Fascial therapy
Fascia is the connective tissue of our body, consisting of fibers, mainly collagen. It completely connects the entire body from head to toe through a continuous interacting system.
Encompassing every muscle and internal organs of a person, fascia separates them from the skin, arteries, veins, nerves, lymphatic vessels and mammary glands, being a link through which you can get to distant parts of the body, not coming from the fascia themselves, thanks to its rich innervation.
The fascial system has not previously been an object of scientific research, playing a secondary role in medicine for quite a long period of time, but now its treatment has acquired great importance.
Fascial therapy, as a technique, was discovered relatively recently. This diagnostic and therapeutic concept is one of the most promising methods and opens up a wide range of opportunities for treating various diseases.
This therapy is a combination of Eastern and Western techniques. This is the only complete system that is applied to soft muscles, fascial tissues and internal organs prone to contraction and spasm.
With its innervation and special multilayer structure, the deep fascia forms an ideally effective structure for perception and, therefore, for providing effective assistance in organizing complex movements.
The basic principle of this method is to identify a specific area of fascia associated with a certain limitation of mobility or pain syndrome. After this limited or painful movement is identified, under the influence of a certain point or area of fascia, the fascial therapist restores fullness and painlessness of movement.
With the help of deep myofascial massage, it is possible to achieve normalization of the fascia and to cause the so-called visceromatic and somatovisceral reflex – the relationship between the dysfunction of a certain organ and the disruption in the work of the muscles or fascia associated with it.
Indications
- Postoperative and post-traumatic disorders associated with the formation of scars, adhesions
- Lumbar pain, sacral and pelvic disorders
- Pain in the cervical and thoracic spine
- Rehabilitation after COVID-19
- Tunnel syndromes
- Problems of the digestive system
- Whiplash injuries and rehabilitation after injuries
- Respiratory diseases – bronchitis, asthma, sinusitis, etc.
- Neurological problems – neuritis and paresis
- Attacks of headache, migraine
- Phantom pain after amputation
- Vegetative-vascular dystonia
- Syndrome fatigue, stress relief
- Anxiety, fear and panic attacks
Contraindication
- Elevated body temperature
- Acute inflammatory process
- Conditions requiring immediate surgery
- Fractures, bleeding