is particularly common for people who feel stressed a lot, are fatigued, always overwhelmed or have a lot of anxiety. Issues that they don’t feel they have control over which causes a constant feeling of tension, especially in the neck. So, what is it that can we do that w e can do to help this out? Now here's a really important thing about how all this works. It's actually really important to know the anatomy of what goes on really deep inside the neck. What we are referring to is the scalene muscles. There's three on each side. One in the front, one at the side and one at the back. They are individually called the anterior, middle and posterior scalene. These muscles attach into the first rib and the second rib. The function of those muscles is to tilt your head from side to side. That's why when you stretch, it can kind of feel really nice, just getting a stretch in through one side or the other, but they also have a second function. That second function is to actually help you breathe. To help you get extra air in when you are taking a really deep breath in. Here’s something you can do… If you look in the mirror, take a really deep breath and focus on your neck. You will notice the muscles we are referring to kick in right at the end of the breath to expand the ribcage right out. Now here's what happens. When you're really stressed, when you've got a lot of pain, when you're under a lot of pressure and there is a lot of pressure going on in your life. What happens is that your body goes through a sort of a fight or flight response. Sometimes, it's there all the time. It’s kind of like you're on edge all the time, and that's what a lot of people with headache and migraine tell me, they feel like that they're on edge. They're walking on eggshells. It feels like they just can't sit still. Quite often that's because the body's just in a ramped up state of fight or flight. When it's in a state of fight or flight, your body actually forgets how to relax. When it's difficult to relax, you actually breathe differently. You don't naturally realize that you're doing this until you actually start drawing attention to the way that you breathe. So this is why there's so much talk now about mindfulness, as well as concentrating and focusing on your breathing. Reason being, when you breathe properly, your blood gets oxygenated, your body's able to replenish itself, it's able to heal itself. The biggest thing that happens as a compensating mechanism for people with neck pain and stress is that they start to breathe shallowly. They're not breathing really nicely in through all the parts of their chest. So, when you're breathing shallowly, you're actually breathing in a state of sort of fight or flight, or in a state where you're not relaxed, you're actually using the neck muscles to breathe instead of your big intercostal muscles, your big chest muscles to get outwards and actually start breathing properly. The cause of some people’s neck pain, is that they're not breathing deeply enough. Their muscles in the neck are overworked, because instead of just working, they are working overtime; to move side to side, to breathe deeply and breathe all the time - every second of every day. As a result, these muscles have a tendency to get very tired and very sore. No matter of poking, rubbing, prodding or anything else can help it to get better. What you need to do is learn how to breathe deeply and calmly in through the nose and out through the mouth. What you want to do, is to get breathing in through the chest. So a good thing to do, is to put your hands at the side of your chest and use it as a guide to breathe in and out. You're using your hands as a cue to get some air into the lungs and re-teach yourself how to breathe properly. One other secret you can do is to put your tongue at the top of your mouth so that you're breathing in through your nose. An exercise to do at home, if you're feeling really tight and sore through your neck is to breathe for 10 minutes. Believe it or not, breathe for 10 minutes. In for four seconds, out for four seconds. You don't want to hyperventilate. You don't want to go too fast. You just want to relax and breathe. Breathing is a really good way just to calm the system down so that when you are doing strength work, when you are moving, when you are doing exercises, it starts to work, and you’ll start to get some improvement. Often just lying on your back with your knees, bent up and breathing for 10 minutes, nice and slowly, nice and deeply into the lungs, is a really good way to settle down your neck pain. If you have got some neck stiffness or neck tightness that isn't going away – it is highly encouraged to have a look at how you are breathing and start practicing calm, deep breathes. It will take the stress off your neck muscles, and you’ll start to notice change. Less pain, less nervous system sensitivity and less heightened stress levels. It's actually really, really effective. I hope that's been helpful and useful. If there's any questions, please contact us here and we will get back to you as soon as we can 😊
By Chris Fawcett 13 May, 2021
