Physical Therapy

Yoga: Like Flossing for your Joints!

For our whole lives, we participate in a daily practice to ensure the health of our teeth, as it is obvious that tooth decay is extremely undesirable. Neglecting dental hygiene can lead to issues far beyond affecting that beautiful smile on your face, including infection, as well as compromised gut and heart health. In order to ensure dental health, we brush and floss daily, and visit the dentist two times per year. We have accepted this as the gold standard practice, and dental hygiene becomes almost an unconscious part of our lives.

What about our joints? We have over 200 of them in our body, and without them, we would be unable to move. Each of these joints desperately need movement, compression, and relaxation in order to stay healthy, mobile, and well-lubricated. Unfortunately, we have an epidemic of poor joint health that is on the rise. In fact, around a quarter of US citizens have arthritis (an inflammatory disease of the joints), and the prevalence of knee osteoarthritis has actually doubled since the mid-20th century.1 This is contributing to extreme rises in healthcare costs, risky surgeries, chronic disability, and unnecessary pain and suffering. Poor joint health is also associated with many other health conditions- depression, cardiovascular disease, stroke, and metabolic conditions such as diabetes.2 There are many theories as to why the incidence of this disease is so high- increasing weight, sedentary behavior, as well as the overall aging of our population. However, there is little discussion about how to address the root cause of this disease through education and prevention.

Why is there not more education about how to keep our joints healthy as we go through our lives? My main takeaways from gym class growing up were pretty much as follows: how many sit ups and chin ups can I do in a minute in order to "perform well" on the presidential fitness test, as well as how quickly can I run a mile in order not to embarrass myself around my peers? However, there was absolutely no discussion of joint health in any of my education up until physical therapy school.

What joints need is movement- movement that goes behind repetitive gym exercises, walking, and running. As joints do not have great blood supply, they are completely reliant on us moving our bodies through our given ranges of motion in order to distribute the lubricating synovial fluid around the joint space. As we move and load our joints through their given ranges of motion, we develop an improved mind-body awareness that helps us control the force we put through each joint through our body's posturing and muscle recruitment/relaxation. By regularly moving each joint, we also build up our injury resistance to both chronic and acute injuries. For example, if you never practice moving your ankle inwards, and then you accidentally trip over a root during a hike that forces your ankle into an inward position, you will be far more likely to sprain this joint compared to someone who regularly practices moving and loading their ankle in this position.

One might be thinking…."Are you telling me that in order to have to have healthy joints, I have to move each and every one of them every single day?? This sounds like a lot of work… I already have enough on my plate, especially with how often I am supposed to floss my teeth!"

Luckily, even a brief mindful movement practice such as yoga can help ensure your joint health! A yoga practice has the potential to move every joint and engage every muscle in your body in a relatively short, continuous sequence. And, you will naturally start to use what you learn on the mat in your daily life as well, perhaps without even meaning to! Rather than a chore, a yoga practice can be fun, and make you feel more comfortable and strong in your body. Yoga can be an excellent supplement to whatever else is in your fitness routine that can actually improve your performance in other athletic endeavors as well.

My mission for PhysiYoga is to teach people more about their bodies, provide engaging and challenging movement sequences, and create a safe space for self-care and self-compassion. The current series- PhysiYoga Fluid: From Ground to Crown, will consist of full-body yoga practices with a special emphasis on joint health in particular body areas (e.g. the foot/ankle, the knees, the spine, etc). Consider this practice like "flossing for your joints"- take the opportunity now to learn what you may not have learned in gym class: how to keep your joints healthy so you can live your life to the very fullest for as long as you are here.

Written by: Jacob Tyson, DPT - Physical Therapist and Yoga Instructor

References:

  1. https://www.pnas.org/content/114/35/9332

  2. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31207113/#:~:text=The%20key%20comorbidities%20associated%20with,to%20have%20other%20chronic%20conditions.

The Elusive Obvious: How Better Movement Heals the Whole Person

How are stress, anxiety, movement challenges (e.g. balance issues, neurological disorders, musculoskeletal injuries), chronic pain, and even long-term symptoms of COVID-19 related to our approach at The Wellness Station?

