Blogs by Topic:
Why Physical therapy or Occupational therapy:
Choose PT First to save time and money
Are you a smart consumer of Healthcare?
Conditions:
Pain relief without medication
What you need to know about arthritis
Your x-rays and MRIs show us the wrinkles on the inside
A new way to Treat Fibromyalgia
Share your goals; they’re important to us!
Back and Neck Pain:
Best way to get rid of back and neck pain
Essential Exercises for Back pain
Can PT help with Headaches/ Migraines?
Can PT help Back Pain? What we learned from Starbucks
Shoulder:
Prevent and Treat Shoulder Pain
Elbow:
Elbow Tendonitis, a.k.a Tennis Elbow
Wrist/ Hand:
Foot/Ankle:
Why Flip Flops may not be your best option
Pelvic Health:
What is Pelvic Health Physical Therapy
How to stay active during pregnancy
Surgery:
Tips & Tricks to Prepare for Surgery
Stronger going into Surgery, Stronger Coming out.
Common Interventions:
Should I be Stretching or Strengthening?
Seasonal:
A PTs Guide to Snow Shoveling Safety
Winter Safety in Industry: Navigating Cold Conditions with Confidence
Finding your balance in winter
Keeping your arms and hands safe in the Winter
Protecting your joints with summer activities
Information for all of our Green Thumbs
Athletics:
Preventing Pickleball Injuries
Could early specialization be the problem?
Concussion:
Everything you need to know about Concussions
Importance of Baseline Concussion Testing
Running:
Return to Running, Spring Edition
Injury Prevention, do shoes matter?
Orchestra and Performing Arts:
Industrial medicine:
Impact of Athletic Trainers in Industrial Care
Tactical Medicine:
Return to Work Assessment for an Injured Police Officer
Police Support Staff Person of the Year
Things we learned from participating in a mass-casualty simulation
Office:
Getting more activity during your workday
Decrease Fatigue and Reduce Stiffness
Direct Contracting:
Our role in providing exceptional care to the employees of local School Districts
Wellness:
Importance of physical activity
Why you need a PT on your team
The 4 P’s of Energy Conservation
Hidden Aches and Pains caused by Cell Phones
How to decrease the aches and pains brought on by using your phone
Movement Vital Sign, what is that?
You’re never too old to strength train
Improve your mood with exercise, especially during the holidays
Importance of Building Strength
Meet the Team:
Advanced PT Recognized with Community Heroes Award
Advanced PT Recognized with Community Heroes Award It’s important to craft a mission statement wisely. You only get one sentence, and it must stand the test of time.
Ours goes like this: The mission of Advanced Physical Therapy & Sports Medicine is to provide individualized care based on clinical expertise with a commitment to patient advocacy, education, and community service.
Fast forward 25 years since the creation of that sentence, and those words ring true. Well, maybe one of the words has undergone a change in definition: community. In 1998, Advanced PT consisted of a single clinic location in Appleton, so “community” meant just the Fox Valley.
Now there are more than 30 clinics throughout Wisconsin.
But growing larger does not mean losing touch with what got you here in the first place: a commitment to doing things the right way.
As testimony, consider Advanced PT’s recent recognition as “Community Heroes” by the Wisconsin Office of Rural Health. Part of National Rural Health Day, which is celebrated on the third Thursday in November, the award is bestowed to practices and individuals for their outstanding contribution to improving the quality of and access to rural healthcare.
It also highlights the unique challenges rural communities face: provider shortages, an older population, and lack of transportation.
The Wisconsin Office of Rural Health describes our rural communities as “wonderful places to live, work, and visit. They are also communities where health care providers deliver innovative, affordable, and holistic primary care.”
Honoring the community-minded, “can-do” spirit that prevails in rural Wisconsin, the award recognized Advanced PT clinics in Ripon, Iola and Marinette.
PJ Christopherson, Clinic Director at the Advanced PT location in Ripon, views the award as a natural extension of the founders’ vision. “We value supporting rural health care,” Christopherson said. “That’s been in our DNA from the beginning, not only to serve communities but to be part of them, growing with them and making them stronger.”
