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The Frozen Shoulder Workbook: Trigger Point Therapy for Overcoming Pain & Regaining Range of Motion
Clair Davies

New Harbinger Publications, 2006 - 285 pages

average customer review:based on 21 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended





Excellent Results

I would like to tell you how the Frozen Shoulder Workbook helped me overcome a painful but common illness with no surgery or manipulation under anesthesia. I found relief!
This past spring I fell while carrying a folding chair and bruised my ribs. Due to the rib pain I stopped my daily stretching and swimming. I was also under a lot of stress at work. The rib healed but I began to have arm pain on reaching down. One time when plugging in a power cord I had shooting pains in my shoulder and arm. (ten on a 1 to 10 pain scale) I returned to swimming and found it to be painful so I went to my primary doctor. She said it was bursitis and gave me an anti-inflammation drug and sent we to physical therapy. It got worse and my shoulder froze up. PT was no help and the pain got worse. X-rays showed a normal joint when I went to a shoulder specialist. He said it was bursitis and possible tendonitis. He gave me a cortisone shot in the shoulder and a prescription for a shoulder MRI, if it didn't resolve itself in a week. No relief from the shot and the MRI would have cost me US $195 out of pocket so I looked for an alternate plan. I went to a Chiropractor and I sent off for this book. The Chiropractor told me I should have come to him sooner before the shoulder froze up. I could not lift my arm over my head, work was very difficult and nighttime required sleeping pills and painkillers. My neck muscles on that side where very tight and the scapula (shoulder blade) was not moving. (I learned that the scapula must rotate 30 degrees for the arm to reach over the head completely.) Clair Davies book is excellent, I began using his techniques to massage my tight neck, chest, shoulder, and arm muscles. The first thing to improve was the pain. I found a great massage therapist to help me and the Chiropractor worked to free up the shoulder joint capsule by stretching after 15 minutes of icing the shoulder . The Trigger Point Therapy truly works if you follow this books instruction carefully. Work through chapter 5 and 6, massage with the book open. It is not an easy path but your diligent self-treatment will pay off (there are 24 muscles that help the shoulder move). Stay positive, work on standing up strait and reducing stress. Today I was able to hang from a chin up bar and pain is almost gone. I have resumed swimming and next week I will begin upper body strengthening exercises. One tip not in the book is that I suggest is to rest your shoulder completely one day per week, the following day you will see improved range of motion from the relaxed trigger points. Good Luck!



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This book saved my life

This book is wonderful. It has enabled me to resume my life without pain. I have recomended it to several friends and relatives so they can treat themselves. I only wish I had found it years ago. Prior to treating my self with the information contained in this little gem, I was constantly awakened by shoulder pain in the middle of the night, was afraid to drive because just reaching for the steering wheel caused so much pain and turning it was out of the question. Now I can even shower and lead a normal life. I highly recoommend it to anyone in pain, even if doctors have not helped.


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This book is simply amazing!

I live with chronic muscular pain from multiple sclerosis and bad posture from my office job. Often my back, neck and shoulders suffer the brunt of this pain, so much so that I have been debilitated for days at a time. Along with my theracane (which this book includes as part of some of the therapies, but by all means is NOT necessary at all) I can work on myself and eliminate the major pain almost instantly and the minor pains work themselves out usually within a day or two. This book has kept me from missing work and from staying crumpled on my couch curled up in a ball of pain. I LOVE this book. Thank you authors!


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Yes! Pain refief, thank you! Fantastic!

Thank You, Thank You, Thank You! This book turned out to be the answer to my suffering! I started having severe shoulder pain, two weeks ago. I was diagnosed 10 days ago by an M.D. to have shoulder "Impingement" which essentially is the same catch-all diagnosis as "Frozen" shoulder. I am completely disgusted that my Dr. offered really no answers or real help in my situation. After only 10 minutes with this book I instantly recognized my symptoms as matching the authors. I found the pain pattern that matched mine, pressed on the associated TPs, and presto, recreated the referred pain pattern. My wife and I could feel the knots and tight bands in my muscles. After only 30 minutes of massage, I had greatly reduced the pain. I slept soundly for the first time in two weeks! I can't wait to see how I feel after more time. It has only been 12 hours and I am ecstatic with my progress! Don't be thrown off by the title. I'd never heard of Trigger Points and don't think the name fits. Regardless, if you are in shoulder pain, you need this book. I'm not one to try alternative medicine, and despite the non-traditional name, Trigger Points are just a mostly undiscovered body of proven scientific research by two well respected Doctors. The author discovered it through his own shoulder pain experience and has translated Trigger Point Therapy into a form that is specific to the shoulder, neck and arms that can be understood and applied by anyone in the comfort of their own home.