At The Wellness Station, our clientele present primarily with issues of musculoskeletal pain, movement disorders, balance challenges, and various stress-related conditions. Our therapeutic approach is neuroplasticity in action, with the goal of helping people achieve their goals and live healthier, more active lifestyles. We provide movement lessons that emphasize working with one's body, rather than on one's body. These lessons help to establish and strengthen motor pathways that facilitate efficiency of movement and inner calm in order to move towards a more fulfilling and pain-free experience of daily life.

Our approach, based on the Feldenkrais Method and therapeutic yoga, helps to shift the autonomic nervous system into the parasympathetic state with all of the various organ systems working inter-dependently in a homeostatic, rhythmic flow. And thankfully when the body is more in a state of calm and balance, that systemic harmony allows for healing to occur in a variety of our bodies systems.

Our focus on decreasing the body's stress response (fight or flight) goes beyond improving movement and decreasing pain. Much to our delight, our clients often report that other health issues also improve, including sleep quality, gastrointestinal distress, memory and cognition, energy levels, and positive management of blood pressure and other heart-related conditions. While we do not claim to treat those conditions directly, research and our experience as healthcare providers can tell us that lifestyle choices- how well and how often we move, our ability to manage stress, the choices of what we put in our bodies, and our daily practices of self-care can have major influences on our mental and physical health.

For example, COVID-19 can lead to long-term symptoms including cognitive issues, labored breathing (dyspnea), pain with deep breaths, loss of smell and taste , and overall malaise. And all of the above create tremendous fear and anxiety about one’s present and future capacity for functioning well -the sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system becomes over-stimulated, and fight, flight, or freeze characteristics prevail. By learning tools to regulate the nervous system through mindful movement and other daily practices, our clients develop the self-efficacy, knowledge, and wisdom necessary to combat or prevent the symptom manifestation of many diseases.

Coming full circle with the above health challenges, at The Wellness Station our emphasis on improving the quality of how we move, think, feel, and sense regularly resolves musculoskeletal pain, improves balance and movement difficulties, and also has many positive effects on the various organ systems.

It is wonderful to hear our patients report improvement with memory and other cognitive issues, high blood pressure and cardiac disorders, various gastrointestinal challenges, sleep quality, and expressing “I feel I have my life back again!”

In the words of Moshe Feldenkrais, we help our clients "make the impossible possible, the possible easy, and the easy elegant."

Welcome, Jacob Tyson, DPT!

The Wellness Station is excited to announce the addition of Jacob Tyson, Doctor of Physical Therapy, to the team! Jacob is a recent graduate from UNC-Chapel Hill and will be working with Paul McAndrew to provide integrative health and wellness services to help you create a pain-free, active, and healthy life.

The following is a note from Jacob:

My name is Jacob Tyson, and I am a physical therapist and yoga instructor from Chapel Hill, NC. I am passionate about integrating mindful movement and other wellness practices with traditional physical therapy to provide holistic health solutions.

I have a Bachelor’s Degree in Cognitive Science from the University of Virginia and a Doctorate in Physical Therapy from the UNC-Chapel Hill. I also have a background in yoga, Feldenkrais method, and neuroscience.

I am fascinated by the interaction between the mind and body- how affect, behavior, and cognitive processes have physical manifestations, and vice versa. My clinical interests are in chronic musculoskeletal conditions, chronic pain, chronic stress, neurological and balance disorders, lifestyle diseases, exercise-related injuries, and preventive care to optimize health over the long term.

I want to be able to spend ample time getting to know each of my patients as individuals in a supportive, low stress environment in order to determine the most effective ways to help them reach their goals. By striving to address the root causes of illness, I will help empower people to take control of their health to enhance their quality of life.

When I am not practicing or learning about these topics, you may find me hiking, reading, trying out new recipes, or playing with my kitty.

I am extremely excited to join The Wellness Station and serve the community as an Integrative Physical Therapist! I look forward to meeting you soon!

Please give him a warm welcome!

Contact us if you would like to schedule a virtual or in person consultation or appointment or Jacob!