Adam Wirtz, Advanced PT Clinic Director in Iola, embraces the role he and his colleagues play to improve the quality of life for patients and communities.
“In America right now—for a lot of reasons—access to good quality health care is restricted in rural areas,” said Wirtz. “We take pride in working hard to address the unique healthcare challenges that rural citizens face today. It’s an honor to be recognized for our efforts.”
Serving communities for over 25 years, Advanced Physical Therapy & Sports Medicine is grateful for this award recognizing our commitment to rural health. We are proud to support the communities we work in, because we live in them too!
Dry Needling
Autumn Paul, PT, DPT
You may have heard about dry needling from one of your friends or family members and now you are thinking, “What is dry needling? Could I benefit from it?”
Dry needling involves the practitioner using a solid filiform needle or hollow-core hypodermic needle (similar to an acupuncture needle) to place it through the skin and enter the muscle. The goal is to place the needle specifically into a myofascial trigger point (hyperactive muscle fibers).
These trigger points can be located in a tense band of muscle. For example, many people have tightness or soreness in their shoulders or necks from the tension they carry throughout the day.
These hyperactive muscle fibers (tense bands of muscle) can send signals to other parts of your body which are considered “referred pain”.
The goal of dry needling is to pierce these trigger points in order to allow these muscle fibers to relax, which can help reduce your pain levels.
“So what conditions may dry needling help with?”
● Headaches
● Shoulder/neck pain/tightness
● Lower back pain/ tightness
● Tennis and golfer’s elbow
● Knee pain
● Shin splints
● TMJ/jaw pain
● Plantar fasciitis
● Hip Pain/ tightness
“Can any physical therapist perform dry needling?”
In order to be able to perform dry needling, the physical therapist is required to go through extensive training. This training includes studying human anatomy and hands-on practice. These training sessions are often a weekend course or even several weekend courses.
“Awesome, I want to see a physical therapist who can assess and see if I could potentially benefit from dry needling. How do I make an appointment?”
First, look online to see what location is closest to you. Then, you can request to schedule an appointment with a physical therapist who is certified to perform dry needling.
—-
References:
Firth C, Meon J, Price M, Taylor J, Grace S. Dry Needling: A literature Review. Journal of the Australian Traditional-Medicine Society . 2020;26(1):22-28. Accessed January 14, 2021.
http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ccm&AN=143040461&site=eds-live
Baseline Concussion Testing
Ben Benesh, PT, SCS
What is a concussion? The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) definition:
“A concussion is a type of traumatic brain injury—or TBI—caused by a bump, blow, or jolt to the head or by a hit to the body that causes the head and brain to move rapidly back and forth. This sudden movement can cause the brain to bounce around or twist in the skull, creating chemical changes in the brain and sometimes stretching and damaging brain cells.”
According to a Pediatrics study from 2016, it was estimated that between 1.6 and 3.8 million sports concussions occur annually in the United States. Concussions can happen in sport during a violent head to head collision in football or taking a charge and hitting the back of your head in basketball. They can be sustained during a whiplash-type injury in a flyer during a competitive cheer stunt or when a young athlete takes a volleyball spike to the head or face. Besides the obvious appropriate post-concussion management for these athletes, a proper baseline concussion test is key in the successful return to school and sport.
High school-age athletes are baseline concussion tested as a Freshman and again as a Junior. They are usually tested in school by their athletic training team. The group that needs the most attention are the elementary and middle school-aged children, that do not have access to athletic training staff, and do not have school-based concussion baseline testing. These kids are still playing sports, including collision type sports that put them at risk for a concussion. Over the last 7 years of treating patients following a concussion, I have seen plenty of soccer and football athletes, but have also treated basketball players, volleyball players, wrestlers, competitive cheer athletes, and even swimmers! In order to treat these patients as effectively as possible following a concussion, baseline testing is crucial.
In healthy athletes, baseline concussion testing includes concussion education, past head injury medical history, baseline ImPACT neurocognitive computer testing, baseline vestibular/oculomotor screening and assessment, and baseline balance assessment. These objective measurements will be saved and used following a concussion to determine if your athlete is back to “normal” following injury and can safely return to their sport they love to do.
