Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Studio 26 home of Amanda Donis massage in NYC

A purely therapeutic environment.
As a massage therapist I have endured working in a wide range of offices. Usually enduring dimly light cramped rooms.
Here at Studio 26, it's sunny everyday. There are even skylights where natural light can pour in to feed the many plants am the people.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Myofascial Massage is a critical component for longer lasting relief from pain and restricted movement. If applied consistently over 4-6 sessions it offers meaningful results. And when used in combination with Acupuncture it's even better. This is an informative article that will help paint the picture about why jaw pain hurts!
Check it out...


TMJ: Think Muscles for Jaw Pain
By Sara Calabro

Researchers from Georgetown recently showed that acupuncture in rats reduces a protein that’s associated with stress. While this gives hope to those for whom molecules make more sense than qi, it remains to be seen whether the findings can be replicated in humans.

In the meantime, the Western-minded among us will appreciate that there’s already a relatable framework for understanding how acupuncture relieves certain symptoms of stress. One of the most common, TMJ, responds very well to trigger-point acupuncture.

TMJ stands for temporomandibular joint, but “TMJ” has become a catch-all term for jaw pain that can radiate throughout the face, head and ear. (We’ll refer to it that way in this article.)

TMJ brings many people to acupuncture, as conventional medical therapies such as bite guards and medications usually offer temporary, if any, relief. It’s especially common among people who also report high levels of stress.

TMJ often is a result of excessive muscular strain rather than an issue with the actual joint. (Handy tip: Think Muscles for Jaw Pain.)

When we overwork our face and neck muscles, which we tend to when stressed—clenching or grinding our teeth, biting our nails, holding ourselves in tense postures—they can develop sensitive nodules that cause referred pain. These nodules, known as trigger points, can be released by inserting acupuncture needles directly into the affected muscle and/or its associated attachments.

Which Trigger Points Cause TMJ?
Trigger points (“X” on the images below) in several different face and neck muscles can cause jaw pain. Here are some of the most commonly afflicted.


Masseter
A trigger-point approach to treating TMJ usually involves a first look at the masseter. This is the big muscle that protrudes over the jawbone, commonly the area that people massage when describing jaw pain. Like other face and neck muscles, the masseter can develop trigger points from teeth clenching and grinding, excessive gum chewing or nail biting, and poor body mechanics. But this muscle more than others is affected by stress.

“The masseter muscles are among the first to contract in persons who are in a state of extreme emotional tension, intense determination, or desperation, and they remain contracted for abnormally long periods of time,” says Janet Travell in her book Myofascial Pain and Dysfunction: The Trigger Point Manual.

Trigger points in the masseter can refer pain to the cheeks, lower jaw, upper and lower molar teeth, up into the eyebrow, and deep into the ear and around the temporomandibular joint (see picture above). Since the main function of the masseter muscle is to elevate the mandible (the lower jawbone), cases where the person has a hard time opening his mouth usually indicate trigger points in the masseter. One-sided tinnitus can be another clue.


Temporalis
The pain patterns for trigger points in the temporalis muscle resemble those of the masseter (see picture at left). However, these patients tend to complain more explicitly of headaches, usually on the side of the head and along the eyebrow or behind the eye. The tooth pain associated with temporalis trigger points is felt in the upper teeth and not exclusively in the molars.

Medial and lateral pterygoid
These little muscles, when affected by trigger points, pack a powerful punch. They both refer pain directly to the temporomandibular joint region. Pain from medial pterygoid trigger points is concentrated directly in front of the ear and spreads downward along the jaw and upper outside of the neck. These trigger points also can cause throat pain and difficulty swallowing. Pain from lateral pterygoid trigger points, in addition to the temporomandibular joint area in front of the ear, radiates higher on the face, on the maxilla (upper jaw). Travell says trigger points in the lateral pterygoid “are the chief myofascial source of referred pain felt in the TMJ area.”


SCM
The sternocleidomastoid, or SCM, has two divisions, both of which can cause TMJ symptoms when affected by trigger points (see picture at right). The sternal division primarily leads to pain above the eyebrow that spreads across the cheek and into the jaw. Pain may also appear at the back and top of the head. Trigger points in the clavicular division produce pain that’s more concentrated in and around the ear, as well as frontal headaches.


Trapezius
Pain from trapezius trigger points spans from the arm to the head. One particular referral pattern, from trigger points in the upper part of the muscle, can mimic some symptoms of TMJ (see picture at left). In addition to lower jaw pain and temporal headaches, these trigger points can cause intense pain behind and below the ear that extends down to where the neck meets the shoulder. This is especially common in people who work at computers all day, as sustained elevation of the shoulders can produce and exacerbate trigger points in the trapezius.

