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Welcome to the Postural Restoration Community! This is where you will read the latest industry news, hear about upcoming events, find helpful deadline reminders, and view a plethora of additional resources regarding our techniques and curriculum. The great part about it is--not only can you can view the entries we post, you can also post about the things that matter to you. Did you find an interesting article about a technique you learned in one of your courses? Do you have a patient case study you want to share with other professionals? Simply click "Submit an Entry" and follow the easy steps towards getting your information published in the PRI Community!

Blog Posts in September 2023

It is always nice to have a home game. Over the last two years I have had the good fortune to teach Myokinematic Restoration on both coasts and multiple points in between. This past weekend I was able to welcome a group of movement specialists to my little mountain town, Missoula, MT.

Revo Training Center hosted the course, and we had a great group consisting of Missoulians, Montanans, as well as representatives from WA, ID, AZ, NM, and TX. We opened the weekend with a discussion of a quote from Mr. Hemingway that is found on page 1 in the manual, “Never confuse movement with action”. We endeavored to appreciate how patterns of human asymmetry dictate the position of the body and ultimately whether the movement elicited by a muscle contraction supports the action we are striving for.

We focused on action around an acetabulum on a femur, on action that is preceded by appropriate position, and on action that requires inhibition of our dominant L AIC patterning. The group had great questions and insights throughout which fostered a running discussion that was not only enjoyable, but added to the depth and applicability of the course.

Thank you to Revo Training Center for hosting and thank you to all the attendees who spent a beautiful September weekend in Missoula. While we may not have been adventuring in the great outdoors, we hopefully all had a chance to expand our view of the human body in Big Sky Country!

Posted September 21, 2023 at 11:23AM
Categories: Courses Science

I had the great fortune to present Cervical Revolution to an in-person and virtual group, hailing from 10 countries.  This course takes the concept of humans’ neurological proclivity for right stance at the pelvis and thorax and carries it up to the neck, teeth, and cranium.
As we know from previous courses, right stance dominance creates complex neuromuscular patterned positions and movements and is heavily influenced by gravity, respiration, and overactive chains of muscles.  We introduced a new chain, the temporo-mandibular cervical chain (the TMCC), which, you guessed it, is over-referenced on the right.

The course was greatly enhanced by:
-    Our in-person attendees, who were instrumental in demonstration of objective tests and treatment techniques:  Lisa Bartels, DPT, PRC; Andrew Consbruck, DPT, PRC; Nate Dickes, PT; Eric Pinkall, PT, PRC; and Kurt Van Kulken, ATC.
-    Kelli Reilly, MSPT; Timothy McVaney, DDS; Nancy Wehner, BSDH, COM for sharing clinical observations and expertise.
-    Our virtual attendees, for thought-provoking questions and insights, most notably Evan Condry, PT; Alex de la Paz, PT; Christopher Lamb, NASM CPT; Peien Lu, PT; Donne Ordile, PT; Locatelli Rao, DPT, PRC; Laura Regan, DPT; and Alek Skorupa, LMT.  To those of you watching in the wee hours of the morning or late at night, thank you for hanging in there and participating in lab.
-    Jen Platt, DPT, PRC, for orchestrating everything this weekend – virtual views, answering questions, providing nourishment, and more.

Attendees gained an appreciation for the brain’s need to sense a new floor – at the occiput on atlas (OA) articulation.  This articulation, when in its proper position, allows the head to remain in equilibrium with the spine below.  Imbalanced left to right sensory processing and motor output occurs when the OA articulation is better sensed and over-referenced on the right side. The very health of the brain may be in peril when we over-reference our right sides too much and for too long.  For example, a “twist” results in the neck, compromising a vital opening for brain: the foramen magnum, which houses the brainstem and “cisterns” for cerebral spinal fluid, bathing and protecting our nervous tissue.

