Myofascial Release Therapy (MFR) for treating compression and pain

What is Myofascial Release (MFR therapy)? How can it relieve pain? Let's discuss how MFR has improved our health and reduced pain and share articles about how MFR works. MFR helps so many different conditions that have compressed tissues, and entrapped blood vessels and nerves. The time to avoid MFR treatment would be if a person has cancer, because in releasing tight tissues, cancer cells could be released and able to migrate through the body.

Myofascial release is a way to stretch the fascial layers that holds our body together. The fascia is connective tissue that forms a web matrix that interconnects everything in the body. It has recently been described as the "Interstitium" or a new organ in the body.

Fascia can be too tight from injuries or surgical scar tissue, and hold the body in poor ergonomics which can lead to nerve compression. Fascia can be stretched or "released" and it will remodel itself by changing from a semi solid to liquid form which brings circulation to an area of compressed tissue which then expands the tissue and circulation, and it enables removal of metabolic waste products. Using their hands, the trained therapist will find the path of fascial restriction in the patient's body and push against it gently in a shearing motion, and wait for the tissue to start to slide. The patient can feel the movement and become body aware. This path of fascial movement can reach the full length of the body and cross over between sides. This path changes as it unravels, and often there is a vasomotor response that can be seen on the skin temporarily as a reddish area where circulation has been restored which is shown on the photo below near the therapist's hands. Treatment must be slow and gentle to prevent the body from guarding in a protective response. This is why aggressive methods to stretch fascia often fail and can cause injuries by tearing the fascia and forming scar tissue that just adds to the problem of fascial tightness.

Fascia also holds tissue memory, and in releasing it, sometimes there is a release of emotions tied to an injury that was a cause of the problem. Stress and injury can cause guarding behavior and tissue tightness that become permanent over time, and MFR and working on emotional health helps a person recover from the physical and emotional effects of stress and trauma on the body.

MFR is helpful to so many conditions that have an underlying physical cause. The physical therapist who developed this treatment method forty years ago is John Barnes. He has developed courses and MFR certifications for physical therapists. There is a lot of information about MFR at myofascialrelease.com as well as directory of therapists treating with MFR. A person may also contact Therapy on the Rocks in Sedona, AZ, and ask for recommendations of therapists who have been trained in the John Barnes Methods. MFR therapy is becoming better known and accepted healing therapy, although there are some doctors who are unaware of the benefits.

I wanted to create this discussion to help organize this information and I thought the Neuropathy group would be a good place to start because someone in pain might look here, but we could have this discussion in many discussion groups. Animals such as dogs, cats and horses have also benefited from this therapy. Hopefully as we collect information here, this discussion can be referenced and shared in the many other discussions on Mayo Clinic Connect.

Here is an incomplete list of conditions that can be helped with MFR treatment.

You may find this list and further information at https://www.myofascialrelease.com/about/problems-mfr-helps.aspx

Back pain
Bladder Problems (Urgency, Frequency, Incontinence, Overactive Bladder, leakage
Birth Injuries
Bulging Disc
Bursitis
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Cerebral Palsy
Cervical and Lumbar spine injuries
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Chronic Pain
Degenerative Disc Disease
Endometriosis
Emotional Trauma
Fibromyalgia
Frozen Shoulder (Adhesive Capsulitis)
Herniated Disc
Headaches or Migraines
Infertility
Interstitial Cystitis
Menstrual Problems
Myofascial Pain Syndrome
Neck Pain
Osteoarthritis
Pelvic Pain
Plantar Fascitis
Pudental Nerve Entrapment
Scars (hypertrophic, hypersensitive, painful, burn scars, mastectomy scars)
Sciatica
Scoliosis
Shin Splints
Tennis Elbow
Thoracic Outlet Syndrome
Tinnitus (ringing in the ears)
TMJ syndrome
Trigeminal Neuralgia
Vulvodynia
Whiplash

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Neuropathy Support Group.

I will bring this up with my doctor and my pain management doctor who I will be seeing before the end of the month. Thank you for the information! Susan

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@ksdm

I will bring this up with my doctor and my pain management doctor who I will be seeing before the end of the month. Thank you for the information! Susan

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Thank you!

