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Possible Side Effects
This is a common and mild side effect. When myofibrils release you may feel momentary discomfort. The sensation varies with each individual. Patients have variously described the feeling as a pulling, tugging, burning, electrical or “weird” sensation. Others feel a heat release or a muscle twitch.
Muscle twitches, either observed or felt, are clear indications that muscle fibres are releasing. A twitch reaction is a good indicator that the treatment will have good results. The greater the twitch, the more fibres are being released.
Some patients experience a very brief radiation or an electrical signal to a limb or up and down the body. This is a positive reaction indicating release of fascial tissue associated with the treatment site.
This is a common and mild side effect. When myofibrils release you may feel momentary discomfort. The sensation varies with each individual. Patients have variously described the feeling as a pulling, tugging, burning, electrical or “weird” sensation. Others feel a heat release or a muscle twitch.
Muscle twitches, either observed or felt, are clear indications that muscle fibres are releasing. A twitch reaction is a good indicator that the treatment will have good results. The greater the twitch, the more fibres are being released.
Some patients experience a very brief radiation or an electrical signal to a limb or up and down the body. This is a positive reaction indicating release of fascial tissue associated with the treatment site.
Patients commonly experience a bruised feeling at the treatment sites. This sensation usually disappears within a day or two after treatment.
Patients who have a significant amount of muscle release may experience fatigue and need for a longer sleep following the first treatment. This is largely a phenomenon following the first treatment and doesn’t seem to occur after subsequent treatments.
New patients may want avoid driving immediately after their first treatment.
Sometimes as patients get pain relief in the treated areas, they experience a migration of pain to new areas. Pain migration generally reflects one of two positive treatment results.
Muscle fibres treated are released and pain is resolved at that specific site. Sometimes, the patient has other longstanding muscle fibres in sustained contraction which were subordinate to or eclipsed by the pain from the treated areas. When the dominant painful area is resolved, other muscles in sustained contraction become dominant and the patient feels pain in new areas. A follow-up treatment that addresses the new painful sites can resolve the issue of migrating pain.
Sometimes new pain results from a realignment of the interrelated muscular framework resulting from the newly relaxed muscles. The mechanism for this is unclear but may reflect disruption of the long established muscular interrelationships of shortened muscles that must readjust to a new relationship with functional muscles. Generally, patients find their bodies readjust and pain disappears within a few days.
Less commonly, individuals may experience short-term worsening or flare-up of pain following treatment which generally resolves within 24 hours. Please call the clinic for assessment if a pain flare-up lasts more than 24 hours. Your doctor may recommend an alternative treatment to relieve the pain.
This is more likely to result in someone who has had previous history of similar symptoms following immunization or visualizing blood. Fainting or loss of consciousness is rare. It is important to tell your physician immediately if you feel lightheaded, dizzy, nauseous or faint.
Rare Side Effects
Rarely, a patient might experience nausea during or immediately post treatment. In general, this symptom only occurs in those who have had nausea from similar medical procedures previously.
Physicians assess each patient for infection risk and follow appropriate precautions according to best practices.
Overall, there is a very low risk of infection, which would be evident by skin redness, soft tissue swelling, increasing pain and/or fever. The risk of infection increases for patients with diabetes, immune-compromised states or if the treatment included many separate insertion sites.
Increased pain that begins several days after the injection may be a sign of infection. This may suggest cellulitis or infection of soft tissues. You should call us if this occurs.
These rare symptoms may suggest a pneumothorax. Seek treatment immediately if this occurs. Call the clinic to speak with your treating physician, or if after hours, seek treatment at an urgent care facility or emergency room. Note - this complication would only result where treatment was applied in skin over the lung fields, most likely in the upper back or lower neck area
Symptoms and Signs That Need Urgent Medical Attention
Please call us or otherwise seek medical attention if you experience any of the following symptoms within 72 hours following treatment:
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shortness of breath, chest pain or sudden reduction in exercise capacity
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fever
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skin redness with swelling of superficial or deep tissues
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fainting
If you experience any of these symptoms, you should be immediately assessed. Here are some options for you:
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Call the treating physician: Dr. Liesl Roome (250) 927-3499
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See your family doctor if you can get an appointment on the same day
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Go to a walk-in medical clinic
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Go to a hospital emergency room
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