Tuesday, September 24, 2019
Local Senior Athlete: Willie Manteris
There’s been a lot of news recently of exceptional seniors achieving amazing physical feats from “World’s Toughest Horse Race Won by 70-Year-Old Idaho Man Named Bob” and “This 71-Year-Old Grandmother Just Smashed a Half-Marathon World Record”. These people are amazing athletes but I also want to highlight that many local individuals are breaking the stereotypes of senior living even if they aren’t breaking world records.
I would like to introduce you to Dr. Willie Manteris, DMD, our local “old man” in my weekly cycling group. Willie is 69 years old and graduated from University of Pittsburgh dental school in 1975. During his years as a practicing dentist, he’s volunteered in Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Ecuador, Vietnam, Bhutan and Cambodia treating patients in need though various charitable groups.
In addition to his local dental practice, volunteer trips, and raising 2 children; Willie started running marathons at 47, triathlon events at 50, and focused on cycling at 65 years of age. His longest ride to date is a 12 hour ride in Spain in 2017 when he got lost. His other longest ride was a 112 mile ride as part of an Ironman event in 2002.
During the summer months, Willie rides his bike 2-4 times a week while going to the gym to work on upper body strength 2-3 times a week. Willie’s weekly mileage on the bike is typically 120-140 miles but I’ve been on single day 100 mile rides with him this summer where he’s easily exceeded his typical weekly mileage.
Willie has been fortunate to not have suffered from a major illness but has come back from multiple broken collarbones and shoulder separations. Willie does suffer from arthritis in both hips and has gone to physical therapy to help manage the pain.
“Just keep moving. Pretty amazing what you can do in later years.”, says Willie. Some good advice.
Thursday, September 19, 2019
Pelvic Floor Exercises
The article “Why Going to Pelvic Floor Therapy Transformed My Life” has raised awareness of how many women suffer from pelvic pain and has prompted me to write about the pelvic floor exercises available within PT-Helper. In the article, the author experiences severe pelvic pain while having doctors tell her that her pain is caused by anxiety. Only after going to a pelvic floor physical therapist was she able to understand the causes of her pain and make progress towards relieving her pain.
An important reminder in the article is not to treat pelvic pain on your own as this may make it worse. Check out the American Physical Therapy Association for help locating a pelvic floor physical therapist.
The PT-Helper mobile app includes pelvic floor exercises that your therapist may prescribe for you to do. Some of our pelvic floor exercises are shown below:
Reminder: Please consult your physician or physical therapist before engaging in any physical activity and stop if you experience pain or discomfort.
An important reminder in the article is not to treat pelvic pain on your own as this may make it worse. Check out the American Physical Therapy Association for help locating a pelvic floor physical therapist.
The PT-Helper mobile app includes pelvic floor exercises that your therapist may prescribe for you to do. Some of our pelvic floor exercises are shown below:
- Abductor Squeeze : While sitting down with your feet together, place a resistance band around your thighs, slightly behind your knees. Slowly open your legs apart while keeping your feet stationary, engage your pelvic floor muscles. Hold. Slowly return your legs together, completely relaxing your pelvic muscles. Repeat.
- Adductor Squeeze : While sitting down, place a yoga block or soft medicine ball between your legs, slightly behind your knees. Slowly squeeze your legs together, engage your pelvic floor muscles. Hold. Slowly relax your muscles completely. Repeat.
- Seated Pelvic Floor : Sit on an chair with nice tall posture with relaxed shoulders and legs. Relax all of your muscles. Lift and squeeze your pelvic floor muscles starting at the muscles around your anus as if trying to stop passing wind. Then tightening your muscles in front as if trying to stop the flow of urine. Hold. Relax and repeat. Make sure to breath while doing the exercise.
- Seated Pelvic Floor - Slow Squeeze & Hold : Sit on an chair with nice tall posture with relaxed shoulders and legs. Relax all of your muscles. During the Hold Time, lift and slowly squeeze your pelvic floor muscles starting at the muscles around your anus as if trying to stop passing wind. Then tightening your muscles in front as if trying to stop the flow of urine. Hold during the Rec Time. Relax and repeat. Make sure to breath while doing the exercise.
Reminder: Please consult your physician or physical therapist before engaging in any physical activity and stop if you experience pain or discomfort.
