Click here to check out our Sports Blog - 'RunTulsaRun 'Have you ever had a massage after a 5k and wondered what the benefit was? Have you gone to a massage therapist for a “sports massage” and left in more pain than relief? Have you paid for a sports massage and left without it affecting your performance at all? Perhaps it is time for you to….
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There are four basic phases of sports massage:
There are many different techniques that we employ to provide you the best sports massage experience at Rē.Some of them are:
The techniques listed above are just examples of some of what we can put together to provide you with the sports massage session that you want. Perhaps the biggest difference between the Sports Massage at Rē and the others is our holistic view of bodywork. Following some of the most successful bodywork models, we focus on three things: the individual musculature that you use in your sport, the relationship between them and your movement, and your individual training regimen. We utilize some orthopedic and osteopathic assessment techniques that may help isolate your issue to one muscle or muscle group and then we look at the entire kinetic chain, to see where else there may be fascial restriction, or a muscle that is being affected away from the initial site of complaint. After addressing the specific muscular issues, we look at what elements of your movement have been affected by the sports massage. At no time will the therapists at Rē insist on you returning, or booking an extended ‘treatment plan’. You are the athlete – this is your massage. You make that call…… Some techniques used by other professionals, in our opinion, may be counterproductive to addressing sports injuries, or may have side effects, such as bruising or extended soreness after their application. For that reason, we do not perform them. (Graston Technique ® is one of the the modalities that falls into this category). Not that these kind of treatments are bad, but they can grossly alter the musculature, and your body will need recovery time after their application, and they can be examples of working on the body instead of with the body. If you have received them, or any recent Chiropractic or Osteopathic adjustments, please let us know, and we will alter your session accordingly. We are massage therapists, not doctors, physical therapists or athletic trainers, and rest assured that if your situation warrants further examination, we are more than willing to work within your personal sports medicine team, or refer you to one of the several sports medicine professionals that we have worked with. The end result is improving your performance, period. Sports massage is not for everyone, and people who have any condition that could cause pain (broken skin and bones), any contagious disease (like the flu and shingles), anything that makes a person unable to properly judge depth or pain (like intoxication, or medications), any disease that could be made worse by massage (like the flu), any time there is the risk of causing infection (like cuts or surgical sites), or any condition that compromises a person's vitality all are contraindications for massage. If you have a concern, please discuss it with your therapist or sports medicine professional before any treatment.
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A note about ice: In our opinon, ice is probably one of the best treatments for muscular trauma, no matter how severe. Many Physicans, Athletic Trainers, and PhysicalTherapists agree, the best thing for an acute injury is rest, ice, compression, and elevation. To us at Rē, ice massage is as fundamental to sports as any other technique. As with any massage technique proper training is absolutely necessary, and due to the fact that incorrect use of any thermotherapy can be counterproductive, it is necessary to be educated in ice massage. Our personal friend and mentor in the realm of ice massage is nationally respected and recognized authority in cryotherapy and ice massage, Harold Packman.
His book "Ice Massage:The Ultimate Cryotherapeutic Alternative" , can be purchased in electronic format by clicking here. Where heat can relax a spasmed muscle and feel great, ice can break the pain-spasm-pain cycle, and deliver true therapeutic treatment helping to resolve athletic injuries faster, with less chance of increased edema or other ancillary issues. Please let us know if you would like to incorporate ice massge into your sports massage session at Rē.
The Benefits of Professional Sports Massage
1. Massage directly benefits the muscular, skeletal, nervous, circulatory, and lymphatic systems.
2. Massage reduces hyper tonicity of the muscles creating improved tone, flexibility and relaxation, as well as promoting all over muscle balance.
3. Massage reduces pain and promotes relaxation, creating a positive effects both physically and mentally.
4. Massage provides a circulatory effect of both blood and lymph, helping to keep the muscles and soft tissue in an optimum state of nutrition.
5. Massage reduces cramping and spasms as well as voluntary and involuntary splinting.
6. Massage reduces muscle soreness by increasing the oxygen supply and decreases the storing of the negative byproducts of muscular activity. This enables the athlete to recover more rapidly from injury and more completely thus reducing the likelihood of chronic problems and further injury.
7. Certain techniques used in Sports Massage effectively reduce adhesions and varying degrees of scar tissue formed in the soft tissue. This allows a true freeing of the tissues, reestablishing the full function of a muscle in contraction and elongation, also promoting muscle balance and range of motion.
8. Ice massage reduces pain, inflammation and the extent of cellular and tissue damage caused by traumatic injury and accompanying hypoxia and edema.
9. Sports Massage can allow a specific muscle to be isolated and stretched increasing its range of motion. The result is an increased potential in performance and a decrease in the chance for injury or re-injury.
10. Stretching and flexibility training utilizing facilitated stretching techniques can strengthen the individual muscles and increase flexibility. This can help the athlete establish a more effective neuromuscular balance for increased performance and injury prevention.







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