Platysma
Considered one of the facial muscles, the platysma is a sheath-like muscle that extends from around the jaw down over the clavicle. Trigger points in the platysma cause a diffuse pricking pain over the lower jaw. The pain is felt more on the surface, at the skin level, rather than deep in the muscle.

Trigger Points Aren’t the Whole Story
Needling trigger points is just one strategy for treating TMJ with acupuncture. Other more traditional styles can be equally effective, and acupuncturists who do trigger-point work usually come at it from an acupuncture perspective, which always considers the interplay between physical health and emotional/environmental factors.

Even Janet Travell, the biomedical physician credited with discovering trigger points, admits in her discussion of head and neck pain, “Isolated attention to individual TrPs [trigger points] early in treatment can be helpful to demonstrate to the patients and reassure them that their problem has a basic organic cause which they can do something about, but it will require a comprehensive approach to unravel all the intertwining components.”

A trigger-point approach to TMJ may be a point of entry for those who struggle with acu-speak. Backed by the fundamental tenets of acupuncture, it’s a comprehensive solution to addressing the many facets of this common condition.

Photo by Sara Calabro
Trigger-point images from Myofascial Pain and Dysfunction: The Trigger Point Manual

http://acutakehealth.com/tmj-think-muscles-for-jaw-pain

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Summer in DC. More Myofascial massage




Summer 2012
Myofascial Massage 
Washington D.C




Join me in D.C for your next Myofascial massage to experience more of that exquisite sense of freedom from pain, tension, stress. Specializing in women's health, prenatal and post-natal massage.
Please pass on this post to a friend and receive a courtesy "THANK YOU" 10% off your next session.

The dates for JUNE 2012
Fri, June 29 (downtown, 1133 20th str)

Sat June 30 (20th street)

Sun July 1   (Little Bird Acupunc
                   1640 colombia Rd)

Fri July 27  (20th street)
Sat July 28 (20th street)
Sun July 29 (Little Bird Acupuncture)

Please consider what times/days you wish to schedule and will be in available. Email me your first 2 preferences.

Happy Summer 2012.


                 
Massage in the Amazon would look something like this...a highlight for me in 2011 was offering massage in the midst of the vast forest.  Brazilian Amazon. 


Friday, May 25, 2012

Brooklyn Bridge, New York

Announcing the next Myofascial Massage tour: 
Washington D.C, June 1 & 3, 2012



After an extended time in New York city this May, I am looking forward to visiting D.C next week and meeting with clients who have been so patiently awaiting their next appointments.

In an effort to try to accommodate as many people as possible, I will be gathering your preferred appointment times/days. Then I can orchestrate the best possible schedule from there. 
If you can submit 1-2 preferred options, it will be greatly appreciated. Your patience and flexibility is truly appreciated as I work out the schedule this coming week. 

Email directly: adonis@amandadonismassage.com
Office 202-280-6583 DC
         
Be Well.
Enjoy life.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Another way to think about our Fascia.

While studying more closely about the biochemical and physiology of our fascial system, I came across an interesting metaphor used by Myofascial therapist, Thomas Myers, in his impressive text book, "Anatomy Trains." In  my pursuit to offer my clients clear and easily understandable metaphors and descriptions of this incredibly comprehensive, ever-present body system, I hope it can offer more valuable insight for readers.

Think of a grapefruit...If you were to extract the juice of a grapefruit, you would find the remaining structure intact. You would notice the membranous walls segmenting the individual wedges of the fruit. As well, you would find filmy walls separating the bubbles of juice within the fruit. This can be likened to our how our own fascial network holds us together as well. Providing structure and encasing our muscles and intracellular fluids. Except in the fascial network, it's made out of a pliable collagen rather than more rigid cellulose as in the actual fruit.

Rather than the previous reference to the filmy layer of tissue one peels away from chicken before cooking, I think the grapefruit version provides more insight into the networking aspect of our fascial system.
It's not only encasing muscles, but actually serves as an organizing structure throughout our body, cells, muscles, bone.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Scar tissue

What is it?
Fibrous tissue that develops with healing of the skin after trauma, surgery or burns resulting in pain, sensitivity, numbness, tingling, or dense buildup of tissue in affected areas. 

How can Myofascial release help?
MFR decreases tightness of scar tissue to alleviate pain, restore normal sensation, and decrease thickness of scar tissue. 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Don't get stuck indoors this Spring...

"Seven Points Seven Fingers is all it takes"
Acupuncture offers tools for both preventing spring allergy symptoms and getting rid of them. Specifically, there are seven acupuncture points that can work wonders for preventing and relieving spring allergies.
Check out this map of sinus relieving points.
HAPPY SPRING 2012

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Case Study Shows Benefits of Myofascial Release

Case Study Shows Benefits of Myofascial Release

"Why does this massage feel so different?"

