Treatment of Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome according to the Fascial Distortion Model: A Prospective Case Control Study
- 01Study evaluated FDM for medial tibial stress syndrome
- 02Manual techniques were applied to lower leg fascia
- 03Patients reported significant pain reduction
- 04Exercise tolerance improved after treatment
Manual therapy using the Fascial Distortion Model may offer rapid pain relief and improved function for acute shin splints.
Medial tibial stress syndrome (MTSS) is a common problem among athletes and soldiers. There is no proven theory that could explain the pathophysiology of shin splints. The therapies described so far are time-consuming and involve a high risk of relapse. The method according to the fascial distortion model (FDM) addresses local changes in the area of the lower leg fascia. It is suited to reduce pain and functional impairments associated with this symptom complex by applying targeted manual techniques. 32 patients (male: 30; female: 2) participated in this study. Visual analogue scale (VAS) was used for the quantification of pain. Scores were also given to rate the maximum painless exercise tolerance of the patients. Subsequently treatment of the crural fascia was performed. Patients retested ability of running and jumping. Therapy was continued until full exercise tolerance or painlessness was reached. A significant reduction of the VAS pain score from 5.2 to 1.1 could be achieved . The impairment of exercise tolerance could be reduced from 7 to 2 points . The duration of treatment was 6.3 (SD: 4.3) days on average. The FDM therapy is a potential effective method for acute treatment of MTSS.
- APA
- Christoph Schulze, Susanne Finze, Rainer Bader, & Andreas Lison (2014). Treatment of Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome according to the Fascial Distortion Model: A Prospective Case Control Study. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/treatment-of-medial-tibial-stress-syndrome-according-to-the-fascial-distortion-model-a-prospective-case-control-study/
- MLA
- Christoph Schulze, et al. "Treatment of Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome according to the Fascial Distortion Model: A Prospective Case Control Study." 2014, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/treatment-of-medial-tibial-stress-syndrome-according-to-the-fascial-distortion-model-a-prospective-case-control-study/.
- Chicago
- Christoph Schulze et al. 2014. "Treatment of Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome according to the Fascial Distortion Model: A Prospective Case Control Study.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/treatment-of-medial-tibial-stress-syndrome-according-to-the-fascial-distortion-model-a-prospective-case-control-study/
- A2009The treatment of Chronic Low Back Pain following the principles of the Fascial Distortion Modell (FDM)
- A2018A fundamental critique of the fascial distortion model and its application in clinical practice
- A2011Assessing the influence of FDM to the postoperative healing processes in distal fracture of the radius
- Ep. 173173. The electrical body part 2, Why do we get sick?
You can do everything right – eat well, exercise, take the right nutritional supplements, get treatment – but still not heal. Why? In this episode, we go deeper into Tennant's mod…
- Ep. 03333. Back pain and other problems related to Fascia
Today's episode of the Fascia Guide is about back pain, neck problems, runner's knee, tennis elbow, diffuse pain, and much, much more. I have pain in... – could it be related to F…
