Network Magazine summer 2015 | Page 37

& REHAB HIPS DON’T LIE…? A SURPRISING CAUSE OF NECK AND SHOULDER PAIN By addressing the underlying causes of musculoskeletal dysfunction you can help your clients move better while eliminating recurrent aches and pains. WORDS: JUSTIN PRICE ne in four people suffer from neck and shoulder pain (Leijon, et. al., 2009), which affects their ability to perform everyday activities like lifting their arms to wash their hair or reach a high cupboard. It also limits their ability to participate in athletic activities and dynamic exercises common to personal training programs. Typically, people with neck and shoulder pain seek help from chiropractors, physiotherapists, doctors and other licensed O medical professionals to alleviate their pain. When their symptoms are under control, they often turn to a personal trainer to begin or continue a program of regular exercise. However, once the client begins exercising regularly and engaging in full-body dynamic activities, more often than not their neck and shoulder pain returns. This frustrating situation often causes them to drop out of training (IDEA, 2013). So why does neck and shoulder pain return so dramatically when clients begin engaging in a program of regular exercise? And what can you do, as a personal trainer, to help identify and remedy one of the most common, yet surprising, causes of neck and shoulder pain? Progressing from physical therapy to personal training When progressing from the controlled environment of physiotherapy office/ medical facility to a fitness/personal training atmosphere, clients begin performing dynamic exercises that challenge the body through multiple planes of movement. While these types of whole-body activities are necessary to burn calories and stimulate energy producing (and recovery) mechanisms, they also place a large amount of stress on the musculoskeletal system (Price & Bratcher, 2010). If one part of the body is out of alignment when the entire body is being stressed, compensations can occur. Myofascial structures above and below the imbalance must take up the slack to help keep the body balanced as it moves. Over time, these compensations can cause further musculoskeletal imbalances, myofascial restrictions and pain. How an imbalance of the hips affects the shoulders and neck The large muscles of the lumbo-pelvic-hip girdle (LPHG) such as the glutes, hip rotators, abdominals, hip flexors and erector spinae group (to name a few), dissipate tremendous forces, namely gravity and ground reaction forces, as they pass through the body (Golding & Golding, 2003). NETWORK SUMMER 2015 | 37