If you haven’t heard of pickleball, you might be behind the times. According to the Sports & Fitness Industry Association, pickleball was the fastest-growing sport in the United States from 2019 to 2021 with an estimated 5 million people playing it.Pickleball offers a great workout, great community and great fun. Read on to find out more about this sport and how to get involved with it in the Dubuque Area.
This year, I have had the opportunity to work with a few pickleball players in physical therapy. Prior to working with them I knew a little about the game, had played it a few times myself and knew that it was growing in popularity, especially in the older adult population. What I didn’t know is that there is a Pickleball Club in Dubuque that gets together a few times every week to play. I had the opportunity to work with one of those players in physical therapy, and she invited me to one of their get togethers to educate the group on the importance of a warm up and cool down. I even got to practice those things with the members.
Let’s back it up. How about we start with a little background on what pickleball is.
Pickleball is like small scale tennis, or maybe like giant ping pong. Either way, it is fun, fast paced and great exercise.You can play singles or doubles pickleball, with each player holding a paddle and using a ball similar to a wiffleball. The rules follow closely to those of badminton.
Pickleball is beneficial to your health in many ways:
challenges your cardiovascular system– you will probably be breathing heavy after a good pickleball match!
requires flexibility in your spine and hips– that is why it is always a good idea to perform a good warm up and cool down.
works on your reflexes– because the pickleball court is small, it requires a quick reaction time to reach the ball before it hits the court.
it is a social game – being social and exercising are both so good for your mental health!
Like any other sport, if you don’t have the appropriate fitness level as your baseline, you are more likely to end up with an injury. Use a good, dynamic warm up (like the one I taught the Dubuque Pickleball Club) including marches, leg swings, spinal rotations, etc. to help reduce injuries. It is also to ease into it, playing for 30 minutes or less the first time and then gradually increasing the amount of time you play. To be a successful pickleball player, you’ll need good balance, spine and hip rotation, good leg strength and fast reflexes.All of those things are things a physical therapist can help you improve!
So where can I play??
In nice weather, Dubuque has a few outdoor pickleball courts. There are courts at Veterans Memorial Park near Wahlert High School and at Flora Park. In the winter, the options are a little more limited. The Peosta Community Center has courts that can be reserved 1 week in advance for non members and 2 weeks in advance for members. There is a daily fee for non members. Find out more on their website: https://www.cityofpeosta.org/community-centre/wellness-amenities.
So, don’t snooze on pickle ball! Whether it’s outside during nice weather or indoors this winter, pickle ball is a great sport for people of all ages to help maintain your fitness and stay active!
(used with permission from the APTA Private Practice Section)
Nobody is going to be surprised to hear that Physical Therapists work with muscles. But we bet a lot of people would be surprised to learn that the muscles inside your pelvis are included. While the pelvic muscles don’t get as much attention as the biceps or hamstrings, they can still cause problems that need treatment. Here are a few examples:
Urinary Incontinence
Urinary incontinence is the involuntary leakage of urine. More than 13 million people in the United States have this issue. There are different types of incontinence, but the most common are stress and urge incontinence.
Stress incontinence is when leakage happens during coughing, sneezing, or laughing.
Urge incontinence is a result of the bladder being overactive or unstable. People with urge incontinence often often have triggers that cause the involuntary loss of urine, such as hearing running water.
Pelvic Pain
This is defined as any pain that occurs either internally or externally in the pelvic or genital area. Both men and women can be affected, but it’s more common in women.
What’s the Cause?
Most incontinence is caused by issues with the pelvic muscles – either weakness or tightness.There can be other contributing factors like spasms that cause bladder contractions, or conditions like anxiety may increase the urge to empty the bladder.
Pelvic pain is also usually attributed to either tightness or weakness of the muscles of the pelvic floor.The pelvis is made up of three bones, forming three joints where they meet. These joints need to be stabilized by an outside force. The job of the muscles and ligaments in and around the pelvis is to provide that stabilizing force. If the muscles are too tight, the joints will have an excessive amount of compression on them. Too loose, and the joints of the pelvis can experience shear forces. Both conditions result in pelvic pain.
What can PT do?
Because incontinence and pelvic pain are usually musculoskeletal conditions, physical therapy can offer a lot of effective treatments. Some examples include:
Exercise – strengthening or stretching of the pelvic muscles or the core can help correct imbalances, improve pelvic stability and reduce pain.
Biofeedback – This involves using sensors placed on the body while doing exercise to help the patient identify which muscle groups are working and bring awareness to areas of tightness or weakness.
