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The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1983
(1983). Trigger-Point Massage Therapy. The Physician and Sportsmedicine: Vol. 11, No. 5, pp. 159-162.
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(1983). Trigger-Point Massage Therapy. The Physician and Sportsmedicine: Vol. 11, No. 5, pp. 159-162.
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Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, 2017
Increasingly, physical therapists in the United States and throughout the world are using dry needling to treat musculoskeletal pain, even though this treatment has been a controversial addition to practice. To better generalize to physical therapy practice the findings about dry needling thus far, the authors of a study published in the March 2017 ...
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Increasingly, physical therapists in the United States and throughout the world are using dry needling to treat musculoskeletal pain, even though this treatment has been a controversial addition to practice. To better generalize to physical therapy practice the findings about dry needling thus far, the authors of a study published in the March 2017 ...
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Trigger Point–Acupuncture Point Correlations Revisited
The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 2003In 1977, Melzack and colleagues examined the possible correspondence of acupuncture points and trigger points for the treatment of pain. They claimed a 71% correspondence between these two classes of points. Their findings have influenced many researchers and practitioners but have not been examined since 1977. The current study explores the claim of a
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American family physician, 2023
Trigger points producing myofascial pain syndromes are common in primary care. Located within skeletal muscle, trigger points are taut, band-like nodules capable of producing pain and disability. Some evidence from clinical trials supports massage, physical therapy, and osteopathic manual medicine as first-line less invasive treatment strategies ...
Benjamin, Shipton +2 more
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Trigger points producing myofascial pain syndromes are common in primary care. Located within skeletal muscle, trigger points are taut, band-like nodules capable of producing pain and disability. Some evidence from clinical trials supports massage, physical therapy, and osteopathic manual medicine as first-line less invasive treatment strategies ...
Benjamin, Shipton +2 more
openaire +1 more source
2017
A trigger point is a hyperirritable spot in the muscle associated with a hypersensitive palpable nodule in a taut band which is painful on compression. Myofascial trigger points are a component of a larger disorder known as myofascial pain syndrome (MPS).
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A trigger point is a hyperirritable spot in the muscle associated with a hypersensitive palpable nodule in a taut band which is painful on compression. Myofascial trigger points are a component of a larger disorder known as myofascial pain syndrome (MPS).
openaire +1 more source
Problems in veterinary medicine, 1992
Trigger points (TP) are objectively demonstrable foci in muscles. They are painful on compression and trigger pain in a referred area. This area may be the only locus of complaint in humans. In dogs we cannot prove the existence of referred zones of pain.
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Trigger points (TP) are objectively demonstrable foci in muscles. They are painful on compression and trigger pain in a referred area. This area may be the only locus of complaint in humans. In dogs we cannot prove the existence of referred zones of pain.
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TRIGGER POINTS AND TENDER POINTS
Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America, 1996Joanne Borg-Stein, Joel Stein
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