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
What is “Prehab’”?? And how to properly prepare for an elective surgery
By guest blogger Anthony Sinacore, PT, DPT, ATC
Barring any significant trauma requiring immediate medical attention, musculoskeletal surgeries are typically elective. Whether its a total joint replacement [of the knee, hip, and shoulders], a rotator cuff repair, or minor spinal surgeries, insurance companies won’t typically classify these as “necessary”, no matter how much pain you’re in.
Whatever the diagnosis is, when the time does eventually come where your pain or related-symptoms are too unbearable to manage, the appropriate step would be to seek out a trusted healthcare provider (i.e. your PCP, an orthopedist, or a physical therapist) to go over the options that may be best for you. Whomever you choose to see for this issue, It is important to have an open and clear conversation with this individual regarding what options you may have, if they align with your current goals, and what time-table for recovery these options provide. If you are unsatisfied with their recommendations, it is highly advisable to seek out a second opinion…remember this is your body we are talking about here.
However, every circumstance is different and there are many times when surgery is the best option. When this is the case, you are going to expect a successful outcome right?
This is where “Prehab” comes in.
Pre-surgical rehabilitation otherwise known as “prehab’’ has become a term referring to the preparatory interventions to help optimize a surgical outcome. In lay terms: setting yourself up for the best recovery possible.
This could mean improving range-of-motion through stretching, maximizing strength, or enhancing cardiovascular endurance to reduce muscle weakness and withstand disuse of the involved region during the initial stages of recovery.
While prehab may come off as common-sense to some, this stage is often neglected in the rehabilitation spectrum. And in most cases, avoiding prehab can be a costly mistake.
Too often have we heard of individuals who fought their pain for weeks, months, and years only to be frustrated to have just as long of a recovery process following surgery.
As pathology (take for example, end-stage arthritis of the knee) worsens, compensatory patterns within our daily movements creep in. We start getting up from chairs in a different way, we adjust how we turn around and walk, or we stop performing tasks altogether. I’m sure you know of someone who might say “I don’t do stairs unless I have to”. Let’s face it, pain hurts.
Unfortunately, these bad habits gradually lead to asymmetry. Those small compensatory patterns create a ripple effect across the musculoskeletal system. Muscles away from the injured area begin to work harder and becomes stronger further supporting the compensatory pattern. It isn’t before long that the affected area becomes weaker and stiffer leading to more pain when you do use it. This creates a vicious cycle and over the course of months or years, you decide its finally time to “get the surgery over with”
It’s difficult to remember that the surgery only offers a solution to fixing the source of the problem but not the symptoms associated from the initial issue, such as all the weakness and stiffness that came from “misusing” the area.
It is recommended to see a physical therapist roughly 1 month away from surgery to discuss what interventions may help you best prepare for the elected surgery. Ideally this should be the same therapist you will see after the surgery as they will already be familiar with you, your baseline measurements, and most importantly your rehab goals.
You also shouldn’t be worried about the expenses associated with prehab. A good physical therapist would be able to perform an evaluation and set you up with a comprehensive home exercise program in 1-2 visits. That way you can take the information and perform them independently at home. What better way to get you started on the road to recovery!
Anthony joined the Action Potential team in July 2018 and brings a wide variety of experience with him. Prior to enrolling in physical therapy school, Anthony worked as an Athletic Trainer for a local high school in St. Louis, Missouri. Understanding there can be a much deeper role in the rehabilitation setting, he then pursued his Doctorate degree in Physical Therapy from the University of Pittsburgh. After graduation, Anthony worked as a ‘travel therapist’ in Texas, providing PT services in the home health and skilled nursing settings for a variety of patients with neurologic and musculoskeletal impairments. These experiences allowed Anthony to develop a stronger passion for treating individuals, of all age-ranges, with complex musculoskeletal issues. Anthony completed an Orthopedic Residency at the University of Delaware in 2018, allowing him to advance his Sports and Orthopedic skill sets. He enjoys using whole-body movement to treat various conditions such as neck and back pain, knee pain, and shoulder complaints. He also believes there is nothing more important in healthcare than a collaborative, inter-disciplinary approach to treating an individual. When he is not working, Anthony performs home-health visits on the weekend; otherwise you can find him at the local coffee shop reading up on the latest evidence/literature.