Education – For incontinence, learning how the bladder normally functions can help you to understand changes that can be made to improve symptoms. Learning about posture and how to improve alignment of the pelvis and the trunk can help to reduce pain and improve tolerance for positions like sitting and standing.
Manual Therapy – joint mobilizations, trigger point release, soft tissue massage, myofascial release, and other techniques can help improve mobility of the pelvic joints, decrease tone in spastic muscles, and reduce pain.
If you’re experiencing pelvic problems, a specially trained physical therapist can complete a comprehensive evaluation, help determine the cause, and design a customized treatment plan to help.
One of the things about being a physical therapist I enjoy is the daily variety it brings. After all, no injury is exactly like another. However, there are some consistencies. For example, almost everyday, I hear the phrase “No pain, no gain.”There is certainly a time and a place for the sentiments conveyed by this saying, but it generally isn’t my favorite thing to hear in the physical therapy clinic.
Where did this phrase even come from?
The phrase in question has actually existed in slight variations for quite awhile. For example, around 700 BC the Greek poet Hesiod conveys the idea a little more elegantly writing, “before the road of excellence, the immortal gods have placed sweat” (Works and Days, c. 700 BC). Other early uses include those by Sophocles and Rabbi Ben Hei Hei. Generally, these authors are using the phrase in the context of some sort of life struggle.
Most of us, thanks to a number of more recent celebrity trainers and exercise enthusiasts, are probably more familiar with the use of this phrase in the context of exercising. And this is what I think most of the patients I hear this phrase from are trying to reference. However, the pain they are usually talking about is not the same pain our favorite Hollywood action stars are embracing to get their superhero physiques. What’s the difference? Let’s dive a little deeper into the science of pain.
So what exactly is pain?
First of all, pain is a complicated and multifaceted topic. As a medical community, we are still learning about it. Pain is also uniquely personal. What is painful to someone could be an entirely different sensory experience to someone else. The rest of the discussion regarding pain is not meant to be an all encompassing guide to pain science. In fact, for the sake of keeping this post from turning into a textbook, some of the technical aspects of pain science will only be discussed briefly. Of course, if you have any specific questions you should reach out to your healthcare provider. Meriam-Webster defines pain as “a localized or generalized unpleasant bodily sensation or complex of sensations that causes mild to severe physical discomfort and emotional distress and typically results from bodily disorder (such as injury or disease).” The key thing to keep in mind as you keep reading is that pain is a “sensation or complex of sensations.” As pain relates to physical therapy, it’s generally the reason that people seek help from a physical therapist. When you go to a physical therapy clinic for your first session, you probably filled out a brief survey asking you about your pain and maybe whether or not you could perform certain tasks. Two of these questions likely went something like this:
Describe the quality of your pain: aching, sharp, stabbing, numb, burning, shooting, etc.
Rate the intensity of your pain: 0 – 10
Now, no health care provider is going to put a ton of stock in your answers to either of these questions. However, they can give us some useful information, including in explaining why I’m often hesitant to reinforce the phrase “No pain, no gain.”
“Describe your pain…”
Let’s consider quality first. There are lots of variables that contribute to pain:
Actual mechanical changes to the tissue around the injured area.
Chemicalchanges to the injured area such as inflammatory markers and inflammation itself.
Neurologic changes to nerves communicating information about the injured area to your central nervous system.
Even changes within your central nervous system influencing your emotional response to the pain.
Each of these alone is worthy of several graduate level lectures, and this is where I’m going to make sure we don’t get too deep into the exact physiology. Many experts in the science of pain will describe these contributing factors as a “mosaic.” This term reflects the uniqueness of each pain experience as the factors resulting in the experience will vary.You may not realize this initially, but if you think back to any of your injuries or aches, you can probably tell that each one is a little different. For example, the pain in your shoulder that led you to physical therapy probably feels different than stubbing your toe. That shoulder pain has a specific quality to it that reflects the mosaic of factors leading to the specific pain you are feeling. If you’ve been through physical therapy before, your therapist may have even referred to this as “your pain.”
Quality makes a difference
If you tell me “No pain, no gain” while doing a therapy exercise and you are talking about the same pain that brought you into therapy, I can almost guarantee you that I’ll stop you from doing that exercise every time.First of all, you may actually just be mechanically irritating the already inflamed tissue. Beyond the obvious, what this tells me is that something about that particular movement pattern is activating the same pain system – enhancing the mosaic if you will – that brought you to physical therapy in the first place. To understand why this is not necessarily something that should be worked through or toughed out, we need to look at sensory nerve anatomy a little more closely.
Time for an anatomy lesson!