The OA compression-decompression (known as OA flexion and OA extension, respectively) reverberates into the cranium at the junction where the occiput meets the sphenoid.  This critical junction enables vector forces through the cranium to be distributed to the remaining paired bones of the cranium.  When over-referenced on the right, two commonly seen conditions develop at the sphenoid-occipital junction, or synchondrosis: left side-bending and its pathological cousin, right torsion.  

These cranial positions, maintained by the Right TMCC, place the paired temporal bones in a patterned position.  The temporal bones mirror the ilia of the pelvis and should exhibit alternating internal and external rotation, depending on the leg you’re standing on.  The other half of temporal-mandibular joint (TMJ), the mandible, too, is directed and held in patterned state.  Without temporal alternating activity, structures within the temporal bones (think mid-brain and vestibular) are deprived of their necessary compression-decompression cycles that are so vital for nerve function.  Our mandibles may lose their ability to move side to side, a prerequisite for upright left to right shifting when, say, walking.  In addition, alignment of our upper and lower teeth becomes skewed over time and may lead to mal-occlusions, such as cross-bites and open bites, and TMJ disc derangements.  One can now appreciate the need for dental collaboration and intra-oral splints to assist the process of restoring alternating tri-planar movement of the cervical spine (30-30-30) and temporal bones and a sense of alternating floors at the OA articulation.  Doing so promotes nervous system health, resolution of symptoms, and efficient functional movement.

I capped off my weekend in Lincoln with Jen Platt and her family with an awesome experience at the U. of Nebraska Women’s volleyball game. You know you’re in for a treat if 92,000+ fans pack the stadium, as they did the previous week.  Put this on your to-do list the next time you’re in Lincoln on game day.  Hopefully you can snag a ticket!

Posted September 21, 2023 at 10:48AM
Categories: Courses Science

The Cantrell Center is Hiring!

The Cantrell Center for Physical Therapy & Wellness, has an immediate job opening for:

LICENSED PHYSICAL THERAPIST (PT)
***NEW GRADS, UPCOMING GRADS, & EXPERIENCED CLINICIANS MAY APPLY***

The Cantrell Center for Physical Therapy & Sports Medicine is a physical therapist-owned private practice and has been serving Middle Georgia for over 30 years. We’re proud to employee clinicians who have a passion for the science and value our one-on-one approach to patient care. We are currently looking to hire a licensed Physical Therapist for our booming practice!

We are proud to currently have 2 Postural Restoration Certified Therapists (PRC's) in the clinic which makes us highly sought after by our referring physicians, our patients, and wellness members.  We often have patients who travel out of town and even out of state to come to the Cantrell Center as we are the only Postural Restoration Certified Facility in the state of Georgia.  

Located in Warner Robins, Georgia, the Cantrell Center is located in the Middle of the state! Just a quick drive to Atlanta or the beach, Warner Robins offers convenience to any interest without the crime rate and elevated costs of a larger city. If you love fresh air and lush green trees, this is the city for you! Visit the website of Robins Regional Chamber for more information about the city of Warner Robins.

What makes The Cantrell Center a great place to work?

  • We are a collaborative environment, where patient care is paramount and each team member’s gifts and experiences blend to create an atmosphere of integrity and encouragement. As part of our team, you will work side-by-side with like-minded and dedicated colleagues, while enjoying the opportunity to build your own career.
  • Join our team and you’ll quickly discover why our staff of 30+ calls the Cantrell Center “home”— many staff members have been with for more than 10 and even 20 years! We take care of each other.
  • We believe every patient has unique needs and concerns and those are best addressed by the physical therapist, one-on-one. NO COOKIE-CUTTER treatments.

WE OFFER:

  • Sign On Bonus
  • Unique and competitive salary and generous benefits package
  • Work/Life Balance
  • Commitment to clinical excellence
  • Team atmosphere
  • Constant training and learning
  • An excellent mentoring program for new hires – especially for new grads

To learn more about The Cantrell Center for Physical Therapy & Sports Medicine...
•    Visit our website
•    Find us on LinkedIn
•    Find us on Facebook
•    Find us on Instagram
•    Learn about our Annual Cantrell Center 5K & 1 Mile


If you like what you see, please send your resume to pr@cantrellcenter.com.

