ProActive Physio, Michelle Biggins

ProActive Physio, Michelle Biggins Chartered Physiotherapy & Sports Injury Clinic Eileen Larkin is our amazing secretary who keeps everything running smoothly.

ProActive Physio is a Chartered Physiotherapy Clinic based in French Vanoli, Oranmore, and Gort Medical Centre Galway. It is run by Michelle Biggins and her fellow physiotherapy colleagues Katy Holmes, Eleanor Stafford and Margaret O Connor.

13/11/2023

Runners knee is a term associated with knee pain when running also called patellofemoral knee pain.
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Pain is typically in the front or back of the knee.
It has a gradual onset without any big incident of injury and can be aggravated by running, going up/down stairs, squatting, or prolonged sitting.
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It is often related to repeated overuse or increase in training.
It can also be related to reduced strength and control of the leg.
This leads to irritation of the knee cap joint and the muscles/tendons/ligaments around it.
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Important to consider any previous knee injury, twisting injuries, or feeling the knee locking or giving way.
Assessment is needed to rule out other structural knee injuries such as meniscal, cruciate, or collateral ligaments.
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This reel gives a taster of some exercises that can help you return to pain-free running

31/10/2023

Neck pain? Chin poker? 😝 Want to improve your sitting posture? Here is a short routine to strengthening your mid & upper back and neck muscles. I have squeezed a lot into this routine with some progressions so listen to your own body. During these exercises, muscle ache & tiredness are fine but stop if it brings on your neck pain. Try adjusting your position, or revisit another day.
Pointers •Ribs down in front • tailbone tucked/no lower back pain • think “long” neck .
Weak muscles aren’t the only component in neck pain but....they are something you can readily address & improve 💪🏼 .
Going a chat through other factors that are related to neck pain over the next few days .
Share or tag any friends who are always complaining about their neck! .

23/10/2023

Tension headache relief 🤕

Tension-type headache is a primary headache disorder affecting over 2 billion people worldwide. It is slightly more common in women (1.2:1). Tension-type headaches are normally bilateral, tightening/pressing quality, and of mild-moderate intensity. It rarely presents with nausea or sensitivity to light or sound which is more related to migraine. Tension headaches generally aren’t aggravated by exercise.

Relaxation strategies are recommended for TTH and this reel gives an example of one approach.

A simple foam roller can be a useful tool to help ease and relax some of that tension at the top of the neck/base of your skull.

**Any new headaches need to be checked out by a GP/physician.

17/10/2023

Shin splints? Share 🎥 with your runner friends!
A common complaint for runners when they increase training load or change footwear or surface. Training modification & ruling out any stress fractures is crucial and then focusing on strengthening specific muscles of the lower legs to tolerate the new demand. Exercises are demoed here by our physio Clara Linnane

03/03/2023
What are the symptoms of Osgood Schlatters Disease?• Swelling to the tibial tuberosity (bony bump at the top of your shi...
20/09/2022

What are the symptoms of Osgood Schlatters Disease?

• Swelling to the tibial tuberosity (bony bump at the top of your shin)
• Tenderness and pain on the tibial tuberosity during or after exercise
• Pain when contracting the thigh muscles against resistance or with a straight leg

What is Osgood Schlatters Disease?

• Osgood Schlatters disease is a very common cause of pain to the front of the knee in children and young athletes, particularly very active boys between the ages of 12-14. It is a condition where the tendon below your kneecap attaches to the top of the shin (known as the tibial tuberosity) becomes inflamed, painful, and swollen.

What causes Osgood Schlatters Disease?

• Osgood Schlatters is caused by irritation of the bone growth plate. The tendon from the kneecap (patella) attaches down to the growth plate in the top of shin. The thigh muscles attach to the patella, and when they pull on the patella, this puts tension on the tendon.
• When movements that involve repeated leg extension is used it can stress, strain and bony inflammation. With repeated strain new bone grows which causes a bony lump that is felt and/or seen at the top of the shin.

What can be done for Osgood Schlatters Disease?

• One of the first lines of treatment will be reduced activity levels to help let the condition settle.
• However, specific based strengthening exercises focusing on glutes and hamstrings is important. It is also important to focus on varying ranges on quadricep isometric (sustained muscle contraction with no movement) strength to help with tendon adaptation.

This blog post was written by our physio Darren Flannery.
You can book an appointment with Darren through the link below.
https://www.proactivephysio.ie/book-an-appointment

16/09/2022

Are you an office worker and get tension and tightness across your upper back, neck and shoulders? This stretch is for you!

It is one of my favourite stretches to do when I am sitting at the computer for a while or generally feeling tight across upper back.

If you can't reach your hands together, let me know and I'll post another option for you!

22/08/2022

Do you have “knots” in your neck or shoulders?

People often think that massage or stretching is their only option.

Strengthening your trapezius through its full range of motion can improve overall function of the neck and shoulders and decrease pain and sensitivity.

Any questions, comment below

Have you had Cruciate surgery or in the process of scheduling it? Darren Flannery is our Knee Specialist here in ProActi...
08/05/2022

Have you had Cruciate surgery or in the process of scheduling it?