In this crazy time dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, sporting events are delayed or canceled and then rescheduled without notice. The training schedule may not be as consistent or as intense as previous years as kids are quarantined or had exposure to COVID-19 or coaches are unable to secure facilities to practice. Parents are often not even able to watch their children play sports because of spectator restrictions in gyms. All of these reasons make this year unique. But the truth is, concussions still happen during a pandemic and we need to be best prepared to give our young athletes the best care possible if they sustain a concussion.
Please contact us for more information or to schedule your Baseline Concussion Test at our Appleton North or Community First Champion Center or online (ages 12+) clinics!
References
https://www.cdc.gov/headsup/basics/return_to_sports.html
McCrory et al. Consensus statement on concussion in sport—the 5th international conference on concussion in sport held in Berlin, October 2016. BJSM April, 2017
Elbin et al. Removal From Play After Concussion and Recovery Time. Pediatrics August, 2016
Best Way To Get Rid Of Back And Neck Pain… Physical Therapy!
Written by: Dennis Kaster, PT-- Stevens Point North
Physical Therapy is one of the most effective and cheapest ways to treat back and neck pain, but few people know that.
Most back and neck pain is caused by muscle weakness, tightness, poor posture, or poorly set-up workstations that put extra stress on the body.
A Physical Therapist will assess which of these issues is causing the pain and help you get rid of it by doing specific stretches, strengthening, improving posture, performing treatment to decrease pain or swelling, using better lifting mechanics, or helping you set up your work or home workstations to put less stress on your body.
The typical process in the past has been that when someone injures their back, they go to a medical doctor. The doctor would decide what to do next, which many times included rest, medications, or expensive imaging.
Several years ago a large medical organization, Virginia Mason, broke down the process of medical care for back injuries, looking for the quickest, most effective, and cheapest way to treat low back pain. In the end, they found that people who saw a physical therapist first for lower back pain recovered much quicker, returned to work sooner, and experienced a much lower overall cost of care.
This is because Physical Therapists specialize much more in the anatomy and mechanics of how the back works and how to stop and prevent pain. Physical therapists also do not prescribe opioid pain medications. Many times medical doctors prescribe opioid prescriptions, advise patients to rest until the pain goes away, or order expensive medical imaging, which many times is not necessary. Many other research studies have found the same results.
As a result of the findings of multiple research studies, many insurance companies no longer require a physician referral to cover physical therapy, as they realize that people with mechanical low back pain respond much quicker and better if they see a Physical Therapist first. Most people are not aware of this.
Several studies have shown that as little as 7% of people with low back pain see a Physical Therapist. This is crazy…..when Physical Therapy is one of the most effective ways to treat low back pain.
Also, Physical Therapists have the expertise to recognize more serious medical issues that would require a referral to a medical doctor.
So, if you see a Physical Therapist first and your pain is due to a medical issue, you can rest assured that the Physical Therapist will recognize it and direct you to the appropriate care.
PLEASE HELP US TO GET THE WORD OUT!! IF YOU HAVE BACK OR NECK PAIN, SEE A PHYSICAL THERAPIST FIRST. IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW HAS BACK OR ANY MUSCLE OR JOINT ISSUE, LET THEM KNOW THAT PHYSICAL THERAPY MAY BE THE BEST FORM OF TREATMENT FOR IT.
If you have questions, please give us a call and we can answer them for you or check with your insurance to make sure our treatment is covered.
References
Furhmans V. Withdrawal Treatment: a novel plan helps hospital wean itself off of pricey tests. The Wall Street Journal. January 12, 2007
Pendergast J, Kliethermes S, et al, A Comparison of Health Care Use for Physician-Referred and Self-Referred Episodes of Outpatient Physical Therapy. Health Research and Educational Trust DOI:10:1111/j.1475-6773.01324.x, Oct. 2011
Mitchell JM, de Lissovoy G. A comparison of resource use and cost in direct access versus physician referral episodes of physical therapy. Phys Ther. 1997;77: 10-18
Moore JH, McMillian DJ, et al. Risk determination for patients with direct access to physical therapy in military health care facilities. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2005;35:674-678
Leemrijse CJ, Swinkles I, Veenoff C. Direct access to physical therapy in the Netherlands: Results from the first year in community based physical Therapy. Phys Ther 88;8:936-946
Kenney. Transforming Healthcare, Virginial Mason Medical Center’s Pursuit of the Perfect Experience. CRC Press, 2011
Why do you make physical activity a priority in your life?
