Sports Therapy: Injury Prevention and Management through Naturopathy

By Naturopath Tina Krombach

Published in Go Strong Newsletter

Optimising athletic performance means asking a lot from your body, which requires support in the best possible way with nutrient rich foods, balancing relaxation techniques and perhaps mental coaching to set your goals. Here are a few ways in which naturopathy can help you prepare and treat/manage injuries:

1) Nutrition for athletes should take into account weight management, muscle rebuild and recovery, strong bones and healthy tendons. Right after working out, food should restore the glycogen in the muscles with healthy carbs, whilst providing healthy fats and protein to support anabolic metabolism.

Insulin and testosterone balance are influenced by food, restore cellular energy and maintain healthy body fat-muscle ratio. Strong bones and healthy tendons are a great prevention for sports injuries.
Food that nourishes the musculoskeletal system can be derived from a wholesome, nutritious, vegetarian, vegan or raw food diet, without the need for synthetic additives. A naturopath can provide an individualized food plan, which addresses your personal needs and provides adequate nutrients for optimal performance.

2) Relaxation is as important as daily training! Adequate relaxation techniques increase muscle restoration and bring you back to balance.

The German relaxation and stress management programme Autogenic Training works with visualisation, affirmation and guided meditation and is often combined with progressive muscle relaxation. This training influences the nervous system, muscle tone, body temperature regulation and heartbeat. It balances blood pressure, eases breathing and clears the mind. During a state of deep relaxation, muscle restoration is increased.

Autogenic Training can be used for mental coaching to improve sportive performance, as the mind becomes focused on optimization of the sports activity while you de-stress.

Four to six customized sessions of Autogenic Training are adequate to learning and incorporating the technique and using it for mental preparation, relaxation, stress management and restoration.

3) Ear Acupuncture is another naturopathic modality for improved recovery and pain management after injury. Basic principles are those of reflexology as the ear reflects the whole body´s organs. By stimulation of certain points of the ear, the corresponding organ or body function is influenced.

It helps reduce use of pain killers, swelling and inflammation, and speeds up the healing process. Ear Acupuncture is used to treat acute, chronic and perioperative pain. Commonly a series of six to eight treatment sessions are conducted, often complementary to other (alternative) medical treatments.

4) Homeopathy considers that any injury can entail three situations: a fright or shock of various dimensions; damage of tissue including bone fracture and bleeding (inner organs or open wound).

Homeopathy provides a range of remedies to prevent a fright from becoming a shock, or a shock from leaving a trauma. This is not only helpful for athletes but also important for preventing anxiety or panic after an accident. Without being a sedative, homeopathic medicine calms you down naturally; emotional stress and physical tension are reduced.

There is also a variety of homeopathic medicine to help stop bleeding of inner organs or wounds. Tissue damage is likely to affect the soft tissue, tendons or bones and maybe nerves. Healing processes can be initiated and improved with the appropriate homeopathic prescription. It can reduce the use of pain killers; has no side effects nor is it habit forming.

Care after sports injuries can entail homeopathic pills to ease bruising, swelling and scarring, and improving exhaustion during recovery.

In most cases it´s best to use a combination of treatments to ensure optimal recovery from injuries.

9th Networking Meeting for Healthcare Practitioners in Dubai

Dubai, 18th January 2016:  After a break for the holiday season, the Elephant Club resumed its activities by hosting its 9th networking meeting – 1st meeting for 2016  – at Lime Tree Café.

We were overwhelmed with the response as eighteen healthcare practitioners joined us for the evening, including: Amy Vogelaar (Lactation Consultant / Antenatal and Parenting Educator, Love Parenting UAE), Anil Daniel Prasad (Physiotherapist, Osteopathic Health Centre), Asha Ann George (Ayurvedic Practitioner, Breath and Health), Cristina Mesquita (Osteopath, Osteopathic Health Centre), Esther Martinez (Osteopath/Physiotherapist, Osteopathic Health Centre), Gustavo R. Rydberg (Osteopathy Service Manager, Up and Running), Jocelyn Kope (Physiotherapist, Breath and Health), Karin Locher (Founder, Spatial Medicine), Malcolm Gregory (Osteopath, Osteopathic Health Centre), Martine Nates (Acupuncturist, Koster Clinic), Moira Macdonald (MLD Therapist, Osteopathic Health Centre), Nargis Raza (Managing Partner, Osteopathic Health Centre), Nicki Anderson (Occupational Therapist, Journey to Wholeness), Priyanka Banerjee (Homeopath), Renata Von Kouh (Physiotherapist, Osteopathic Health Centre), Shahida Siddiqui (CEO, Spa Dunya) Stephen Watts (Osteopath, Osteopathic Health Centre)and William D Murrell (Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon).

The next meeting is scheduled for 1st February for practitioners based in and around Mirdif. If you would like to attend, please send us your details on events@108.160.159.203

Workshop: Myths and Secrets of the Pelvic Floor

The body’s primary stress container

A 2 hour introductory talk for everyone…

Presenter: Karin Locher

Date & Time: 15th February, 6-8 pm

Cost: AED 250

Venue: Osteopathic Health Centre, Al Wasl Road, Umm Suqeim 2, Dubai, UAE

To reserve a seat and payment details, email: events@108.160.159.203

Overview

The concept of a weak pelvic floor quickly conjures up dreaded images of incontinence, prolapses, a lack of sexual senses and floppy lower abs. There is no wonder it has become one of the primary focuses to ‘tighten and tone’. But what constitutes a muscle that is not working, or feels weak? And what is the best way to bring it back into a healthy state? Contrary to what you might think, a weak muscle does not mean a loose muscle, one that needs tightening up. Weakness comes about when a muscle has lost its communication to the rest of the body, its sensory feedback, usually induced by a stressful environment or stressful circumstance.     

Workshop: The Lightest Weight, for the Most Strength

Understanding the load distribution system

A practical workshop for functional trainers, movement professionals and all rehabilitation therapists

Presenter: Karin Locher

Date & Time: 3rd February, 6-8 pm

Cost: AED 250

Venue: Osteopathic Health Centre, Al Wasl Road, Umm Suqeim 2, Dubai, UAE

To reserve a seat and payment details, email: events@108.160.159.203

This 2 hour workshop will demonstrate:

  • how to get involved with the efficiency of the body’s distribution system;
  • how load, force and strain are distributed by and through the fascial system, when they can be, and how pain and injury occurs when they cannot;
  • how information and communication are distributed for our automechano function, when it can be, how disorder and a sense of weakness occur when it cannot;
  • how there is no isolated event in the body; isolated event = isolated strain, prolonged isolated strain = injury; and
  • how when load, force and strain is evenly distributed, nobody ‘over strains’, and nobody injures.

Sixth Networking Meeting by The Elephant Club

Dubai, 28th September 2015: Hosted once again at The Change Initiative in Dubai, the sixth networking meeting for healthcare professionals was a chance for each practitioner to discuss their work and healthcare issues they feel strongly about or treat regularly. Participants represented and spoke on home nursing, acupuncture, osteopathy, kinesiology, biodynamic craniosacral therapy, physiatry physiotherapy, rehabilitation, shockwave therapy, sports injuries and psychomotor therapy.

This group, now known as The Elephant Club, was inspired by a story from India about six blind men who had heard about an elephant but wanted to experience for themselves what the elephant was….