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@ksdm

I will bring this up with my doctor and my pain management doctor who I will be seeing before the end of the month. Thank you for the information! Susan

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@ksdm You're welcome.
Jennifer

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I have great pain in my whole lower body, including feet. This has been going on for 10 years. I'm wondering if I am, even, a condidate for Myofascial Release ( MFR). I am fused L-5 through S-1. I have a pain pump. Would it, still, be possible for MFR to help in some way?
Thanks in advance.
Judy

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@jjcseck

I have great pain in my whole lower body, including feet. This has been going on for 10 years. I'm wondering if I am, even, a condidate for Myofascial Release ( MFR). I am fused L-5 through S-1. I have a pain pump. Would it, still, be possible for MFR to help in some way?
Thanks in advance.
Judy

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@jjcseck Judy, You should ask the doctor who placed the pain pump. This is like massage, except that the therapist maintains the tension and waits for the tissue to relax. If the source of your pain is generated by scar tissue from surgeries, MFR may help. Do you have restrictions in what you can do because of the pain pump? You can also have tight tissue elsewhere in the body causing tightness and fascial restrictions.
Jennifer

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@jjcseck

I have great pain in my whole lower body, including feet. This has been going on for 10 years. I'm wondering if I am, even, a condidate for Myofascial Release ( MFR). I am fused L-5 through S-1. I have a pain pump. Would it, still, be possible for MFR to help in some way?
Thanks in advance.
Judy

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Good morning, @jjcseck ....it is great to see you make your first post. Welcome! You are starting with an important question. I am going to introduce you to @jenniferhunter right now. She is the creator of the discussion about MFR on Connect. While waiting for her to respond, perhaps you would like to check out some of the MFR information.
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/myofascial-release-therapy-mfr-for-treating-compression-and-pain/
In fact, I have to leave right now for my Monday MFR session. I will check in with you when I return.
May you be safe, protected, and free from inner and outer harm.
Chris

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@artscaping

Good morning, @jjcseck ....it is great to see you make your first post. Welcome! You are starting with an important question. I am going to introduce you to @jenniferhunter right now. She is the creator of the discussion about MFR on Connect. While waiting for her to respond, perhaps you would like to check out some of the MFR information.
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/myofascial-release-therapy-mfr-for-treating-compression-and-pain/
In fact, I have to leave right now for my Monday MFR session. I will check in with you when I return.
May you be safe, protected, and free from inner and outer harm.
Chris

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Good evening, @jjcseck. I see you got to meet @jenniferhunter. Were you able to review some of the posts on the MFR discussion?

This afternoon, I spoke with my Expert MFR therapist. She agrees with @jennifer about how MFR might be helpful. As I reflect on today's session, I realize how fortunate I am to respond positively to MFR.

Please check in when you have a minute or two.
Chris

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Thank you, Jennifer & Chris.
I, really appreciate hearing from you. I did read through some of the MFR posts yesterday. I don't have any restrictions with the pain pump. But, I can't do much, even sit & read the paper, because of the pain. I will find a MFR therapist. I hope it doesn't take too long to find a good one. I don't know if it will help, but it is, certainly, worth trying!
I appreciate your replies and your kindness in doing so.
Judy

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@jjcseck

Thank you, Jennifer & Chris.
I, really appreciate hearing from you. I did read through some of the MFR posts yesterday. I don't have any restrictions with the pain pump. But, I can't do much, even sit & read the paper, because of the pain. I will find a MFR therapist. I hope it doesn't take too long to find a good one. I don't know if it will help, but it is, certainly, worth trying!
I appreciate your replies and your kindness in doing so.
Judy

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Good evening, @jjcseck, Just wanted to share this website with you. John Barnes is the developer of MFR. To find a qualified MFR therapist, please try:
https://mfrtherapists.com/
Stay in touch.
Chris

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@golfshrink

This is an amazing description of what myofascial release does. I had a double knee replacement a year ago and have had a rough go of it. I’ve withstood a ton of pain in my life, but nothing like rehab for the surgery. With Months on end of no more than two hours sleep, constant pain, as well as aggressive Physical therapy that left me with PTSD, I finally found relief with alternative therapies. Acupuncture and myofascial release has been a god send and just makes sense. My physical pain is subsiding as well as the emotional pain that has been stored in my body. It’s giving me back my life!

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I WAS a golf shrink also. I have numbness and no feeling in both feet. Lost balance, can't swing a golf club, will fall down. Do you think MFR might work? Any other suggestions? Thank You.

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