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- Jiangchun Zhang, Tingting Pang, Junjie Yao, Ailin Li, Li Dong, Yueting Wang, and Yufeng Wang.
- College of Acupuncture and Tuina, Changchun University of Chinese Medicine, Changchun, China.
- Medicine (Baltimore). 2024 Oct 4; 103 (40): e39869e39869.
AbstractDuring pregnancy, fetal growth could lead to changes in human biomechanics. If postpartum recovery was not properly managed, it could be exacerbated, resulting in myofascial system disorders and various functional impairments. Among them, pain-related functional disorders were an important issue affecting quality of life in postpartum women. The pathogenesis of these disorders remained unclear but it was primarily associated with changes in biomechanics, the endocrine system, and nervous function. However, postpartum pain-related dysfunction had been considered a normal physiological response to childbirth, leading to a lack of attention. Therefore, many postpartum women failed to receive timely, effective, and standardized treatment, hindering their ability to reintegrate into family and society, and causing severe damage to their physical and mental health. In clinical practice, myofascial therapy could effectively alleviate postpartum pain and muscle spasms, improve excessive tension injuries in myofascial, and had a good therapeutic effect on postpartum pain-related functional disorders. The mechanism of myofascial therapy involved improving core muscle strength, restoring normal body alignment, and promoting the remodeling of myofascial mechanical structures. This article explored the positive effects of myofascial therapy on postpartum pain-related functional disorders from a biomechanical perspective, aiming to provide diverse treatment approaches for clinical practitioners.Copyright © 2024 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
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