Yesterday one of the PT patients at NYC Spine and Sport rehab center made the obvious and simple observation that the "massage" work I was using for his 20minute session was so much less painful than other treatments. Utilizing the moment to illuminate the Myofascial approach of the graduating, sinking, pressure effect, I explained that the difference is FASCIA. At first, it must sound like a very strange word for someone hearing it for the first time. As the light bulb began to flicker, the patient asked, "what is fascia?" In the 30 second window of attention that I would have,I succinctly tried to introduce the difference between working on the connective tissue vs specific muscles. Connective tissue is present from head to toe, front to back, inside out. It's encases the muscle itself allowing us to release tension, restriction, restore balance, alignment more comprehensively. Hopefully,this didn't totally overwhelm my patient. All I do know is that he was delighted to receive benefits of feeling better without being terrorized through very painful tactics. Especially on the dreaded Illiotibial tract of soft tissue that runs along the outside of one's leg. So very sensitive!

Here's a great resource to learn more about this unique and especially valuable concept:
http://www.myofascialrelease.com/fascia_massage/public/fascia.asp

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Solar flares. Imagine this!

Solar Flares 2012. Near Australia somewhere.
Posted by Picasa

The new home of Amanda Donis Massage Therapy NYC. Seeing is Believing.


Very cool "braille" style wall art

Front hall area; Experience the exhale feeling from the beginning


Awesome and spacious treatment rooms. Always clean, welcoming, and therapeutically focused
It's a Massage therapist's dream come TRUE

Why Myofascial Massage ? What's the big difference?

Myofascial release is a form of manual therapy addressing specifically the connective tissue layer of the body. It's the connective tissue that offers a filmy kind of covering over every part of our body from Head to toe, also inside-out starting at the cellular level. So when you think of gaining balance, greater flexibility, freeing up tension in your tight hamstrings, hips, or calves, the more comprehensive approach is to work on your fascia. 
Rather than going for swedish massage or just deep tissue massage to gain valuable circulation of blood and of course, to feel good, relaxed, you can address deeper issues with alignment and pain through Myofascial massage. 
What to know?
Pressure is applied in accordance with feedback from the soft tissue that the therapist is feeling. Using a sustained pressure that only gradually deepens as the connective tissue warms up, softens, and melts to deeper layers. This is how the technique feels. Gradually, the pressure increases to more intense levels helping relieve pressure or tension in the fascia tissue. Overtime, your structure, spine, joints can then realign with a new found sense of alignment and balance. Thus giving you more freedom to move.

Myofascial massage offers the recipient time to feel the connectivity of their structure and soft tissue. Making you more aware of where your imbalances lie and helping you gain perspective.

Try it for yourself and feel the difference

Sanity through Nature

Here's somethings about Nature to consider amidst urban living:
Today, we enjoy the comfort of indoor living. When it gets too hot, we turn on the air conditioning; when it rains, we have a roof to shelter us. Without the sanctuary of our homes and other buildings, we would often be uncomfortable and unable to fulfill our daily responsibilities. But have we drifted too far away from nature? How might we benefit from a daily effort to experience the great outdoors?
A large amount of research suggests that there is a strong relationship between feeling connected to nature and a variety of desirable outcomes including satisfaction with life, close relationships with others, self-acceptance and feeling positive emotions. If you spend most of your time indoors, there are many ways to make nature a bigger part of your life. Here are some ways you can experience the benefits of Mother Earth:
1. Take a walk. One experiment found that a mere 15 minute walk led to feelings of enthusiasm, aliveness and positive emotions, compared to taking a walk indoors. Whether you prefer brisk morning air, the full intensity of the sun, or a cool evening breeze, spending just a few minutes outside can have a great impact on your day.
2. Look at pictures. The beneficial effect of nature is so powerful that just looking at pictures of beautiful scenery can make a difference! One study found that looking at four nature pictures for two minutes each increased feelings of vitality and vigor, while looking at pictures of urban buildings decreased these feelings. If the weather is less than inviting, this is a great alternative to get a happiness boost from nature.
3. Get some plants. In what rooms do you spend the most time? Fill them with plants! In addition to producing oxygen, plants also seem to make us feel good. In fact, one study found that being surrounded by plants was associated with being more generous toward other people! Among many other plants, the English Ivy, Spider plant, and Peace Lily add the extra benefit of air filtration.
Do you feel close and connected to the great outdoors? How often do you savor and enjoy this connection?
Make time in your day for just one short walk. If this is not possible, remember that you can enjoy the benefits of nature in your home or workplace. Regardless of how nice the weather is, breathe the air, gaze at stars and don't forget there is a moon up there in the night sky.
Article taken from Huffington Post