Dean J Sondrol, PT
Why do you make physical activity a priority in your life? This question was a recent topic of discussion one day between myself and some of my clients at Advanced Physical Therapy and Sports Medicine, and then later on between some friends and I. It was sparked by a recent article I read on the APTA Website- see article below.
Here are some of the responses that came up:
-to stay’ healthy (was the most common)
-to keep up or stay with my children (one of my main reasons)
-to enjoy the outdoors; hiking, kayaking, and biking
-to dance at my granddaughter’s wedding
-my wife tells me to, or my kids tell me I need to
-so I look good
-cause of my heart attack or new hip or knee
-So I can play high school sports (from some of the younger people)
-in case I get COVID (a more recent reason)
-so I can fit into that dress or pair of jeans
-my high school reunion is coming up
-so I can drink more beer, or eat more food
-it just feels good
Of course, this also led to a discussion on why we don’t make physical activity a priority in our life, (that is a topic for an article in itself). The benefits of physical activity are well documented, we all have heard reason on TV, at the Dr office, from social media and from family and friends. So I won’t lecture you in this article but I would encourage you to find the one or two reasons why you should make physical activity your priority. Write it down if you want, post it on your phone, or just think about it from time to time. I will also think of my reasons why I’m doing that activity and it makes that walk or work out all the more meaningful. So if you see me out running, biking, or walking and ask what I’m thinking about I would probably tell you my children or how many more miles I should run so I can eat that jelly doughnut.
You may have some of the same or have your own reason. Please feel to share your reason with me…. Remember to keep making physical activity your priority!
From: Top 10 Benefits of Physical Activity. From Choose PT August 2020
https://www.choosept.com/resources/detail/top-10-benefits-of-physical-activity
Most Americans do not move enough. The good news is that regular physical activity is one of the easiest ways to reduce your risk for chronic disease and to improve your quality of life.
Make physical activity a priority to:
1. Improve your memory and brain function (all age groups)
2. Protect against many chronic diseases.
3. Aid in weight management.
4. Lower blood pressure and improve heart health.
5. Improve your quality of sleep.
6. Reduce feelings of anxiety and depression.
7. Combat cancer-related fatigue.
8. Improve joint pain and stiffness.
9. Maintain muscle strength and balance.
10. Increase the life span.
Physical therapists are movement experts who improve quality of life through hands-on care, patient education, and prescribed movement. Physical therapists treat people of all ages and abilities and empower you to take an active part in your care. After an evaluation, your physical therapist will create a treatment plan for your specific needs and goals.
Choose more movement. Choose better health. Choose physical therapy.
Better going into surgery, better coming out.
Briana Wasielewski, PTA, CCCE, BS
Having the best rehab after surgery is one of the top priorities of all surgical candidates. Many spend a lot of time getting the best surgeon in place, getting their place to rest in order, and thinking about who can help them with daily life and getting to and from appointments once the surgery is done. While these are all things one should think about prior to surgery, many do not think about what they can do to ultimately increase their chances of having a better surgical outcome: exercise prior to surgery.
Exercise comes in many forms and is something everyone can do before surgery. If done appropriately, exercise before surgery will likely improve recovery. Who better to help figure out your unique pre-op exercise plan than a physical therapist?
First, a physical therapist will discuss and evaluate your reason for surgery. Many times the reason a patient is thinking about having surgery is that they have pain or their movement is affected. Exercise is usually not something surgical candidates think they can or should do before considering surgery. Prehab exercise is specifically designed by physical therapists to improve the outcome of patients’ post-surgical rehab. The idea here is “the better going into the surgery, the better coming out”. Whether that means breathing exercises, simple strengthening, flexibility work, or practicing how to use crutches, seeing a physical therapist before surgery can help the healing process in the long run.