Transcript Good morning, Chris, from a headache and pain management center here for your Wednesday morning. And today we're talking about the little known secret relationship between breathing, neck pain and headaches. And that's really important to know because quite often, you can get some really tight muscles around your neck, around your shoulders, in through here, you try everything and it doesn't appear that anything works. And sometimes it's actually a really simple fix that you can do it yourself at home. So I'm going to share that with you today and all the secrets around that. If you are joining me, tap in below, say hello, and it's good to have you here with us. So Hey, the introduction to this, basically we see a lot of patients that come in that have had a lot of treatments in the past about their neck. Good morning. It's nice to see you there joining us. We have a lot of people with neck pain, a lot of people with a lot of issues with respect to neck pain, tight shoulders, and just feeling this generalized tightness that feels like it's really deep in through this part of the neck. And it doesn't matter how much massage they get. How much needling, how much manipulation, chiropractic physio, doesn't matter how much they've had. There's just this never ending kind of tightness that can come through the neck, which just doesn't seem to go away. And this particularly for people who feel like that they're stressed a lot. They feel like there's a lot of fatigue. They feel like they're always overwhelmed. There's a lot of anxiety. It feels like there's a lot of issues that they don't feel like they have control over. It just feels like there's a lot going on and you just tense all the time. And it doesn't even matter if it's sleeping. It doesn't matter if you're resting a lot. It just feels like it's never, ever able to just let go. A lot of the time, what happens with people is, that they're going, "Well, look, I just need to get a lot of massage. I need to get a lot of..." If someone is digging their thumbs into this part of my shoulder, it's really tight. Digging in a lot into the neck pushing prodding, putting on a heat packs on it, trying to sort this out. And it just never gets better. And we're thinking, well, what is it that can we do that we can do to help this out? Now here's a really important thing about how all this works. It's Actually really important to know the anatomy of what goes on really deep inside the neck, in this kind of area. And there's three muscles in there. And they're called the scalene muscles. There's three on each side. There's one in the front, one in the sort of at the side and one at the back and the here on the diagram. So you can see them here. They called the anterior middle and posterior scalene. So you've actually got one that comes down the front one in the middle, one at the back. And I don't know if you can see here on the video, but basically it attaches into the top one and to ribs here. So the first rib and the second rib. So there's muscles that connect directly from your neck that go directly down into the rib cage. So right at the top of the rib cage there. So the function of those muscles is to tilt your head from side to side. So it's just sort of bring you from side to side like this. So that's why when you stretch, it can kind of feel really nice, just getting a stretch in through one side or the other, but they also are muscles that have a second function. And that second function is to actually help you breathe, okay. To help you get extra air in when you're taking a really deep breath in. So if you have a look at me now and have a look at the muscles here in my neck, I'm just turning the top button and done so you can see what it looks like. So if I breathe in really deeply through my chest, okay, so let's watch this now. You can see right the very end, when I breathe right in, those muscles kick in right at the very end to actually expand the ribcage right out. So it's actually expanding from the bottom here. You can't see at the bottom of the video, but when you actually expand right at the very top of the breath, right when it's really deep, the muscles actually all through here, kick in to expand the chest. So I'll do that one more time. Okay. So nice and easy. And all of that comes in. Okay. So those muscles around here started kicking right at the very end of the breath. Now here's what happens, when you're really stressed. Okay. When you've got a lot of pain, when you're under a lot of pressure and so stress going on, with a lot of pressure going on in your life. What happens is that your body goes through a sort of a fight or flight response. It goes through a fight or flight response almost, it's kind of this low grade fight or flight response. It's there all the time. Okay. So it's not like you're really relaxed and something nasty happens any kind of up, and then it gets better. Again, it's kind of like you're on edge all the time. And that's what a lot of people with headache and migraine tell me, they feel like that they're on edge. They're walking on eggshells. It feels like that they just can't escape is just like, it feels like there's bugs in their skin. It feels like they just can't sit still. And quite often that's actually because the body's just in a ramped up state of fight or flight. And when it's in a state of fight or flight, your body actually forgets how to relax. And what it means when it's difficult to relax, is that you actually breathe differently. You don't actually realize that you're doing this until you actually start drawing attention to the way that you breathe. So this is why there's so much talk now about mindfulness breathing deeply and concentrating and focusing on your breathing. Because when you breathe properly, what happens is that your blood gets oxygenated, your body's able to replenish itself. It's able to heal itself. It's able to do all of these different things to calm you down. And the biggest thing that happens as a compensating mechanism for people with neck pain and stress is that they start to breathe shallowly. Okay. So they're not breathing really nicely in through all the parts of their chest. They actually breathing in just through the top. So if you remember before, when I was doing the breath in, it was right at the