2 Your Health: How Does Physical Therapy Help with Pain Relief?

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What causes pain? Why am I experiencing pain? Why does some pain persist longer?

What Is Pain?

Pain is an early sign of warning that is essential to help us minimize contact with damaging or noxious stimuli. It is a normal human experience. Have you ever touched a hot surface or stepped on a sharp object? Special nerves, called nociceptors, send information towards our brains to warn of damage. Our immediate response is to take our hand off the hot surface or take our foot off the sharp object. This is a withdrawal reflex that occurs after our brain receives the information to further protect us from harm.

The Most Common Type of Pain

Called nociceptive pain (naa·ki·sep·tuhv), this type of pain plays a role in sending warning signals to protect the body from further injury in response to a noxious stimuli or mechanical stress. These pain receptors, called nociceptors, exist in the skin, muscles, and joints.

Does Pain = Injury?

Pain can sometimes persist even without injury. This does not always mean there is damage happening in your body. Think about pain like an alarm system designed to keep us safe from harm. With chronic or persisting pain, this can mean pain signals keep firing even after the body’s tissues have healed.

We have 400 nerves stretching 45 miles in our body. They send information back and forth to and from your brain. When you have an injury, your nerves become sensitive to protect you. With chronic pain, your nerves get stuck in this “sensitive” mode. Your body thinks this is a threat and will sound off your alarm. When your alarm goes off, your brain continues to process it as pain.

Three Helpful Tips to Manage Pain

1. Exercise. Exercise, including low to moderate intensity aerobic exercise, helps to release endorphins that make you feel good. Endorphins are hormones that increase feelings of well-being.

2. Sleep. Research has shown that sleep has a significant effect on everyday life and overall health. Aim for 6-8 hours of sleep each day. Sleep aids in healing and allows for the body to recover.

3. Nutrition. It has been shown that a low dietary intake of micronutrients such as vitamins B1, B3, B6, B12, D, magnesium, zinc, and omega 3-fatty acids are often associated with inflammatory pain. Dietary intake can also enhance function of the nervous, immune, and endocrine systems.

How Physical Therapy Helps with Pain Relief

Physical therapists provide you with an individualized plan to help areas of your daily life that pain interferes with. Physical therapists also provide you with safe and appropriate activity modifications that aid in performing daily activities. Physical therapy may also include therapeutic exercise, which provides general benefits associated with improved overall physical health and functioning. Your physical therapists will prescribe exercises to improve strength and flexibility while decreasing impairments. Contact AzOPT today to get started on your journey to living and feeling betterpain free! Learn more at azopt.net.