We often think of nerves as either on or off. However, with sensory nerves this really isn’t the case at all. In fact, these nerves are always firing at some baseline rate or frequency. A deviation from that baseline yields the experience of some kind of sensation.When you think about it, this makes a lot of sense with simple everyday experiences. Holding a hot drink on a cold day will cause nerves relaying temperature information to fire at an increased rate. However, those same nerves will fire at an even faster rate if you accidentally come in contact with the hot water used to prepare that drink leading to a decidedly less comfortable experience.
Nerves are also highly adaptive. Staying with the temperature theme, imagine getting into a hot tub that’s just a little too hot. If you were to get in quickly (like you may do if getting into a cold pool) the water temperature is probably going to be pretty uncomfortable. But if you get in the way we learned to as kids (a few inches deeper every half minute or so), you give your nerves time to adjust. Every time you inch deeper, your nerves fire at a faster rate. But because you only exposed a few inches of skin to the hot water, they do not reach a rate that prompts you to withdraw. And as you leave your feet in the hot tub, eventually your nerves return to their baseline and you feel like you are used to the temperature. Moreover, this adaptation lasts for a short period. If you get out of the hot tub and then come back in a few minutes, you’ll find that it is easier to get in the second time around.
“But wait, shouldn’t that mean that if I keep pushing through the pain eventually I’ll get used to it?”
Admittedly, that’s a good question and some of that does happen. However, I can tell you that in my experience, the people I meet who are used to pain are also always in pain. Consider a skilled movement, something like playing the guitar or driving a golf ball. If you wanted to get better at performing this skill, what would you do? Practice! Both of the aforementioned skills require quite a bit of repetition. Every time you do that movement, not only are you going to make the muscles that are involved stronger, but the nerves will begin to adapt as well, becoming more efficient at doing their role in the process. Given enough time, you will get better.
The reverse effect for pain
However, this works against us when we talk about the nerves involved in your pain experience. Every time you feel pain, the nerves that relay information about the painful area to your brain and the nerves in your brain itself become more easily activated.The end result is this system is so good at working that it is almost always active and you are almost always feeling some kind of pain. This can even go as far as to create something pain scientists call allodynia: the experience of pain from stimuli that would not otherwise cause pain. Imagine water running over your hand being a painful experience. If it is possible to avoid building up the nerve systems responsible for communicating your pain, I would prefer to avoid it.
(Now, there are certainly some exceptions to this and I think the most important is in cases of long lasting or chronic pain where this system has already been made so efficient you will probably feel a little pain/discomfort with most movements. But even in these cases, the exercises should still feel very manageable. See the following discussion on intensity.)
“Ok, that makes sense. But what about when I’m working out at the gym?”
Let’s circle back to pain quality, most of us would agree there is a certain type of discomfort that comes from exercising. It may not feel the same to all of us, but we can probably agree it is different than the kind of pain we would go see a physical therapist or doctor for. It isn’t your pain, but it is still telling you something about your body. When you are working out, you are actually causing microtrauma to your body. The loading of the tissues (muscles, tendons, etc.) that are helping you move is actually creating a little damage to them. Given appropriate time and resources to recover, your body will rebuild the areas of microtrauma and build them back stronger than they were before you worked out.
Ok give me the final word
So if you say to me “No pain, no gain,” AND you can confirm that the pain you are referencing is different than “your pain,” great! Let ‘er rip! … within reason.This is where intensity comes in. For quite a few people, this likely will not come up in the clinic because by the time you are ready to exercise to this intensity, you’ve been done with physical therapy for at least a few weeks. When you are at the gym, however, it’s a different story. Muscle fatigue or burn within reason is very valuable. However, pushing too hard could put you at risk of an injury such as a muscle strain, and that could land you back in PT with me.For other people, especially those who have been experiencing pain for a longer period of time, it may be necessary to bend the quality rule a little. In these cases, your therapist should be able to help you figure out which exercises are ok to be a little uncomfortable and which ones should feel pretty good. Sometimes we may give you a number threshold, something like no more than a 3/10 on the pain scale, but this will vary a lot person to person. A more certain intensity rule is that you shouldn’t feel like your pain is getting worse as you do more exercise or “ramping up.” In my eyes, that’s often an indicator that the exercise needs to be adjusted or at the very least that it is time for a rest break.
In summary, “No pain, no gain” is not a phrase to live by when you’re in the physical therapy clinic. There are different kinds or qualities of pain and if possible you want to avoid recreating your specific pain. When you can’t avoid doing so, make sure you keep it in check. And even if you’re feeling a good exercise burn on your third or fourth set at the gym, keep in mind that sometimes too much of anything can be a bad thing.Generally it’s better to finish your workout feeling like you could have done more than to regret doing what you did. If all those criteria are met, well… alright, No pain, No gain!