Posted September 18, 2023 at 2:39PM

The Impingement & Instability course has been a clinician's course for a long time. And that is even more the case now than ever before. I&I has evolved into an excellent precursor for the PRI Cervical, Cranial, Voice Box, and Forward Locomotion courses. This was very evident in the most recent presentation of I&I, which just happened to be the final delivery of this course for 2023.  

Since it is a Secondary Course, the course has the opportunity to go into several different directions, depending on who is in attendance and the questions the attendees ask. This is one of the primary reasons that each I&I course is different every time it's presented.  

We were able to touch upon content from a multitude of courses, but our focus remained on the value and necessity of both Impingement and Instability as great concepts, which lead us into the value of alternating compression and decompression to increase our ability to become less functionally cortically dominant. Being able to properly manage a system below C7 allows management of issues above C7 to become easier. As a result, we start drawing the connection between the scapula and calcaneus from very, very early on Day One.  

My thanks to Torin Berge, PT, PRC, for his help digest and break down the 4 unique non-manual techniques that are in this course. We were able to have an in-depth discussion about the value of these techniques, which was a treat. My thanks to Nancy Hammond, PT, PRC and Hayley Kava, PT, PRC for their questions and presence. And none of the live-stream would have been possible without RJ Hruska and his direction and production of this course.  It is not lost on us that the live-stream has expanded PRI Nation, and I am eternally grateful for all of those in attendance who live in other parts of the world.

 

If you haven't had an opportunity to attend the I&I course, I would encourage you to do so as every course is different, depending on the movement specialists present. My thanks to all of the movement specialists who were in attendance, and I look forward to teaching this course in 2024.

Posted September 13, 2023 at 1:35PM
Categories: Courses Science

Last weekend I had the honor of presenting Cranial Resolution in Chapel Hill, NC. Although most in attendance had previously taken this course, a few multiple times, several were dipping their toes into this material for the first time.  I was proud, gratified, and extremely relieved that, by the end of the weekend, everyone was expressing an energized and clinically relevant understanding of the functional relationship between the ANS and CNS - and the role that our lateralized cortical and subcortical biases and nasal passages play in influencing what we so often ‘orthopedically’ address. I had the privilege of witnessing the occurrence of serial eureka moments. These were illustrated through the cognitively insightful questions and enlightening discussions that, as one attendee put it . . . were “cathartic.”

The PRI giants at Advance PT, Susan Henning, Jean Masse and Lisa Mangino, who hosted the course, could not have been more welcoming. Their hospitality went above and beyond. I also owe a huge thanks to the incredible avatars who could not have demonstrated the autonomic concepts any better. Jean, for allowing us to use her beautifully neutral system to illustrate how the interruption of nasal flow can immediately and predictably alter one’s sense of ground and gravity (and so dramatically change a SLR test)! Kaisa for demonstrating how someone progresses through the treatment algorithm, including when and how to address an apparent dysfunctional autonomic limitation by effectively using one of the thoracic cranial resolution techniques. And a special thanks to Joe, who let me positionally challenge him to illustrate how, when, and why modifications may need to be made, and what significant gains can be achieved by addressing the autonomic nervous system.

I finished Sunday more excited than ever to be teaching this material. I cannot express how grateful I am to the institute for having the confidence in me to translate and present this aspect of Ron’s monumental work. To me, the ANS is where PRI begins. I honestly feel that gaining a basic grasp of how the ANS integrates with the CNS makes all the other courses so much easier to comprehend. It explains why things are happening and illuminates (and fortifies) the importance of the positioning, referencing, and sequencing of each and every one of the steps that are so methodically spelled out in all of the non-manual techniques.  

This was my first time teaching this course solo and I will be eternally grateful to everyone who attended for making it such a successful and meaningful experience. The dynamic of this group was incredible.

Posted September 5, 2023 at 3:15PM
Categories: Courses Science

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