Scar Tissue Relief Boston MA

"The reality is if you've ever had an injury, you have scar tissue," says Natalie Nevins, a medical doctor and a certified yoga instructor in Hollywood, California. Scar tissue forms as the body’s natural response to trauma, such as sprains, strains, and repetitive stress injuries to muscles and joints.

Ajay D Wasan, MD
(617) 732-8510
75 Francis St
Boston, MA
Business
Brigham & Women's Hospital Anesthesiology
Specialties
Anesthesiology

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Federico Arturo Villa
(617) 726-3030
55 Fruit Street
Boston, MA
Specialty
Anesthesiology

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Charles Joseph Cote, MD
(617) 726-2607
55 Fruit St
Boston, MA
Specialties
Anesthesiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Albany Med Coll, Albany Ny 12208
Graduation Year: 1972

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Richard Mario Pino, MD
(617) 724-8545
35 Fruit St
Boston, MA
Specialties
Anesthesiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: La State Univ Sch Of Med In New Orleans, New Orleans La 70112
Graduation Year: 1990

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Rouzbeh Jahansouz, MD
(617) 726-3855
55 Fruit St
Boston, MA
Specialties
Anesthesiology
Gender
Male
Education
Graduation Year: 2007

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Elliott Sanders Farber, MD
(617) 732-8219
2 S Cedar Pl # 3
Boston, MA
Specialties
Anesthesiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Loyola Univ Of Chicago Stritch Sch Of Med, Maywood Il 60153
Graduation Year: 2001

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Josephine Marie Hernandez
(617) 636-6044
750 Washington St
Boston, MA
Specialty
Anesthesiology

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Miroslaw Owczarek, MD
88 E Newton St
Boston, MA
Specialties
Anesthesiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Akademia Med, Lodz, Poland
Graduation Year: 1989

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Joshua Daniel Weber, MD
(617) 726-3030
21 Bowdoin St Apt 1A
Boston, MA
Specialties
Anesthesiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Ks Sch Of Med, Kansas City Ks 66103
Graduation Year: 2002

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Nabil Ramez Fahmy
(617) 724-0342
55 Fruit St Cln 3
Boston, MA
Specialty
Anesthesiology

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Deep-Down Pain Relief

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By Jennifer Lang

As soon as I got out of bed, I knew something was wrong. My left foot felt fine, but my right one hurt each time I took a step. I did a quick mental check of potential causes: a bike ride with kids—OK. A vigorous yoga class—maybe. A 30-minute jump-roping session in my lightweight, snazzy sneakers—ouch!

For the following two weeks, I winced when I walked. An orthopedist, who X-rayed my foot, discovered a bone spur and the beginnings of mild arthritis in both feet. He concluded that I’d pinched a nerve jumping rope in non-supportive shoes. Prescription: time, patience, and no more strenuous yoga.

A week later, still in pain, I went to a chiropractor. After reviewing the doctor’s report, he felt my right foot, then left, then right again. New diagnosis: scar tissue. It’s normal, he said, but because of a severely sprained ankle 13 years ago, I had a lot of it.

Hearing about everyone else’s aches, my guess is I’m not alone. Many people walk around with vague pain in their shoulders or backs thinking they’ve got tendonitis or arthritis. What if it’s not one of those catchall “itises,” but really scar tissue? And what if healing requires a more hands-on approach and some yoga-like stretching instead of an anti-inflammatory and a sling?

Moving the matrix
“The reality is if you’ve ever had an injury, you have scar tissue,” says Natalie Nevins, a medical doctor and a certified yoga instructor in Hollywood, California. Scar tissue forms as the body’s natural response to trauma, such as sprains, strains, and repetitive stress injuries to muscles and joints. It consists primarily of collagen, which is a type of connective tissue that assists healing of the damaged tissues. “We often think of it as bad, but without it our bodies would never heal,” says Nevins.

But scar tissue formation isn’t always problem-free. Unlike soft tissue—which has fibers running alongside each other in the same direction—scar tissue can form randomly, potentially causing pain and limiting function. “Think of a game of pick-up sticks where you stand the sticks upright in your hand and then gently let go, allowing them to drop any which way,” says Nevins. “That’s what scar tissue can do if you don’t help your body heal properly.” Meaning? Say you sprain your wrist. Most likely, your instinct is to immobilize it based on the RICE theory—rest, ice, compression, and elevation. But what you really need to do is keep moving. “Rest doesn’t mean immobilize,” says Nevins. “It means do what you can do—gentle, pain-free, range-of-motion, non-weight-bearing exercises—and slowly work your way up each day.” If you keep proper motion going and strengthen the surrounding area, slowly working to rehabilitate the injury and stretch the surrounding areas that are tight, scar tissue will lay down in the same pattern as the original tissue.

Easy does it

Because scar tissue takes years to form and is created any time you damage skin, tendons, ligaments, fascia, muscle...

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