Peri-operative Therapy for Postoperative Pain and Hastened Healing
backUsing Peri-operative Therapy for post-operative pain and hastened healing.
By Cheryl Meyers – 5280 Health Magazine
If you’ve ever considered cosmetic surgery, it’s the before-and-after pictures that draw you in. Hanging jowls, miraculously lifted. Flabby stomachs gone. Small breast enlarged. Even if it’s a non-elective surgery (like knee reconstruction), you think about the ‘after’ – maybe hitting the slopes next winter – as you sign on the dotted line. No matter what type of procedure you might be undergoing, you rarely consider the postoperative phase – that swollen, puffy, bruised, scarred, anxious, and downright uncomfortable time immediately afterward. But the reality is, with every surgery comes a healthy dose of ‘trauma drama’. And in a noteworthy embrace of alternative health modalities, a growing number of Denver surgeons are now prescribing a specific type of massage therapy to help alleviate this discomfort.
Of course, we don’t mean these doctors send patients from the operating table straight to the day spa for a deep-tissue rubdown. Rather, they enlist the help of Ann Brooks and Kent Lemburg, two veteran Denver massage therapists who have developed an innovative system of massage called Peri-operative Therapy, which assists patients through the entire recovery process associated with surgery.
At their practice, called Soulstice, all therapists have extensive medical massage therapy experience and all observe surgeries to witness firsthand how the body is affected by everything from mastectomies to liposuction to orthopedic procedures. It’s an experience that allows therapists to know intimately what the body needs to begin recovery – where scarring might develop, how to alleviate swelling, and methods for minimizing lumps and bumps.
“When the surgeon provides the surgery, it happens in a flash of time,” Lemburg says. “the surgeon makes sure that the surgery was successful and that your life is not in danger.” But once you’re sent home out of acute danger, he explains, that’s when the patient’s real healing challenges begin. Take for instance a mastectomy. The incision from the surgery makes it so that a patient is unable to fully extend her arms, explains Brooks. The typical patient will ‘guard’ the surgery site, oftentimes refusing to move or touch it. Two months later, a patient that guards an incision too much can develop something called frozen shoulder, where she is unable to move her arm. “We’re an extension of the doctor,” Brooks says. “The compassionate arm of the process. We empower people to get their bodies moving right again.”
Every patient’s treatment is customized to meet his or her needs, but a typical schedule might entail: a presurgery treatment to prepare and relax the nervous system and tissue for the upcoming procedure; a postoperative lymphatic drainage massage that helps to alleviate swelling; later on, deeper therapy to work on scarring; and finally, a neuromuscular massage and passive range of motion session to work on muscle balance and posture. “I started incorporating Peri-operative Therapy into my cosmetic cases a few years ago,” says Nick Slenkovich, a surgeon with the Colorado Plastic Surgery Center who sends his patients to Soulstice. “Getting the tissues and lymphatic fluids moving after surgery is critical to aid the healing process and prevent stiffness or hardening that may impact the results. I’ve found that the patients who receive Peri-operative Therapy treatments recover faster and with fewer complications.”