Motor Vehicle Accident (MVA) Rehabilitation is a very specialized type of rehabilitation with a collaborative goal to return you to the physical state that you were in the minute before your car accident occurred. MVA Rehabilitation often requires the care of more than one health care provider and may involve blending such treatments as physiotherapy and massage. Other options may include chiropractic care, acupuncture, active (exercise) therapy, and hydrotherapy.

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While acute pain is a normal sensation triggered in the nervous system to alert you to possible injury and the need to take care of yourself, chronic pain is different. Chronic pain persists. Pain signals keep firing in the nervous system for weeks, months, even years. Common chronic pain complaints include headache, low back pain, cancer pain, arthritis pain, neurogenic pain, psychogenic pain.

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Home exercise program is an education program for our patients provided by physiotherapists or chiropractors. It is designed to provide more strength and improve patient's lifestyle at home.

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Work Hardening is a highly structured goal-oriented, individualized treatment program designed to return a person to work. Work Hardening programs, which are interdisciplinary in nature, use real or simulated work activities designed to restore physical, behavioral, and vocational functions. Work hardening addresses the issues of productivity, safety, physical tolerances, and worker behaviors.

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Elbow Injuries Rehabilitation

Elbow Rehabilitation in Toronto

No matter what type of elbow injury you have, your elbow rehab should focus on several main areas to be effective. If you are suffering from elbow pain, or are currently rehabilitating an elbow injury, make sure that your program is addressing all of these areas.

Improving Range of Motion

Loss of motion at the elbow joint is not common, but it does occur.

Depending on your injury, you may not be able to fully bend or straighten your elbow. Your elbow program should focus on improving your range of motion.

If your motion is limited by joint tightness, your ATC or PT may need to perform joint mobilizations. This type of restriction is common after a fracture, or if you have been in a cast and your elbow immobilized for a period of time.

If your motion is limited by muscular tightness, stretching is the way to fix it. Stretches for your forearm, as well as your shoulder should be included in your program.

Improving Strength

Strengthening exercises for the biceps, triceps, forearm extensors, and forearm flexors are important for any rehab program. What is important to remember about the elbow is its relationship to the shoulder. Many times weaknesses at the shoulder, especially in the scapular stabilizers and rotator cuff can contribute to elbow problems.

If you have a chronic or overuse type of elbow injury, like tennis elbow, you may need to focus some of your rehab efforts on your shoulder. Weakness at the shoulder often contributes to overload of the elbow muscles, resulting in pain.

Make sure that your elbow rehab is addressing any possible weakness at the shoulder in addition to strengthening of the elbow muscles.

Improving Mechanics

Many elbow injuries are caused by improper mechanics. This is especially true for throwing athletes. If you are not properly aligned, or if you are using poor form, your elbow will suffer.

Evaluation of throwing mechanics, or any biomechanical evaluation should be done by either your athletic trainer, physical therapist, or coach.

Make sure that they are evaluating your entire body, not just the elbow. Sometimes mechanical problems at the shoulder or hips can contribute to elbow injury. Remember everything is connected!

Summary

Elbow rehab must focus on improving range of motion, improving strength, and proper mechanics in order to be successful. Make sure that your program is not neglecting the shoulder, both for strengthening and for proper mechanics. Talk with your athletic trainer or physical therapist if your rehab program does not inlcude one of these areas.

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