very end. Okay. So we'll do it again. You can see all that comes on. Okay. So it all comes on there right at the very end. But if you take a short, sharp breath, you see how that all just pops up. Okay. So when you're breathing shallowly, when you're actually breathing in a state of sort of fight or flight, or in a state where you're not relaxed, you're actually using these neck muscles in through here to breathe instead of your big intercostal muscles, your big chest muscles to get outwards and actually start breathing properly. So a lot of people that get this neck pain in through here, in through the back here, that doesn't seem to go away. The cause of it can actually be that you're not breathing deeply enough. Okay. So the muscles in through here actually overworked. Because instead of just working, when you're breathing in very deeply, it's actually working when you're just functioning day to day. So these muscles in through here are becoming overworked and that is the cause of your pain. So when you're moving from side to side, that's great, everyone does that. But if they're using those muscles to move side to side and breathe deeply and breathe all the time because you're breathing every second of every day, these muscles have a tendency to get very tired, very sore. Okay. And no matter of poking prodding or anything else can actually help that to actually get better. What you need to do is actually learn how to breathe deeply and actually calmly breathe in through the nose and out through the mouth. I'll just bring this back a little further, so you can see me. So when we've got... Oops, so well, we'll just bring this back up. There we go. Okay. So when you actually got the breath happening, what you want to do, is you want to actually get it breathing in through the chest. Okay. So a good thing to do is to get in through the chest, actually put your hands at the side of your chest there and use that as your guide to breathe in and out. So you're actually using your hands as a cue to get some air into the lungs and reteach yourself how to breathe properly. One other secret you can do is to put the tongue at the top of your mouth so that you're breathing in through your nose. So we'll do that again. You can see there, my whole chest wall is opening up and it's actually bringing air into the lungs and then back out again. So it's actually using these muscles of the neck to do it. It's using all the muscles down low to actually get that happen. So an exercise to do at home, if you're feeling really tight and sore through your neck is actually to breathe for 10 minutes. Okay? Believe it or not, breathe for 10 minutes. And the way to do that properly is to get your hands on your chest and breathe into your hands. Okay? In for four seconds, out for four seconds. You don't want to hyperventilate. You don't want to go too fast. You just want to relax and breathe. Okay? Breathe into your hands, out through your mouth, in through your nose, out through your mouth, into your hands, expanding the lungs and taking the stress off your neck pain. And then we've had a lot of patients where they haven't responded to [inaudible 00:08:54] they haven't responded to these sorts of things. And sometimes breathing is actually a really good way just to calm the system down so that when you are doing the strength work, when you are doing the moving, when you are doing the exercises, it actually starts to work, actually starts to get some improvement. Because let's face it, If you're not breathing properly and you breathe every second of every day, if you're not using all of the muscles of breathing, instead of just the ones up here in your neck, then basically anything that we do with the neck to try to help that out, just isn't going to work. It's actually taking two steps forward and a step and a half back, if you're not dealing with this sort of stuff. So at home, if you are feeling like you have a little tension through your neck and it's just not getting better with massage or things like that. Often just lying on your back with your knees, bent up and breathing for 10 minutes, nice and slowly, nice and deeply into the lungs, is a really good way to actually settle down at your neck pain. And it's actually a really useful thing to do. If you have got some neck stiffness, neck tightness that isn't going away. If there's any questions about that, please type in below. I hope that's been really helpful and really useful to help that, there is actually a physical reason to start breathing, not just the mental and psychological stuff that people talk about is actually a physical thing. It takes the stress off your neck here, and it starts to cause some changes. So there's less pain. There's less nervous system sensitivity, less heightened stress levels in there. So it's actually really, really effective. And plus it's a really good way to actually start winding your system down because everyone knows how to breathe. And sometimes it can be diverted to get out of here and head, but certainly breathing is something that's really easy to do. So maybe give that a try at home that can really help things out. Hope that's been useful and I will see you again later in the week for another Facebook live video. Cheers and bye for now.
By Jai Warner 12 Dec, 2019
The golden rule is that all movement is good movement, and getting strong is key to getting function back. Any exercise that involves increasing your movement gradually, and building strength in your key muscles over time, is generally going to go well for you. In saying that, everyone is different, and some exercises are good for some people, but terrible for others.
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