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Myofascial Release

Duration: 30-45 minutes per session · Physiotherapy and Rehab, Ayurvedic Sports Medicine

Overview

Fascia is the continuous web of connective tissue that wraps every muscle, bone and organ in the body. After injury, surgery, sustained postures or repetitive strain, areas of this web can become dense, dehydrated and stiff — and because fascia is richly supplied with nerve endings, these restrictions can be genuinely painful and can limit how freely muscles glide against each other.

Myofascial release (MFR) uses slow, sustained manual pressure and stretch into these restricted areas — typically held for 90 seconds or more — until the tissue softens and lengthens. Unlike massage strokes, MFR waits for the tissue: the clinician feels for the release rather than forcing it. At ACTYMED it is used for chronic back and neck tightness, recurring overuse injuries, post-surgical restriction and alongside our Ayurvedic soft-tissue therapies.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does myofascial release feel like?

Slow, sustained, sinking pressure — quite different from the rhythmic strokes of massage. Over the hold you’ll often feel the tissue gradually “melt” or lengthen. Working through genuinely restricted tissue can be intensely relieving; a day of light soreness afterwards is normal.

How is it different from massage or dry needling?

Massage works broadly on muscle for circulation and relaxation. Dry needling targets discrete trigger points with a needle. MFR works on the fascial layer with sustained manual pressure and stretch, following lines of restriction that often run well beyond the painful spot — which is why your clinician may work somewhere different from where it hurts.

Is there scientific evidence behind it?

The evidence base is younger than for exercise or joint mobilisation but growing. A systematic review (Ajimsha et al., Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies, 2015) found encouraging results for chronic low back pain, tennis elbow and fibromyalgia, while calling for larger trials. We are honest about this: at ACTYMED, MFR is used as an adjunct within an evidence-based plan — never as the whole plan.

How many sessions will I need?

Longstanding restrictions usually need a course — commonly four to six sessions — with progress judged by how your movement and symptoms change, not by how the tissue feels alone.

Can I do myofascial release on myself?

Self-MFR with foam rollers or balls is a useful maintenance tool between sessions, and we will teach you exactly where and how. Clinician-applied MFR reaches restrictions and directions that self-treatment cannot.

Who should avoid MFR?

We avoid or adapt treatment over open wounds, active infection or inflammation, acute injuries in the first days, known blood clots (DVT), and in people on strong blood thinners or with fragile skin.

Key Benefits

  • Releases deep, longstanding tissue restrictions that massage doesn't reach
  • Eases chronic muscular tightness in the back, neck and limbs
  • Improves how muscles glide and lengthen during movement
  • Complements dry needling, exercise and Ayurvedic soft-tissue therapy
  • Teaches you self-release tools for lasting maintenance

When This Treatment Is Used

  • Chronic low back and neck muscular tightness
  • Recurring overuse injuries with tissue stiffness
  • Post-surgical or post-injury fascial restriction and scarring
  • Fibromyalgia-related tightness, within multidisciplinary care
  • Sports-related muscle tightness limiting performance

When It Is Avoided

  • Open wounds, active skin infection or acute inflammation at the site
  • Acute injury in the first few days (other care comes first)
  • Known or suspected deep vein thrombosis
  • Strong anticoagulant therapy or fragile skin
  • Recent fracture or surgical site before clearance

Your clinician will always screen you before treatment — share your full medical history at your consultation.

Scientific Evidence

  • Systematic review (Ajimsha et al., Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies 2015) reports encouraging results for myofascial release in chronic low back pain, lateral epicondylitis and fibromyalgia, while recommending larger trials
  • Reviews of self-myofascial release (Beardsley & Skarabot, 2015) show short-term improvements in flexibility without reducing performance
  • ACTYMED positions MFR honestly: a useful adjunct within an exercise-led, evidence-based plan

Conditions This Treatment Helps With

More Manual Therapies

Doctors Who Perform This Treatment

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Ayurvedic Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine

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