Anthony lives in Wilmington with his wife, Allie, and golden retriever, Yogi. He enjoys traveling, reading (aka listening to audiobooks), playing pick-up basketball, and going on long runs.
Barring any significant trauma requiring immediate medical attention, musculoskeletal surgeries are typically elective. Whether its a total joint replacement [of the knee, hip, and shoulders], a rotator cuff repair, or minor spinal surgeries, insurance companies won’t typically classify these as “necessary”, no matter how much pain you’re in.
Whatever the diagnosis is, when the time does eventually come where your pain or related-symptoms are too unbearable to manage, the appropriate step would be to seek out a trusted healthcare provider (i.e. your PCP, an orthopedist, or a physical therapist) to go over the options that may be best for you. Whomever you choose to see for this issue, It is important to have an open and clear conversation with this individual regarding what options you may have, if they align with your current goals, and what time-table for recovery these options provide. If you are unsatisfied with their recommendations, it is highly advisable to seek out a second opinion…remember this is your body we are talking about here.
However, every circumstance is different and there are many times when surgery is the best option. When this is the case, you are going to expect a successful outcome right?
This is where “Prehab” comes in.
Pre-surgical rehabilitation otherwise known as “prehab’’ has become a term referring to the preparatory interventions to help optimize a surgical outcome. In lay terms: setting yourself up for the best recovery possible.
This could mean improving range-of-motion through stretching, maximizing strength, or enhancing cardiovascular endurance to reduce muscle weakness and withstand disuse of the involved region during the initial stages of recovery.
While prehab may come off as common-sense to some, this stage is often neglected in the rehabilitation spectrum. And in most cases, avoiding prehab can be a costly mistake.
Too often have we heard of individuals who fought their pain for weeks, months, and years only to be frustrated to have just as long of a recovery process following surgery.
But why is this the case?
Unfortunately, these bad habits gradually lead to asymmetry. Those small compensatory patterns create a ripple effect across the musculoskeletal system. Muscles away from the injured area begin to work harder and becomes stronger further supporting the compensatory pattern. It isn’t before long that the affected area becomes weaker and stiffer leading to more pain when you do use it. This creates a vicious cycle and over the course of months or years, you decide its finally time to “get the surgery over with”
It’s difficult to remember that the surgery only offers a solution to fixing the source of the problem but not the symptoms associated from the initial issue, such as all the weakness and stiffness that came from “misusing” the area.
It is recommended to see a physical therapist roughly 1 month away from surgery to discuss what interventions may help you best prepare for the elected surgery. Ideally this should be the same therapist you will see after the surgery as they will already be familiar with you, your baseline measurements, and most importantly your rehab goals.
You also shouldn’t be worried about the expenses associated with prehab. A good physical therapist would be able to perform an evaluation and set you up with a comprehensive home exercise program in 1-2 visits. That way you can take the information and perform them independently at home. What better way to get you started on the road to recovery!
Anthony joined the Action Potential team in July 2018 and brings a wide variety of experience with him. Prior to enrolling in physical therapy school, Anthony worked as an Athletic Trainer for a local high school in St. Louis, Missouri. Understanding there can be a much deeper role in the rehabilitation setting, he then pursued his Doctorate degree in Physical Therapy from the University of Pittsburgh. After graduation, Anthony worked as a ‘travel therapist’ in Texas, providing PT services in the home health and skilled nursing settings for a variety of patients with neurologic and musculoskeletal impairments. These experiences allowed Anthony to develop a stronger passion for treating individuals, of all age-ranges, with complex musculoskeletal issues. Anthony completed an Orthopedic Residency at the University of Delaware in 2018, allowing him to advance his Sports and Orthopedic skill sets. He enjoys using whole-body movement to treat various conditions such as neck and back pain, knee pain, and shoulder complaints. He also believes there is nothing more important in healthcare than a collaborative, inter-disciplinary approach to treating an individual. When he is not working, Anthony performs home-health visits on the weekend; otherwise you can find him at the local coffee shop reading up on the latest evidence/literature.
Anthony lives in Wilmington with his wife, Allie, and golden retriever, Yogi. He enjoys traveling, reading (aka listening to audiobooks), playing pick-up basketball, and going on long runs.
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