By Dr. Kintaro Oku, DC on Dec 11, 2007 in Blog | Comments Off
Generally, when a patient is accepted for care, initial treatment is scheduled for two weeks (obviously case-dependant). At that point we re-evaluate and determine the success or failure of treatment. If the patient is not progressing as well as expected, we either switch treatment approaches and treat for another two weeks, or refer the patient [...]
By Dr. Kintaro Oku, DC on Nov 27, 2007 in Active Release Techniques® | 0 Comments
In some ways, pain is actually a good thing. Pain lets us know that there is something wrong, and that there are problems that need to be addressed. If your brain and body sense pain and/or injury, you can easily imagine how your body responds with compensatory movements to avoid the injured tissues. Most repetitive [...]
By Dr. Kintaro Oku, DC on Nov 20, 2007 in Active Release Techniques® | 0 Comments
Treatment with Dr. Kintaro Oku, DC at Advanced Chiropractic Specialists bases treatment on an evidence-based approach incorporating “best practices” into my recommendations. Best practices include treatment based on three important concepts: (1) the best available scientific evidence, (2) clinical decision-making, and (3) patient values. Incorporating a best practice model into daily practice insures that my [...]
By Dr. Kintaro Oku, DC on Nov 19, 2007 in Active Release Techniques® | 0 Comments
Adhesions (scar tissue) is a dead fibrotic tissue that forms mostly in muscles, tendons, ligaments, fascia, and joints. Scar Tissue occurs as a result of injury, surgery or repetitive motion. When a muscle, tendon or ligament is torn (strained or sprained) or nerve is damaged, healing occurs in three stages called the inflammatory response: acute [...]
By Dr. Kintaro Oku, DC on Nov 17, 2007 in Active Release Techniques® | 0 Comments
The best way to explain what ART does is to use the Paintbrush Analogy. Start off by saying… “Imagine yourself painting with a paintbrush. The bristles on the paint brush represent your muscle fibers – they glide and move smoothly next to each other without anything on it. You paint, leave out the paintbrush overnight, [...]