The following article reprinted with permmission of Back To Health Magazine, June 1989
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Dr. Janet Travell, the first woman ever to serve as White House Physician, takes a large
portion of the credit for Trigger Point Therapy, the technique that helped JFK's back.
It was 1952 and the voters of Massachusetts chose a Navy war hero as their representative in the US Senate. The handsome young Senator had connections, charisma, sharp wits and a determined vision that would lead him to the White House. But young Senator John F. Kennedy also had a bad back. And though many Americans are aware that Kennedy had back problems, he wasn't one to publicize the severity of his injuries. Kennedy originally injured his back in 1939 and strained it further when a Japanese destroyer rammed and sank the WWII torpedo boat he commanded, hurling him across the deck. A disc operation in 1944 and a spinal fusion in 1954 failed to provide permanent relief from his left-sided back pain, which made it nearly impossible for him to bear weight on his left foot. An old football injury hampered the bending of his right knee. Unable at times to put weight on either foot, Kennedy's crutches became a familiar sight in th U.S. Senate chambers. Both Kennedy and his crutches disappeared in late 1954, however, when complications from his back surgery forced the hard-working Senator to take a seven-month leave of absence.
Health RestoredWhat happened to the crutches? The bad back? What treatment proved effective enough to convince political opponents and the probing press that a man recently dependent on crutches was now physically fit for the Presidency? How was the ailing JFK revitalized? A large, if not predominant, portion of the credit belongs to Dr. Janet Travell -- mother, teacher, research pioneer and, as personal physician to both Presidents' Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, the first woman ever to serve as White House Physician. Except for her White House tenures, Travell, now 87, focused her efforts during the last half century on the diagnosis and treatment of pain syndromes due to "trigger points."
Travell's Trigger Point TherapyTrigger Point Therapy is safe and effective in alleviating myofascial pain and syndromes that erroneously, or by default, become categorized under such headings as tennis elbow, frozen shoulder, dysmennorhea, TMJ, fibrositis, trick knee, whiplash, etc. Mainstream clinical research has shown that trigger points are often responsible for headaches, muscle weakness and pain, restricted range of motion, tearing, sweating, salivation, dizziness and blurred vision. Kennedy sought Travell's help during his sick leave from the Senate, which he spent writing Profiles in Courage. "I met Jack Kennedy when he was a junior senator from Massachusetts," Travell explained following one of her well-attended seminars in Palm Springs. "He had war wounds and was on crutches for so long he had calluses under his armpits. I got him off those crutches and when he asked me to go to the White House with him, well... I didn't think I could say no." Travell declines to detail President Kennedy's personal medical file. But with her ongoing research, writing and seminars, she tirelessly continues to honor the late president's wish that she teach others the therapy he found so helpful. And she has, at least in major medical research journals. Since her first collaborative research paper that appeared in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1942, Travell's name has appeared at the top of some 50 major reports on the mechanics and treatment of pain caused by trigger points. These tender spots in muscles (and other types of tissue) are extremely sensitive to touch and possess the nasty ability to refer pain and other symptoms and sensation to distant parts of the body. For instance, the all-too-common trigger points in the muscle between the neck and shoulder (the trapezius) often send pain shooting up back of the neck, around the ear and above the eye.
Mapping Trigger PointsThe referred pain from TPs, which usually fail to follow "normal" neural pathways, may travel a considerable distance. For example, pressing on a TP in the calf of the lower leg (the soleus muscle) can reproduce a patient's nagging pain and tenderness in the lower back, directly over the sacroiliac joint. Trigger points in the abdomen, pelvic area and legs also are responsible for several common back pains. By inactivating the trigger points bothering Kennedy's back and then preventing their reoccurrence by prescribing proper exercise, footwear and seating (she revolutionized the rocking chair). Travell played a significant role in the unfolding of American political history.
Reshaping Medical History
Causes of Trigger PointsTrigger points also develop in muscles that are chronically overloaded by poor posture, especially while working, or repeating muscle movements as in typing, playing the violin, or even knitting. Structural discrepancies, like uneven legs and pelvic bones, or short arms on a long upper body, often produce a chronic mechanical stress that activates TPs. This is why Travell prescribed left heel lifts for all of Kennedy's shoes and custom designed seating for the president's personal quarters, his office, helicopter, planes, boats and limousine. In short, trigger points generally follow in the wake of muscle strain or abuse. Research has shown that manual laborers who use their muscles every day are less likely to develop TPs than are sedentary workers who occasionally overdose on tennis, volleyball or other strenuous activities.
Putting TPs To RestDeep finger pressure in TPs was popularized by Bonnie Prudden in her books on Myotherapy. Prudden recommends seven seconds of sustained pressure on TPs to erase them. Other therapists press the point until the referred pain subsides. Massage (as well as other TP treatments) is "only effective if you know what you're doing," Travell says. "Vigorous massage of hyperirritable trigger points may markedly increase pain." Because long term relief from trigger point pain requires much more than simply pressing on sore muscles, one must execise caution in selecting a local doctor or therapist claiming to treat trigger points. To find a qualified therapist in your area you might contact the American Academy of Physical Medicine or the Academy of Myotherapy and Physical Fitness (Lenox, Mass.). "Many family practitioners and aspecially rheumatologists are increasingly familiar with, or know someone who is familiar with trigger points," says Dr. David G. Simons, who with Travell, co-authored Myofascial Pain and Dysfunction: The Trigger Point Manual (1983, Williams and Wilkins) |
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