2022; The Flares of Low back pain with Activity Research Study (FLAReS): study protocol for a case-crossover study nested within a cohort study
Topics: Disability; Episodes; Exacerbations; Flare-up; Flares; Low back pain; Recurrence.
Topics: Disability; Episodes; Exacerbations; Flare-up; Flares; Low back pain; Recurrence.
Topics: fascia; innervation; nociceptor; pain
Topics: pain, fatigue, fibromyalgia, hypermobility, rheumatology
Topics: biopsychosocial profile modulation; bruxism; limbic system; stress; temporomandibular myofascial pain syndrome
Topics: Musculoskeletal pain; chronic pain; muscle; connective tissue; mind and body practices
Topics: DOMS; athletes; eccentric exercise; fascia; pain.
Topics: Hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome; Joint hypermobility; Mind-body relations; Neurodevelopmental disorders; Psychiatric disorders; Psychopathology.
Topics: hypermobility, pain, fatigue, ME/CFS, fibromyalgia
Topics: Hypermobility, Anxiety, CBT, Interoception, RCT
Topics: ageing; cerebrovascular function; cognitive decline; menopause; neurovascular coupling; nutraceutical; phytoestrogen; resveratrol
Topics: caesarean section; vaginal delivery; fascia; abdominal muscles; pain; ultrasound
Topics: Fascia, nonspecific low back pain, limb myofascial manipulation, fascial continuity, case series
Topics: Myofascial Pain Syndrome; Pressure Algometry; Neurodynamics; Chronic Pelvic Pain
Topics: Dermatomes; nerve; communications; map; cutaneous; sensory
Topics: chronic paain, neuroinflammation, inflammation, sensitization
Topics: low back pain, motor control, chronic pain, proprioception, motor cortex, somatosensory cortex, muscle spindle
Topics: vCOPD, diaphragm, low back pain, GERD, fascia
Topics: COPD, diaphragm, thoracic pain, fascia, muscle pain
Topics: exercise, analgesia, pain, catecholamines, opioid system, nitric oxide, 5-HT, noradrenergic system, endocannabinoids, anti-inflammatory cytokines
Topics: Pain quality, Thoracolumbar fascia, Multifidus muscle, Electrical stimulation, Verbal descriptors
Topics: fascia, low back pain, lumbodorsal fascia, nociception
Topics: pain scales, fibromyalgia, myofascial pain
Topics: Matrix metalloproteinase 1 (MMP-1); Tenon’s fibroblasts; Transforming growth factor-β1; Type 2 cannabinoid receptor (CB2R); Wound healing
Topics: Pro-inflammatory cytokines , C-reactive protein (CRP), Interleukin-6 (IL-6) , Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) , Interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), Low back pain (LBP)
Topics: Fascial manipulation, back pain, hyaluronan
Topics: chronic pain, cortex, DNA methylation, Central nervous system, immune system
Topics: fascia, calcitonin gene-related peptide, muscle pain, back pain, thoracolumbar fascia, sensory innervation, immunohistochemistry
Topics: Repeated bout effect, Delayed onset muscle soreness, Muscle damage, Pressure pain threshold, Visual analogue scale
Topics: MCP-1, CCL2, Single fiber recording, Unmyelinated afferents, Mechanical sensitization, ab-Methylene ATP
Topics: myofascial pain, fascia, lumbar fascia, dysfunction
Topics: dermatomes; nerve; communications; map; cutaneous; sensory
Topics: fascia, low back pain, thoracolumbar fascia, erector spinae muscle, hypertonic saline, peripheral sensitization
Topics: Hyperalgesia, Pressure pain, Musculoskeletal pain, Low back pain
Topics: hypermobility, psychiatric symptoms, fibromyalgia, brain structure, amygdala, temporal cortex, autism, proprioception
Topics: fascia, thoracolumbar fascia, low back pain, immunohistochemistry, sensory innervation, nociception, peptidergic free nerve endings
Topics: connective tissue, innervation, low back pain, musculoskeletal pain, fascia
Topics: Low back pain, shear strain, thoracolumbar fascia
Topics: fascia, low back pain, connective tissue, lumbar
Topics: Experimental pain, Deep tissue, Hypertonic saline, Fascia, Eccentric exercise, DOMS
Topics: LBP, pain, fascia, connective tissue
Topics: fascia, chronic Low Back Pain, connective tissue, neuroplasticity, connective tissue remodeling, mechanical stress, stiffness
Topics: Low back pain, Biomechanics, Hypothesis, Thoracolumbar fascia, Proprioception
Topics: Low back pain, Neck pain, Whiplash, Biomechanics, Hypothesis
To truly understand Fascia, you must understand the whole. But how do you do that if you have trained all your life to divide and separate?
Dr Heike Jäger, Professor Karl Arfors and innovator Hans Bohlin presented the latest research regarding Fascia, inflammation and Fascia treatment in Stockholm, May 2017.
“Fascia and the Living Body” is a document about the scientific understanding of the body as a living whole.
Exclusive interview with Dr Stephen Levin, the worlds leading expert on Biotensegrity, at the Fascia Research Congress 2015.
One of the best ways to keep yourself healthy, free from pain and injuries is to take care of your Fascia. Here are 9 tips on how to take care of your Fascia.
Get a deeper introduction to new Fascia Research with the 2018 German documentary “The mysterious world under the skin”.
You probably know that the immune system is our defensive wall protecting us from the threats from the outside world – but do you know how it works and how to boost it?
New research leads to insights and by looking at the body in a completely new way we get new perspectives and explanations to symptoms and diseases. At the 2015 Joint Conference on Acupuncture, Oncology and Fascia in Boston, research was presented regarding Fascia and Cancer
Exclusive interview with Gil Headly explaining how Fascia changes the perspective on how we look at the body at the 2015 Fascia Research Congress in Washington DC.
