Article by Joe Box
Take a technical overview of IMS, a dry needling technique used to stimulate trigger points and reduce chronic myofascial pain.
Also known as “Dry Needling” IMS is a modern technique for relieving chronic muscular tension.
IMS does not involve the injection of any substance into the tissue. Instead, specifically-placed needles in myofascial trigger points or taut bands of muscle tissue induce a reflex response that causes a shortened muscle to relax and lengthen.
A single needle is usually used on an individual client with each selected spot being stimulated with the needle for about 30 seconds before it is removed and used in another spot. It is discarded at the end of the session. The research into the effect of IMS is emerging but there are several likely mechanisms by which IMS alleviates chronic myofascial pain.
The spots where needles are inserted first have to be identified by palpation. These painful “trigger points”, as they are commonly called, have been shown to have an increased concentration of acetylcholine on biopsy at the synaptic cleft.
This excess neurotransmitter leads to sarcomere contraction and formation of a taut band (1). It is realistic to assume that chronically shortened muscles can physically cause a large variety of pain syndromes by pulling on various structures as well as by compressing local blood vessels, causing ischemia and hypoxia (2).
It is known that dry needling can cause a decrease in spontaneous electrical amplitude and subsequent relaxation via either a direct local electrical stimulus or via a reflex mechanism (3). This means that as the needle is introduced into muscle tissue it can cause a shortened muscle to visibly fasciculate and subsequently relax (4).
Therefore, by manipulating a needle in muscle the Physiotherapist can induce repeated fasciculation which decreases the supply of excess acetylcholine in the area resulting in muscle relaxation (2).
In summary, IMS needling is theorized to relieve pain via the following mechanisms:
- Joe Box, MSC PT, cGIMS, Owner Pinpoint Physiotherapy and IMS
Sarcopenia is a natural, progressive loss of skeletal muscle as we age. Fortunately, this process can be slowed down.
Frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis) is a painful shoulder condition of gradual onset that is associated with stiffness and difficulty sleeping on the affected side.
Nearly 8 million Canadian residents are living with the diagnosis of chronic pain1. Living with pain can impact one’s abilities to participate in activities of daily living—such as work, school, and socialization. There are many possible branches of treatment for chronic pain, and this article highlights the positive role that injectable therapies can have.