General consideration II
- Symptom
- This type of knee pain is often found with soccer players. Causes of knee pains found with soccer players are categorized into two types: one is too much use of multiple joint surfaces (knee joints, nine joints of foot, hip joints, etc.) that work together for complex footworks, and the other is trauma injury caused by tackles and other external forces.
- Tamatare Remedy
- For both types of problems, Tamatare Remedy first recovers the capability of lower limb muscles by restoring their metabolism efficiency. In doing so, Tamatare Remedy categorizes the relationships between muscles and joints into functional groups such as alignment between the abductor muscle and the joint surface, the alignment between the adductor muscle and the joint surface, and the alignment between the side-bending muscle and multiple joint surfaces. Tamatare Remedy then uses various techniques such as multiple joints alignment, coordination of joints, muscles, and bones, and coordination of force axes of multiple joints, in order to remove the pain and cure the problem.
Here we would like to explain a little bit more about the meniscus injury. Until recently, this injury required an operation, but it does not anymore unless the injury is very unusual. The meniscus is not used directly in human actions of sports, not to mention everyday life. Human joint movements are actuated by muscles and joint capsules. Furthermore, the meniscus has the natural healing ability, and can be cured by Tamatare Remedy.
- Details
- Overworking often causes inflammation in the cruciate ligament and the pes anserinus. The pes anserinus is a tendon common to three different muscles: the gracilis muscle, which stabilizes the pivot foot when kicking a ball, the semitendinosus muscle, which exerts the force for kicking a ball, and the sartorius muscle, which raises the foot. An injury in this region is a pes anserinus inflammation.
Trauma injuries that are often caused by tackles are those of the meniscus and the collateral ligament.
General consideration III