Darren Flannery is our Knee Specialist here in ProActive Physio and has done extensive research into Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injuries both as a patient himself and chartered physio.

He has an MSc in Physiotherapy and is also an Athletic Therapist. He is head physio with Galway Senior Hurlers and has worked with Mayo U20s and Senior Football teams.

Darren's approach for his Cruciate Clinic include;

Early Phase
- Focus on pain management and swelling. Use walking aids as needed, compress the joint, elevate and take pain relief as prescribed and needed
- Focus on ROM - Regain knee extension as quickly as possible. Also focusing on regaining flexion overtime. Little and often is key!

*Poorly managed pain can result in;
- limping
- decreased quads activity
- decreased ROM - optimally wanting to have full knee extension and +90 deg flexion by 3/52 to prevent cyclops lesion developing
- increased arthrogenic inhibition (use of muscle stim in clinic that can be used in the early phases to help reduce this)
- increased muscle atrophy
- increased fear avoidance/frustration

Strength training
- Will always use isometrics to begin the loading process - important not to neglect donor site (BPTB/Hamstring/Quad)
- Progressive loading overtime rather than being too aggressive too soon. Use a mix of closed chain and open chain exercises
- TEST Don't Guess - Completed ideally with isokinetic testing. Can also use HHD in clinic to progressively measure strength

Use of Patient Reported Outcome Measures to Assess psychological readiness/fear avoidance. Again progressively tested overtime initially starting at the 3 month mark

Proprioception
- Will discuss with patients that balance is another important piece of the puzzle that needs to be targeted
- Will vary the difficulty of these type of exercises overtime starting with SL eyes open/closed to rolled up towel/wobble boards to stepping of a low step with eyes closed

Plyometrics
- Try to initiate plyometrics as soon as possible (once sufficient strength has been regained)
- Will discuss with patient that while horizontal jump/landing should not be neglected I will focus more on vertical jumps
- I use the MyJump App to test vertical jump heights on the following; DL CMJ, SL, CMJ, DL/SL Drop Jump
- I will discuss with patients that regaining Reactive Strength Index (ability to repeatedly hop for example) is key to allowing a safe RTS

Sports Specific
- Overtime, introduce sport specific drills that start as planned in nature and progress to reactive/unplanned

**Always letting patients know that optimally will want to get all testing criteria within 10% of the opposite limb/baseline.
**Never rush a return to sport. The knee will be ready when it's ready!

18/04/2022

TOP 10 TIPS FOR HAMSTRING INJURY

Sports injuries tend to garner more than their fair share of well-meaning advice and old wives tales. Hamstring injuries are no different. Maybe there is something to be said for potions, magic waterfalls, and faith healers…but until something is shown to be more effective than placebo, we are going to stick to recommending what science and research studies have found to be most effective.

If you want to
1. Accelerate your return to sport
2. Decrease your risk of re-injury

You might be interested in finding out the following;
• What is most likely to help you
• What doesn’t make a difference
• What might actually make you worse

Before you read on it is worth noting;
Inflammation is the way your body tries to heal and regenerate new cells, to repair the injury site. Inflammation is crucial for injury recovery. A lot of advice given on acute muscle injury is based on the premise that you need to stop all inflammation. This is not true. Too much isn’t good i.e. a persistent swollen ankle, but on the other side, too little inflammation interrupts the normal healing process and has a negative long term effect.

Top Ten Tips
1. Get a diagnosis
Assessment by a chartered physiotherapist is very valuable and will give you an idea on the severity, estimated timeframe for return to sport and guide you through rehab. A think tank held by the British Journal of Sports Medicine advocates for massage away from injury site and mobilisation of the lumber spine in the early stages of hamstring injury.

2. Ice
Use ice for the first 24-48hrs. It had previously been thought that ice decreased inflammation in a muscle injury, however we now know that it has more of an analgesic numbing affect to the skin which is important for pain relief and also facilitating normal walking & function as soon as possible.

3. Don’t rest
Rest should be of limited duration and restricted to immediately after the trauma. Longer periods of unloading or rest of hamstring muscles are harmful and produce adverse changes in tissue biomechanics and morphology. You should aim to start a progressive exercise and loading program from 48 hours post injury.

4. Compression and Elevation
The use of a compressive support ie tubigrip around the thigh is advocated by sports medicine experts in the initial stages for assurance and support. Elevation probably has more of a role in a distal injury ie ankle sprain, based on the hypothesis that elevation will help drain some of the swelling away from the ankle. It is not considered as important for acute hamstring tears.

5. Load, load and increasing load
Progressive mechanical loading helps to restore the strength characteristics of muscle tissue by promoting a cellular response that causes a positive structural change within the injured muscle. So, don’t rest. Start strengthening your hamstrings as soon as pain allows. Even if you can only manage basic bridges, start here and progress.
But…too much loading too soon, may cause re-bleed and further damage. You do still need to protect vulnerable tissue. The challenge for your physiotherapist is to decide what is optimal for you in terms of dosage, nature and timing and the unique mechanical stresses placed you’re your hamstrings during your sport specific activity.

