Physical Therapy for Seniors

Among the circumstances where physical therapy can be valuable are for those:
- Recovering from injuries such as a broken hip
- Osteoarthritis
- Pain in all parts of the body such as knee, back, shoulder, wrist, etc.
- Diabetes
- Parkinson’s Disease
- Alzheimer’s Disease
- Stroke
- Vertigo
- Incontinence
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Cerebral Palsy
- And many other conditions
What Does a Physical Therapist Do?
Physical Therapists (PTs) diagnose and treat everyone from newborns to seniors who have medical problems or health-related issues. PTs develop a plan using a variety of treatment techniques to increase a person’s movement, reduce pain, and restore function. The first goal is to reduce pain and swelling if there is any. Then, a PT will apply various techniques to increase flexibility, strength, coordination and balance. These techniques usually involve exercise such as stretching, lifting weights and walking. PTs can also combine an assortment of other therapies, some that may help, and others that may not.
Types of Physical Therapy
Manual Therapy is therapy performed by the hands of the therapist with the goal of relaxing the patient, reducing pain, and providing more flexibility. It includes:
- Massaging muscles and the body’s soft tissues to relax the patient, improve circulation and relieve pain.
- Mobilization uses slow movements to twist, pull and pull joints and bones into place. This can help to loosen tight joint tissues and increase flexibility.
- Manipulation uses fast, forceful movements to relieve pain and re-align joints and bones.
- Cold Therapy is used to relieve pain, swelling and inflammation from conditions such as arthritis. Treatment involves ice packs (15 to 20 minute sessions), ice massage, and rest, ice, compression and elevation (RICE).
- Heat Therapy relaxes muscles and improves blood circulation, which is useful for loosening stiff joints from osteoarthritis or other conditions where you’ve been immobilized. Heat is also used to loosen muscles before exercise.
- Dry Needling are inserted into a specific area of a tight muscle causing it to relax.
- Physical Therapists educate patients in every session. Patients are taught how to perform daily tasks, protect their body from re-injury, perform exercises at home, and how to make their homes a safer place.
Treating Specific Conditions with Physical Therapy
The medical community is finding that physical therapy can be used to help patients with a variety of diseases and medical conditions-some obvious, some less so.
Most people 65 and over have some arthritis in their spine, even if they don’t have the symptoms. Physical therapy can help offset future symptoms by various methods.
Most people 65 and over have some arthritis in their spine, even if they don’t have the symptoms. Physical therapy can help offset future symptoms by various methods.
- For stroke patients, PTs use constraint-induced movement therapy, where you are forced (your good limb is restrained) to use your weaker arm or hand. Motor imagery and mental practice involves rehearsing movements without actually doing it. This stimulates that part of your brain that controls movement.
- Parkinson’s disease patients perform exercises that improve trunk flexibility to avoid the robotic movements the disease produces.
- Incontinence patients are taught how to find the right muscles and use them correctly. Doing pelvic exercises helps strengthen muscles to better control the bladder.
- PTs work Alzheimer’s patients using exercise, which can improve memory and delay the onset of more serious memory problems. They also use “mirroring” where the PT serves as a mirror, showing the patient how to move. Other techniques include dancing and gardening, which help patients remember certain types of movements.
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which causes difficulty breathing, is addressed with exercise training that can improve shortness of breath by training muscles and increasing aerobic capacity.
Summary
As you can see, physical therapy can help seniors in about every area of health care imaginable. If you’re recovering from surgery or an illness or living with a disease, ask your doctor about physical therapy. PT can give you back your independence by increasing your mobility and making daily tasks easier.