Remember in school when it was time for recess and you couldn’t wait to run outside? Maybe you’d sprint right up to the grassy field and dive right into a game. Perhaps it was football, soccer, kickball or whatever struck your fancy. Remember twisting your ankle, too? That happens a lot when we ask our bodies to perform athletically without warming them up first. This is one way of getting injured when playing football, which has the highest risk of injury of all popular sports. However, thanks to the increasing availability of home-use devices, you can use electrotherapy for football injuries before and after play.
It’s easy to tear, sprain and strain when the body isn’t warmed up. In football, the hamstrings are prone to tears. These leg muscles are used when running, and sprinting in particular. Proper stretches and conditioning should be used to ensure that the legs are sufficiently warmed up. One type of electrotherapy called EMS (electrical muscle stimulation) can also be applied to muscles such as the hamstrings to help with warm up. EMS sends electrical impulses to stimulate the muscles, thus strengthening and increasing blood flow.
RECOVER FROM FOOTBALL INJURIES USING EMS OR ELECTRICAL MUSCLE STIMULATION
Not only does EMS help prevent, but it helps treat. You can use electrotherapy for football injuries after the fact to expedite recovery. Anti-inflammatories such as ibuprofen are known to cause nausea, fatigue, dizziness, headaches and other minor side effects. Over the counter pills can also pose major threats to health with continuing use. Athletes in particular should avoid using anti-inflammatories, as they actually hinder muscle growth. EMS, however, helps muscles to push through recovery and come out stronger on the other side.
All of the heavy impact in football lends itself to additional types of injuries. A tackle to the front or the rear might result in an ACL or an MCL tear. The ACL is the anterior cruciate ligament in the knee. The MCL is the medial collateral ligament. These tissues connect the thigh bones to the shin bones. The ACL or the MCL may tear if one gets hit very hard on the side of the knee. Football players are also prone to tearing the meniscus, the cartilage that provides padding for the knee. A torn meniscus can occur from rotating and twisting the knee beyond its limit. This means that all the pivoting from a football game, if not done carefully, has the potential to tear this cartilage.
For knee injuries such as these, TENS therapy can be applied. TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation) treats pain noninvasively by sending electrical impulses to the nerve endings. These impulses stop the pain signals from travelling to the brain. Using this electrotherapy for football injuries is, again, an optimum alternative to over the counter anti-inflammatories. TENS is also known to release endorphins, the body’s natural painkillers. Use TENS on any injured or strained muscle or joint. Whether it’s tendinitis in the shoulder from the repetitive motion of throwing, or a sprained ankle from running and pivoting, electrotherapy is an effective and beneficial treatment option for football related injuries.
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