A physical therapist prehab visit also gives the opportunity for surgical candidates to ask questions specifically about the most dreaded part of having surgery: the recovery. Physical therapists are experts in rehabilitation and can tell you exactly what to expect in recovery, and how to prepare yourself with pain management tools.
If you are thinking about having surgery or know someone who is, make sure you prepare yourself and your body by seeing one of our physical/occupational therapists.
Head to our location page to find a clinic near you!
The Most Common Cause of Vertigo is also the Most Treatable
Chris Hupf, PT, DPT, CSCS
Do you ever feel a sense that you or your surroundings are spinning or moving? Do you experience bouts of sudden unsteadiness or dizziness? Vertigo is a type of dizziness defined as an illusory sensation of motion of either the self or the surroundings in the absence of true motion.1 According to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, it’s estimated that close to 40% of the population will experience dizziness or balance problems over the course of their lifetime.2
One of the most common causes of vertigo is a condition called benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV). In fact, of the 5 million people in the United States who seek care for complaints of dizziness every year, between 17% and 42% end up receiving a diagnosis of BPPV.1
BPPV is a type of positional vertigo caused by a disorder of the inner ear. Those who have it experience repeated “spinning” sensations or unsteadiness when they move their head in a certain direction. This could occur when rolling over or getting out of bed or tipping the head back to look up. A feeling of lightheadedness and nausea can occur as well.
It’s widely understood that BPPV is caused by small calcium carbonate crystals that become dislodged from their normal resting place and end up free-floating within one of three semicircular canals used by the inner ear to sense movement. With changes in head position, these crystals migrate within the fluid-filled canal, causing movement of fluid and subsequent pressure changes that result in an abnormal sensation of rotation or spinning.
In the clinic, a physical therapist can assist in diagnosing BPPV through physical examination and understanding your history. This includes observation of involuntary eye movements that occur when the patient is placed in specific positions that provoke their dizziness. Depending on the canal affected, treatment involves a sequence of specific maneuvers designed to clear these crystals from the canal. These maneuvers are highly effective, with studies showing a complete resolution of symptoms 74-95% of the time in as little as one visit.3-6
Almost 90% of people with BPPV will experience some interruption to their daily lives, including anxiety, depression, an increased risk for falls and impaired performance at home or at work.1,7 And, because most people who seek treatment are unaware that physical therapists can help, many ultimately end up undergoing expensive and unnecessary diagnostic testing and treatment first.7
BPPV is quickly and easily treated by physical therapists. Many of our therapists have undergone additional training to diagnose and treat BPPV, so please don’t hesitate to reach out and schedule an appointment. It could be your next and final step in ending this debilitating condition, allowing you to live life uninterrupted once again.
References:
1. Bhattacharyya, N., Gubbels, S. P., Schwartz, S. R., Edlow, J. A., El-Kashlan, H., Fife, T., ... & Seidman, M. D. (2017). Clinical practice guideline: benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (update). Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, 156(3_suppl), S1-S47.
2. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. (2005). Strategic plan (FY 2006-2008). Retrieved from http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/StaticResources/about/plans/strategic/strategic06-08.pdf [PDF].
3. Wang, Y. H., Chan, C. Y., & Liu, Q. H. (2019). Benign paroxsymal positional vertigo–recommendations for treatment in primary care. Therapeutics and clinical risk management, 15, 719.
4. Fyrmpas, G., Barkoulas, E., Haidich, A. B., & Tsalighopoulos, M. (2013). Vertigo during the Epley maneuver and success rate in patients with BPPV. European archives of oto-rhino-laryngology, 270(10), 2621-2625.
5. Helminski, J. O. (2014). Effectiveness of the canalith repositioning procedure in the treatment of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. Physical therapy, 94(10), 1373-1382.
6. Bruintjes, T. D., Companjen, J., van der Zaag‐Loonen, H. J., & van Benthem, P. P. G. (2014). A randomised sham‐controlled trial to assess the long‐term effect of the Epley manoeuvre for treatment of posterior canal benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. Clinical Otolaryngology, 39(1), 39-44.
