Do You Need Knee Support? Top 3 Reasons Why a Knee Brace Can Help You

While at opposite ends of the temperature spectrum, heat and cold both create a healing response. If you think of your stove and your freezer, you can easily see the result of either. Heat melts and increases surface area. Cold constricts and prevents expansion of fluids. Heat moves things along while cold maintain them in a state of suspended animation. So how do these temperatures affect the body?
Heat causes the body to circulate more blood and to remove toxins. This allows more fresh oxygen and nutrients to the injured area, which begins and continues the healing process while removing the toxins that cause scar tissue and chronic pain. Cold, on the other hand, retards swelling and reduces pain.
Both temperature extremes shut off pain signals; heat by relaxing the affected nerves and cold by numbing them. This is good because when pain signals are not sent to the brain there is no response signal generated telling the muscles to contract (spasm) in order to protect the injury site.
After proper application of heat or cold over time, the pain-spasm-inflammation cycle is broken and effective healing of the area can begin.
The elbow is the region surrounding the elbow-joint and it is in the middle of the arm. Elbows are joints just like knees and their function is to rotate, flex and support the body weight when needed. Excessive pressure, continuous action and aging can hurt the elbows and knees. When too much strain is put on them or when they are leaned upon, they will hurt. Most common causes of elbow pain are golfer elbow, tennis elbow and bursitis.





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Quantum Ad Code

Research Your Target Market in Five Easy Steps

Acing the First Date!