At the 2015 Fascia Research Congress in Washington DC, Tom Myers, the author of Anatomy Trains, gives a short introduction to Fascia and how new research changes the way we look at pain and discomfort.
Fascia research has sparked a wildfire of new insights that are challenging conventional belief about how the body works – and the latest insights are presented at the 2018 Fascia Research Congress in Berlin.
On the Fascia Guide FAQ we have gathered the most common questions and answers about Fascia. Is there anything you would like to know? Visit the page and submit your question.
Fascia research has sparked an ongoing global revolution in the anatomical research field. In The Fascia Guide Research Database we have gathered hundreds of research articles about fascia.
In 2015 veterinary Vibeke S Elbrønd published the first report on Fascia and horses. To make that happen she had to learn all there was regarding fascia, she had to become a fascia expert.
In 2015 veterinary Vibeke S Elbrønd published the first report on Fascia and horses. Through autopsy she found that the horse has the same kind of chains and networks of connective tissue through the body, as found in humans.
What is Fascia? New research shows that it is more than the layer around the muscles. It is a network without beginning or end, from the skin, through the entire body, to the smallest cell.
Fascia is a new perspective, a completely new way of looking at the body, a new way of conducting research and a new way of understanding the world. So how do you learn to understand Fascia?
Strolling under the skin is a fascinating journey inside a living body. With small camcorders, Dr. Jean Claeude Guimberteau has managed to capture how Fasica actually looks in a living human body.
Here are three major reasons why the Fascia’s central importance to the body’s functionality is not nousehold knowledge. It might be helpful to bare these in mind when relating to current and previous research.
David Lesondak is a structural integrator and a myofascial specialist who has been working for many years trying to explain what fascia is, as well as the benefits you get from treating different problems with fascia treatment. In an interview at the Fascia Research Congress in Berlin 2018, he describes the basics of what fascia is and what challenges it is facing in the strive for recognition in the medical field.
Recently, a German researcher showed that the connective tissue in a human transports 15 l of water in 48 hours, which is a relatively large amount compared to for example the amount of blood and the lymphatic system.
What we do know for sure is that the abundance of sugar has a negative effect on the fascia and makes it less elastic. Stress also affects the fascia in a disadvantageous way
Fascia eller interstitium? Fascian eller interstitium är kroppens arkitektoniska byggnadsstomme med sitt kontinuerliga flöde, som en amerikansk forskargrupp nu alltså anser vara kroppens största organ.
In early 2013, a German documentary was broadcast based on the latest research on the Fascia. It provides a very basic introduction for newcomers. To help you get a quick overview of Fascia, we have cut together a 10 minute version.
Banbrytande ny forskning visar hur kollagenproduktionen över hela kroppen påverkas av könshormoner, som t ex östrogen. Läs mer här
By beginning to see the body as something that is alive, and not something that is dead, we have been able to begin to notice other things.
In the 70s when the orthopedic surgeon Dr. Stephen Levin was at a natural history museum and saw the wires holding up the neck of a dinosaur, he did not get the picture to go together. How could his neck have been held up originally?
From Newton, to Einstein, to the new wildfire of Fascia Research. How do we understand things from a different perspective?
The concept of Fascia Lines is a great way to understand how the body functions and how treatment can be optimized to increase mobility and functionality. The main principle is that muscles, no matter what they do individually, also affect tissues throughout the entire body.
Connective tissue / fascia is an incredibly adaptable and plastic tissue. It is transformed, remodeled and strengthened or weakened according to the mechanical stimulation (load) to which it is exposed. If we don’t move, the tissue will diminish.
Look at a ballet dancer, a gymnast or a drummer and study their movement, feeling, timing, it is easy to be fascinated by how fast it is. Fascia helps us understand how the body is able to function in such an incredible way.
Vitamin C is good for the immune system, but did you know that it also supports tissue regeneration or that we use up 7 times more Vitamin C during stress?
What do we know about the Fascias function and what affects the Fascias ability to rebuild – and how can we use that knowledge in our everyday lives?
New research shows that low back pain is caused by inflammation in the Fascia. But why are we getting low back pain and what happens in our body when we get back pain?
The function of the articular cartilage is to reduce friction between the two articular cartilage surfaces and facilitate sliding when the joint moves, and to absorb the load when the joint is exposed to pressure, compression
Keep the flow of lymph alive! What can I do to increase the lymph flow?
Vitamin C has many different actions in the body. It is a coenzyme, which assist in various physiological processes in the body and it is a powerful antioxidant.
The new discoveries and knowledge about Fascia has taken us back to an observing stage – we have to investigate our surroundings to get an understanding for what to measure.
Tom Myers is perhaps best known for his book Anatomy Trains, where he describes the Myofascial lines which help us understand movement and functions of the body
A lot of injuries after a long break might not be that unusual – but why do so many female athletes suffer from cruciate ligament injuries?
Fascia is a network of connective tissue, without beginning and end, which encloses everything in the whole body, from muscles and bones, to organs and cells. But what does that mean?
Exercise increases collagen production in tendons, ligaments and all Fascia. To stimulate collagen formation in tendons and ligaments, it doesn’t matter if the exercise is eccentric (muscle contraction during extension) or concentric (muscle contraction during shortening).
Fascia is a system of flexible connective tissue encapsulating everything in the body. If the system is running smoothly, all is fine, but when some parts become stiff, tense or inflamed, there will be consequences.
David Lesondak describes how stretching the fascia is vital for rehabilitation from injury at the 2018 Fascia Research Congress in Berlin