Physiotherapy rehabilitation paths offer alternatives
... for your needs and goals. Physiotherapy can be carried out as a rehabilitation period, a change process or a continuous process.
Physiotherapy as a rehabilitation period
A physiotherapy rehabilitation period is suitable for the rehabilitation of musculoskeletal injuries and/or pain conditions where a clear structural damage or change is identifiable. For example, the rehabilitation of ankle sprains, muscle tears, knee twisting injuries, fracture sequelae and contusion injuries is carried out as a rehabilitation period.
Rehabilitation for orthopaedic and other musculoskeletal surgery ( pre- and post-operatively) is also provided as a rehabilitation period.
The rehabilitation period is carried out with a process-oriented work approach and takes into account tissue healing and normalisation of the body and nervous system functioning.
Physiotherapy as a process of change
Often musculoskeletal symptoms begin without a clearly identifiable reason. Underlying these symptoms may be
long-standing movement impairments from which the nervous system has managed to protect the body. At the onset of symptoms, the body and nervous system have used available compensatory mechanisms. Thus, from a viewpoint of behavioural selection, acute pain is not a warning signal, but rather is the failure of the system designed to avoid pain.
Therefore, in the case of long-standing or "chronic" musculoskeletal disorders, a change in the mechanisms underlying the disorder is required.
Then the rehabilitation process is often like peeling an onion layer by layer until the root of the problem is identified. Physical and psychological factors may contribute to the symptoms.
According to our experience, most "chronic" pain conditions can be resolved.
Physiotherapy as a continuous process
Physiotherapy as a continuous process is aimed at professionals whose work involves the body as a central instrument, such as athletes, dancers, actors and musicians.
Very small abnormalities in the functioning of the body and nervous system can become a problem when the body is pushed to its limits. The aim of the ongoing physiotherapy process is to optimise the trainability of the body and the adaptability of the nervous system.
Physiotherapy is always individually programmed relative to the training and competition season or performances. The primary goal is a healthy athlete or performer who can train progressively and be at their best during competitions or performances.