WHAT IS REFERRED PAIN IN A MASSAGE AND WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
It can be a very odd sensation – feeling pain in a completely different area to where your massage therapist is working on.
The feeling of pain radiating through a region of the body instead of a local site is often known as ‘referred pain’, and it can tell your therapist a lot about what’s going on in the body during a massage.
WHAT ARE TRIGGER POINTS?
If you’ve ever had trigger point therapy in a massage, you’ll know the exact moment your therapist finds the right trigger point – it’s usually when you get ready to spring off the table and out the window.
Trigger points are also commonly referred to as ‘knots’. Trigger points are essentially areas in the muscle/body that have become hypertensive and stiffen to restrict movement and attempt to act as a defence against injury and overuse. When this happens, the constriction on the muscle, blood, and oxygen to the area can send pain signals through the body’s network of nerves and present as referred pain in a different area.
For example, someone experiencing chronic headaches may actually be referred pain from a trigger point in the shoulders or neck.
COMMON TRIGGER POINT SYMPTOMS
Some of these trigger point symptoms may sound familiar:
You feel a persistent dull aching sensation
There is no clear triggering event for the pain
You can feel the pain radiating and/or moving across a region of your body
You have specific places on your body that are very sensitive to pressure
The pain may subside or feel better with movement and exercise
You may find some relief from the pain by applying heat.
TRIGGER POINT MASSAGE FOR REFERRED PAIN
Ever noticed that massage therapists have a unique talent in finding that exact spot where all your referred pain seems to stem from? Massage therapy for trigger points works by tracing your referred pain back to the source, then applying compression over a short period of time to release the muscle spasm/contraction of that trigger point.
Typically, your therapist will hold that compression point (while you’re probably gripping onto the table for dear life) until they feel a change in the tissue. That change is generally the result of the build-up of waste and tension being released from the area.
SOME CAUSES OF ACTIVATING TRIGGER POINTS AND REFERRED PAIN
Prevention is always the best cure, and there are a lot of avoidable everyday habits that could be causing referred pain such as:
Lifting your shoulders due to anxiety or stress
Constantly hunching forward and/or looking down at your device for long periods
Awkward lifting
Repetitive movements without breaks or stretching
Poor sitting and standing posture