How Can Intramuscular Stimulation (IMS) Help with Pain?

How Can Intramuscular Stimulation (IMS) Help with Pain?

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Physiotherapist discusses How Can Intramuscular Stimulation (IMS) Help With Pain?

Physiotherapist discusses How Can Intramuscular Stimulation (IMS) Help With Pain?

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Video transcript

Featuring Steve Wong, BHK, BScPT, Dip.Manip.PT, FCAMPT, CAFCI, CGIMS, TSCC-2, Treloar Physiotherapy, Vancouver BC

Video Title : How Can Intramuscular Stimulation (IMS) Help With Pain?

Duration: 3 minutes, 1 second

IMS stands for Intramuscular Stimulation. It's a dry needling technique that looks like acupuncture, but actually little bit different, and it's commonly used to treat chronic muscle pain. Today, we commonly see it used for muscular types of pain throughout the body, whether it's in your neck, your shoulders, your lower back, your elbow, even in your legs. So it's throughout the body.

IMS treats primarily neuropathic pain. What that means is nerves throughout your body can start to get hypersensitive and hyper reactive. What that means is nerves start to feel extra pain when there really shouldn't be any pain. This manifests itself as tightness throughout the body, and so IMS will really treat that in a very effective way.

Quite often we see people coming in for IMS for things like rotator cuff tendonitis, rotator cuff tendinopathy, elbow pain, neck stiffness, chronic shoulder pain and stiffness, jaw pain, chronic hip pain, lower body stiffness, general body tightness and nothing will just make it let go. The main process is a needle is inserted through a muscle as it hits a little nerve ending in the muscle receptor, it actually stimulates a reaction, and that reaction leads to a muscle relaxation. We call it a reflexive relaxation. Once the muscle is relaxed, a number of things have happened. First of all, you, the pain has been reduced. The tension has been reduced. So now we've taken away some of that, that tightness along the tendon and the pressure that's being put on the joint, the disc and the nerve, and inevitably, you're trying to reduce the pain sickness.

The second thing that happens is special cells in the bloodstream start to get released, which help to remodel the area of pain as well as the area of trauma. The third physiological effect is a current of injury or energy flows through the muscle, which tries to allow the muscle to repattern itself and to let it function normally again.

Treatment frequency really depends on, obviously, the nature of the condition, as well as your age. We typically will see somebody once a week, and the goal weaning them up to maybe once every two to three weeks. Sometimes people may need a maintenance type of treatment plan where they're coming once every month per se.

If you're interested in IMS what you want to do is visit a certified and trained practitioner gun, IMS and that could be one of either a medical doctor, or a registered physiotherapist.

Presenter: Mr. Steve Wong, Physiotherapist, Vancouver, BC

Local Practitioners: Physiotherapist

This content is for informational purposes only, and is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified healthcare professional with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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