6. Don’t endlessly stretch.
Pulling or stretching the injured muscle tissue into pain will more than likely cause a re-bleed within the muscle and slow down healing, especially in the early stages. There is much more evidence in the research to recommend loading and strengthening your hamstrings to facilitate healing and recovery than there is for stretching. If your sciatic nerve (main nerve to the hamstrings) is affected, stretching into pain will irritate the hell out of it! On a correct exercise program you should be mobilising the hamstrings through range as well as strengthening.

7. The river, lake, sea, and magic waterfalls…
“I’ve spent the last 3 weeks down in Blackrock and I still can’t sprint…” Hmmmm
Maybe we are being too cynical but if there is good evidence to support other interventions to assist your recovery then it might be time better spent doing that than spending 3 weeks in the sea praying for a miracle?
But, in saying that, there is some evidence to support “cold water immersion” or as we call it; the Atlantic Ocean, for recovery of DOMS (delayed onsite muscle soreness) after high intensity exercise but just not for improved recovery after a muscle injury.
So, it is unlikely that you will do any harm by wading in the cold sea or a magic river after a muscle tear but it is also unlikely that it will have any positive effect, besides placebo. If you want to improve, get strengthening.

8. Don’t take anti-inflammatories
*Unless you are specifically directed to do so. The use of anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories) had been previously advocated but their widespread use for muscle injuries is now controversial. NSAIDs include ibuprofen, aspirin, neurofen, difene etc.
As we discussed above, we want to allow some inflammation to occur. Stopping inflammation altogether is argued to have a negative effect on the long term healing process. The use of anti-inflammatories for chronic tendon injuries, (some hamstring injuries will fall into this category) has been shown to compromise healing.
If you need pain relief look to paractemol or any other simple analgesic that has the same pain relieving effect as anti-inflammatories without the higher risk of asthma exacerbation, gastrointestinal and renal side-effects, hypertension and other cardiovascular disease.

9. Sleep well, eat well, best not to go on the tear…
We know sleep helps with recovery of every cell in your body. When you get injured or sick, get enough sleep! Be aware that what you put in to your body will be utilised as fuel to either help or hinder your recovery. Alcohol, whether to celebrate or drown your sorrows, is considered to have a negative effect on muscle repair.

10. Dos and donts
Do: get a diagnosis, ice, compression, keep moving, LOAD your hamstring, eat well, sleep well
Don’t: stretch, rest, spend 3 weeks in the sea hoping for miraculous recovery, take NSAIDs, and don’t go on the absolute p**s!

All of this advice is based on our analysis of the current research and clinical guidelines into hamstring and muscle injury recovery which aims to facilitate your earliest return to sport and minimise your risk of re-injury. It is now up to you to make an informed decision on how best to manage your hamstring injury. based on; what has shown to be effective, what is of minimal benefit and what probably makes you worse.

Book an appointment with our top sports physios Galway hurling Physio Darren Flannery or Connacht Rugby physio Colin Nash....

https://www.proactivephysio.ie/team

Best of luck to Galway Hurlers & Galway / ProActive Physio Darren Flannery today in the first round of the championship ...
16/04/2022

Best of luck to Galway Hurlers & Galway / ProActive Physio Darren Flannery today in the first round of the championship against Wexford!

13/04/2022

I am a Chartered Physiotherapist with special interest in Headache and Migraine.

I treat patients with Headache & Migraine problems in our Oranmore and Gort Physiotherapy clinics.

My clinical practice is in alignment with the ICGP report for Migraine, Diagnosis & Management from a GP perspective by Dr Mary Kearney, Dr Martin Ruttledge & Ms Esther Tomkins.

1. Hands-on approach to de-sensitise the upper levels of the cervical spine, particularly C1-3. Recent research from Bogduk et al 2022 identified which levels are associated with migraine headache.
2. Exercises to improve function of the vestibular system & upper cervical spine as it relates to sitting, work and posture
3. Long-term aerobic exercise program for migraine prevention, which has been found to be as effective as topiramate
4. Strategies to improve sleep (CBTi) and decrease overall stress/tension

Message me to book an appointment.

A very Happy Christmas to all our clients, past and present from all the team at  ProActive Physio.  Stay Safe
23/12/2021

A very Happy Christmas to all our clients, past and present from all the team at ProActive Physio. Stay Safe

Fundet på Google fra christmas.365greetings.com

27/09/2021

Hamstring exercises after a hamstring injury.
1️⃣ Mobiliser: Hold hip at 90 degree and straighten knee without pushing into pain 3 X 12 twice daily
2️⃣ Diver: reach as far forward as you can while extending the back leg 3 X 6 reps
3️⃣ Single leg RDL: can replace diver as rehab progresses
4️⃣ Glider: keep affected leg in front 3 x 4 reps every 3 days.

For an individualised rehab plan and return to sport you can book an appointment below

https://www.proactivephysio.ie/pages/book-an-appointment

Address

Oranmore Business Park
Oranmore
GALWAY,

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 9pm
Tuesday 8am - 9pm
Wednesday 8am - 9pm
Thursday 8am - 9pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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