Microtrauma rehabilitation
As a Ukrainian-American with first medical education in Ukraine, I not only gravitate towards but have my strongest belief in rehabilitation principles, developed across Eastern Europe, especially in the sports systems that grew out of the Soviet Union era. Rehabilitation was rarely treated as a dramatic rescue mission- it was as daily work: do the basics every day, load the tissue intelligently, and let small improvements accumulate until the body is truly durable again. After my 36 years of holistic medicine practice, that mindset still holds up, particularly for microtrauma, meaning overuse and repetitive strain where symptoms creep in gradually and the root problem is usually load that exceeded the body’s capacity to recover. Microtrauma is not only irritated tissue; it is a nervous system that starts protecting a movement pattern. In practical terms, you see inhibited recruitment, poor timing, compensations, and eventually pain. If you treat only the pain, the compensation stays. The Eastern European approach aims to restore function first, then performance, with consistent low-grade progress and a strict refusal to rush.
Microtrauma is not reserved for sport. While in an athlete, microtrauma is usually training volume and repetition, in an older adult, it can be stairs, long walks, gardening, carrying groceries, poor sleep, or simply moving with a guarded pattern for months and even years. In disability, it is often repetitive strain from compensations: one-sided cane use, wheelchair propulsion, transfers, or overusing the “good side.” In people, suffering from dementia, for instance, it might become a chronic bracing pattern: fear of falling, sensory confusion, pain, and anxiety all raise baseline muscle tone; that constant guarding creates microtrauma in neck, shoulders, jaw, low back, hips, and calves; even without a major injury, repeated small stumbles and awkward catches create cumulative strain, especially in the wrists, ribs, hip flexors, and lumbar spine. Microtrauma may present as agitation, withdrawal, facial grimacing, resistance to care, or sudden changes in gait rather than a clean complaint of pain.
Rehabilitation routine at my practice
First we find what fails to work. For an athlete, it might be sprint mechanics, overhead lift, cutting, throwing; for an older adult, sit-to-stand, stairs, turning, reaching, walking tolerance; for dementia or disability, transfers, standing balance, gait initiation, bed mobility, wheelchair propulsion, or simply tolerating upright posture. This is usually done by applying Tuina tests to the meridians and muscles.
Then we reduce pain, swelling, and protective tone. My goal is to make movement possible, not to create dependency. With that in mind, I use acupuncture (to downshift pain sensitivity, normalize tone, and make movement feel safe again), Tuina (to restore glide, reduce myofascial drag, and address the real mechanical lines that match how the body moves; this is where Tuina is brutally practical: it changes tissue texture and tolerance so the person can use his body), laser therapy (as a non-aggressive way to calm sensitivity and support recovery, particularly useful when touch tolerance is low, bruising risk is higher, or the client is fragile.)
After that work on restoring range of motion and control inside that range.
Microtrauma thrives in guarded partial ranges, so it’s important to open the range, and then teach the nervous system to be in it. For older adults and dementia, this step is often the breakthrough: once a hip, ankle, or thoracic spine moves again without threat, gait and balance improve fast.
Next step is rebuilding recruitment with simple, repeatable daily movements. In addition to short controlled exercises during the sessions, every client is encouraged to start moving and lightly exercising at home. Even 2 minutes per day make a huge difference. The movement builds up safety and familiarity.
When the client is ready, we increase volume and difficulty in small steps. It’s a slow and careful process, where each next load needs to be “earned” to avoid spikes and flare-ups. For disability, this prevents the classic trap: one good day leads to overdoing it, which leads to a crash, which leads to fear, which leads to more guarding.
Gradually the regained function will be integrated into client’s actual life: be it sport demands, elastic work, return-to-play stressors, or stairs, carrying, reaching, getting up from the floor safely, walking turns, getting in and out of the car, or safe step-ups, supported squats, balance, hand coordination.
I always ask my clients to follow a simple physiological mindfulness: protein sufficiency, hydration, sleep regularity, daily light exposure and walking in the street, stressless environment as much as possible.