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Myofascial Release is a technique that has been developed extensively particularly in the US and in Australia, and latterly here in the UK and elsewhere. It followed the discovery that the body’s fascia, or connective tissue, plays a much more crucial role in health and well-being than previously thought.


Fascia is a fibro-elastic connective tissue that not only superficially surrounds the whole body just under the skin, but also surrounds every organ; bone; individual muscle fibre; ligament; tendon; nerve, blood and lymph vessel; and ultimately every cell in the body – forming a 3 dimensional protective and communicative network from head to toe. Muscle and its fascial binding (myofascia) are functionally linked, providing contour and movement to the body. In its normal state, fascia is elastic and very strong. However, when physical or emotional trauma occurs (as it can throughout our lives),  fascia will harden, thicken, tighten and become dehydrated. Then its inherent strength, together with a lack of elasticity, acts to immobilise whatever it surrounds, preventing normal function. It is often restriction in the fascia that causes pain, both in itself and the structures it surrounds. And because fascia is entirely continuous throughout the body, a restriction in one part will affect every other part.


Pain from myofascial restriction is described as burning, dull, deep, sharp, heavy, diffuse, or ‘like toothache’, and the exact location is often difficult to pinpoint . The pain can become generalised, and is often referred pain from a restriction elsewhere in the body. A myofascial therapist will aim to treat the origin of the pain which might be in a seemingly unrelated, unaffected area.


Myofascial release is a hands-on technique, performed without oil or wax, which re-hydrates the area of fascial restriction and loosens the fibres, restoring elasticity and connectivity. It treats the whole body, and gets to the cause of the problem, not just the symptoms.


Myofascial restrictions do not show up on a CAT scan, MRI or x-ray, so can be missed completely or even misdiagnosed.


MFR can help with generalised undiagnosed pain, general tightness in the body, and can often relieve pain where all other techniques have failed. It can also help with, amongst other conditions:


  1. •Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ME

  2. •Fibromyalgia

  3. •IBS

  4. •Period Pain

  5. •Scar Tissue

  6. •Polymyalgia Rheumatica

  7. •Plantar Fascitis


Myofascial Unwinding

During Myofascial Release the body can spontaneously move as the fascia releases. The therapist goes with the movement, assisting and supporting where necessary. If the restriction was originally due to a physical trauma, it is as if the body needs to  replicate the position in order to release. Sometimes emotion or memories can surface as well.