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All About Physical Therapists
by Josh Stone
Physical therapy is a broad
sphere of medical practice that encompasses many
needs and scenarios. Simply put, a physical
therapist provides the service to the patient of
helping him or her achieve, maintain, or restore
maximum movement and functional ability. The patient
and why they need physical therapy can be as vast as
medicine itself. The old and infirm need assistance
in maintaining movement. The injured need therapy to
recover movement. Those born with a physical or
neurological handicap need therapy to develop
movement.
Just some of the conditions
which a physical therapist may help with include:
back and neck pain, spinal and joint conditions such
as arthritis, biomechanical problems and muscular
control, problems affecting children such as
cerebral palsy and spina bifida, heart and lung
conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease and pneumonia, sport-related injuries,
stress incontinence, and neurological conditions
such as stroke and multiple sclerosis.
Physical therapists usually specialize in a specific
field. Just like a doctor, a physical therapist is a
certified expert - in the United States requiring
four years of college with an eye towards the
specialty. Not many people realize this, because to
watch a physical therapist work, you might at first
mistake them for a coach or a counselor.
In fact, coaching and counseling are a great deal of
what physical therapy is all about. Physical
therapists work in a very active role with the
patient, guiding them through exercises designed to
help build the patient's mobility. They may be
working on the track or the gym with a sports injury
case, in a hospital coaxing a stroke survivor to
take their first few steps with a walker, or in a
swimming pool using the water's buoyancy to help a
recovering accident victim with a fractured pelvis
to learn to walk again.
History
Physical therapy as a recognized profession goes all
the way back to ancient China, though in that point
in history it was more like a massage business.
Physical therapists came into their first mass use
in World War two, when soldiers coming home with
spinal injuries provided new challenges to the
profession. Orthopedic hospitals and chest clinics
for veterans soon sprang up, with physical
therapists running the show.
In many countries, the profession of physical
therapy has grown to become the largest allied
health profession, in third place only behind
medicine and nursing in the number of graduating
health care students.
Working with disabled children
Children are born with a mobility problem for many
reasons. For just one example, there's cerebral
palsy. A baby born with cerebral palsy has a very
good chance of being able to partially recover by
the time of adulthood. This is due to the brain's
ability to patch itself by growing new neurons. But
in order for those neurons to form in the first
place, the child must have stimulus.
They say that riding a bike is something that once
you learn how, you never forget. This actually
applies to all mobile activities. Anything from
crawling to surfing is a learned set of muscular
co-ordination reflexes, and to develop them, we have
to practice. Once the brain has learned how to guide
the body through a set of motions, new pathways of
neurons are formed in the brain to record the
learned behavior. The act of learning an activity is
actually one of providing physical stimulation to
the body, which in turn is used by the brain as raw
material to build a learned behavior from.
A physical therapist working with a disabled child
who cannot crawl, for instance, may start by placing
the child on his belly on a soft inflated ball. With
just the feet and hands touching the floor and
without the necessity to support the bodies entire
weight on the limbs yet, the child can move
themselves around on the ball by pushing against the
floor with their hands and feet. Later the ball
might be replaced with a padded board on wheels.
Just like training wheels on a bike, the motion is
practiced in gradual steps until the child can both
develop the muscle tone and learn the gross motor
skills necessary to carry out the task.
Water walking
Similarly, an older patient with a mobility problem
due to a recent injury or stroke might need to teach
their body how to walk again. By suspending their
body in a shallow pool with a floatation vest on,
they can walk around on the surface of the pool
bottom and their body's weight is mostly carried by
the water. In this way the legs and feet can rebuild
muscle tone and the brain can learn to remap those
neurons that may have been damaged or forgotten.
Tai Chi and Pilates
Tai Chi, a "soft" Chinese martial art, has made some
popular gains in senior patrons of physical
therapists. The gentle, graceful movements and slow
pacing are a deliberate effort to force the body and
mind to focus on it's mobility. As opposed to the
"training wheels" model, this is more of a "slow and
steady" model, but even those the Tai Chi class may
look like slow-motion aerobics, the benefits are
staggering.
Researchers have found that long-term Tai Chi
practice had favorable effects on the skills of
balance control, flexibility and cardiovascular
fitness and helped reduce the risk of falls in
elders. The studies also reported reduced pain,
stress and anxiety in healthy subjects who took Tai
Chi. Other studies have indicated improved
cardiovascular and respiratory function in healthy
subjects along with those who had undergone coronary
artery bypass surgery.
Pilates is an exercise regimen with very different
roots in Europe and America instead of the Far East,
but with similar goals in mind. The inventor of this
exercise named it "Contrology", which refers to the
way the method encourages the use of the mind to
control the muscles. It is an exercise program that
focuses on the core postural muscles that help keep
the body balanced and are essential to providing
support for the delicate muscles of the spine. In
particular, Pilates teaches an awareness of breath
and alignment of the spine, and strengthens the deep
torso muscles which are important to help alleviate
and prevent back pain.
There's more to physical therapy than meets the
mind. Indeed, the benefit is mostly applied in the
mind, although physical therapists speak almost as
if the body had a mind of it's own, which the brain
merely oversees. In a way, a physical therapist can
be seen as a "brain programmer" - or re-programmer!
No matter what your course of medical treatment in
life, you're almost bound to require the services of
a physical therapist at one point or another in your
life.
About the Author
Freelance writer for over eleven years.
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