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THE Best Solution for Should Pain (other areas, too)

If I could, I'd double these stars. It's hard to believe how many people immediately choose surgery without researching other options. I was one of those at one time in my life. But a few years ago when my shoulder locked and the excruciating pain persisted, I was determined not to have surgery...unless all else failed. After months of physical therapy, my pain was definitely better ("managed") but not gone, and my range of motion was 50% better but not 100% better. Good enough, I thought. A year after I stopped PT, I re-injured the shoulder because of heavy lifting and was back to square one. That was when I searched online and found Clare Davies' Triggerpoint Therapy Workbook (the shoulder version is apparently specific to that type of injury... the book I found covered all areas). I'm not saying the method was a snap because it took time to read and understand the concepts, and it took patience to find the trigger points. Working them was painful but, ironically, in a good way because you know something healing is going on. Despite those challenges, within three weeks, my pain was gone and my range of motion was back to normal. On occasion, if I feel the slightest pain anywhere due to stress on my joints, I pull the book out and work the suggested areas. I'm very grateful to Mr. Davies for dedicating himself to finding a nonsurgical means of helping the body, and I gladly take the time out to share my own trigger point experience with others. I have since recommended the method to friends who have also avoided surgery. One was my boyfriend who had injured his back doing yoga. Another was a friend who had a knee injury from playing football in high school decades ago. He complained constantly about the pain and was afraid of looming surgery. I suggested he try trigger point therapy, but he swatted the air at the idea. One day over the phone, he was back on his knee rant. I told him unless he tried the therapy then and there, I didn't want to hear another word. I got the book, had him work just two recommended areas. Before we got off the phone, he sheepishly admitted the pain was almost gone.


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5



Powerful Techniques to Relieve Shoulder Pain and Stiffness

Author Clair Davies? own case of frozen shoulder led him to undertake an extensive study of trigger points and referred pain that eventually resulted in his best-selling Trigger Point Therapy Workbook. Now this renowned bodywork expert and educator revisits the subject of frozen shoulder, offering the most detailed and comprehensive manual available for this painful and debilitating condition, a useful resource for self-care?with and without a partner?and for bodywork practitioners looking to expand their treatment repertoire.

Frozen shoulder, the syndrome name for several joint and tendon-related symptoms, is experienced as a loss of motion and pain in the shoulder and upper arm. It is most often observed in women between the ages of forty and sixty and individuals with type-two diabetes. Unlike traditional medical treatments for the condition, which rely on painkillers, steroid injections, and physical therapy and often do little to moderate symptoms or speed recovery, trigger point therapy can bring real and lasting relief. This gentle massage technique targets localized areas of tenderness in soft tissue. Put it to work for you to relieve pain, restore range of motion, and shorten recovery times.

A well-written exposition on a difficult subject. ?Daniel J. Wallace, MD, clinical professor of medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Medicine

In this outstanding book, Clair Davies aptly explains the rational for the trigger point approach based on the teachings of Drs. Janet Travell and David Simons to the treatment of frozen shoulder. He presents his hypothesis well. It is time for the medical profession to accept alternative therapies in treating this condition, which does not often respond to routine medical care. ?Paul B. Brown, MD, Ph.D., rheumatologist and clinical professor of medicine at the University of Washington

Clair Davies has done it again. He has written a wonderful book that provides insight and practical advice for the treatment of a common problem: frozen or stiff shoulder. He shows where the pain is, what the problems are, and how an individual can treat it, sometimes with the help of a partner. His illustrations and directions are clear. His case examples are helpful. This is a very useful book for those who have had rotator cuff injuries or other shoulder problems. ?Robert D. Gerwin, MD, president and medical director of Pain and Rehabilitation Medicine, Baltimore, MD, and the Janet G. Travell, MD, Seminar Series

Mr. Davies has done an outstanding job of tackling and simplifying a difficult topic that challenges even experienced clinicians. His review of the functional anatomy and kinesiology of the shoulder and the central role of the muscles in the control of the shoulder is a welcome review for physicians and therapists. His simple diagrams and descriptions make this topic understandable to those without formal training as well. Most importantly he shows very concrete ways in which a patient or clinician may effectively treat trigger points, which in my view are the primary cause of shoulder pain and stiffness in the majority of cases. I highly recommend this book to patients with shoulder pain and to clinicians involved in the evaluation and treatment of patients with shoulder pain. ?Bryan J. O'Neill, MD, clinical assistant professor in the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at Thomas Jefferson University

From a practical point of view, this is a really exceptional workbook, which could become a best-seller in its field. It is a wonderful overview concerning trigger points, which are the most common cause of frozen shoulder. I can recommend the book to all who are engaged in treating frozen shoulders, including medical doctors, therapists, and patients together with their partners. ?Dieter Pongratz, MD, professor in the department of Neurology at the University of Munich Hospital, Friedrich-Baur-Institute, in Munich, Germany

The Frozen Shoulder Workbook is truly a remarkable and comprehensive text that will be indispensable for patients with chronic shoulder pain. Written from a layperson?s perspective, it is very readable and well illustrated, but still has plenty of background science and anatomy to satisfy clinicians as well. The book outlines a thorough approach to myofascial pain in the shoulder region and provides multiple treatment strategies to address the clinical variations that are seen. I will highly recommend it to my shoulder pain patients. ?Steven R. Shannon, MD, Pain and Rehabilitation Medicine, Baltimore, MD


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