7. BPPV: Experts Update Best Practices for Diagnosis and Treatment. (2017, March 1). Retrieved from https://www.entnet.org/content/bppv-experts-update-best-practices-diagnosis-and-treatment
Image of Inner Ear: Blausen.com staff (2014). "Medical gallery of Blausen Medical 2014". WikiJournal of Medicine 1 (2). DOI:10.15347/wjm/2014.010. ISSN 2002-4436. - Own work.
Are You a Smart Consumer of Healthcare?
ARE YOU A SMART CONSUMER OF HEALTHCARE
Think about the last time you made a big purchase, say $1,000 or more. Did you go out and buy the first thing you saw? Take one recommendation from somebody? Or did you research it, learn some things, compare it to other options, and select something that was right for you? Most people tend to be educated and research large purchases like cars, televisions, or the newest iphone. So why do we so often fail to do this with healthcare?
By becoming more educated healthcare consumers we can go from passive patients who take the first recommendation that comes from a practitioner to an active consumer who weighs options and makes choices. Here are some questions to talk through with your practitioner the next time a healthcare decision comes up.
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS OR EXPECTED RESULTS?
When a treatment or procedure is recommended, the patient often assumes that it will make them "better." But what the patient expects and what the healthcare provider expects are often two different things. For example, a patient having back surgery expects to be pain free after surgery. The surgeon probably doesn't expect that to happen. Outcomes from back surgeries are terrible. A large study of 1450 patients in the Ohio worker's comp system showed that after 2 years 26% of patients who had surgery returned to work. Compare that to 67% of patients who didn't have surgery. There was also a 41% increase in the use of painkillers in the surgical group.
WHAT ARE THE RISKS AND DOWNSIDES?
Patients want to hear about the benefits of a treatment, but they often don't ask or care about the risks. To be an educated consumer, you need to. If one treatment has a 3% edge over another, but has a high risk of making you itchy or causing frequent headaches, do you want it? Going back to the back surgery study from before, the researchers found a 1 in 4 chance of a repeat surgery and a 1 in 3 chance of a major complication. With surgery you risk infection, blood clots, complications with anesthesia, and a whole host of other things. These risks need compared with other treatments. In the case of back pain, physical therapy is a valid alternative with a much lower risk profile. You might have some soreness with physical therapy, you might sweat some and be challenged with exercise, but the risks of PT compared to surgery are minimal.
WHAT ARE THE ALTERNATIVES?
Don't feel bad asking about alternative treatments. If you were looking at a certain car you wouldn't go out and just buy it. You'd at least consider the competitors and probably even test drive them. You should at least look at the other options in healthcare too. Maybe the first recommendation that your practitioner makes is the right one for you, but if you don't consider the alternatives you'll never really know.
WHY THIS TREATMENT OVER THE OTHER ONES?
This is the question where the rubber meets the road. You've learned about all the options, now you can see if your practitioner is balancing the risks and benefits to make the right choice for you. Staying with the back pain example, research shows that more than 40% of people who seek care for back pain will not receive a treatment of known effectiveness. Back pain is also the #1 reason for opioid prescriptions, despite a 2016 recommendation from the CDC to avoid prescribing opioids for back pain, and opt for non-drug treatments like physical therapy. By asking for the rationale and carefully weighing options, you can avoid being one of the people who gets an ineffective treatment.
WHAT'S IT COST?
This last question is becoming more important as patients bear an increasing share of the cost of healthcare. Even if you don't have a high deductible plan or hefty co-pays, by being financially responsible today, you'll probably see smaller price increases in your premiums down the road. That back surgery that we've been talking about? It'll likely cost between $60,000 and $80,000. So if we put the whole picture together, a patient who takes the first recommendation for surgery will have a $60,000 procedure that leads to a higher risk of disability, and a higher risk of long term painkiller use, while risking infection, and blood clots. Don't forget the 25% chance that you'll get to do it all again in a repeat surgery. Seems like a bad deal. An educated consumer would learn that physical therapy is a viable alternative to surgery with comparable outcomes, much less risk and lower cost. In fact, a large study of 122,723 subjects showed that people with back pain who got physical therapy in the first 14 days lowered their healthcare costs by 60%. It's easy to see why bargain shoppers love PT!