The Primal Reflex Release Technique™ (PRRT, pronounced “pert”) is a manual-therapy approach for evaluating and relieving musculoskeletal pain. PRRT is often able to accomplish in just seconds what joint mobilization and manipulation, trigger point therapy, and soft tissue and myofascial release can do overtime.
PRRT has been found effective in more than 80% of patients with painful conditions. How can it be so successful? PRRT is based on the premise that over-stimulation of the body’s primal reflexes creates pain and keeps painful patterns occurring again and again. These reflexes – startle, withdrawal, and the protective joint reflexes – are hardwired into the nervous system of the body for the purpose of survival. When a person experiences a painful or startling event, these reflexes are triggered in an attempt to protect the body.
Unfortunately, these reflexes often persist in a state of hyper-readiness long after the triggering event has passed. When sustained over time, activated reflex responses lead to patterns of pain that are reproduced, repeated, and maintained, interfering with healing and resisting therapeutic efforts to restore natural function.
PRRT addresses muscle and joint receptors along with their spinal modulation. These often overlooked and seldom-treated areas of the body are the cause and solution for many types of pain, including:
The Primal Reflex Release Technique™ treatment system offers an innovative combination and application of techniques that facilitate rapid “neural reboot.” This neural reboot resets the neural control of joints, muscles, and fascia to release joint restrictions, trigger points, and fascial restrictions not unlike when you reboot your computer.
Why Haven’t We Looked at the Most Primal of All Systems, the Reflexes?
It seems obvious that the reflexes found at the spinal cord and brain stem levels should be considered in musculoskeletal assessment as they are with PRRT. Yet in courses, textbooks, and journals that address treating musculoskeletal issues, the neurophysiological basis underlying muscle and joint protective mechanisms is generally ignored or overlooked.
You may have noticed that many patients you see have some degree of “splinting” in the injured area. This splinting is of a protective nature and is often referred to as muscle spasms. The relationship of muscle spasms to musculoskeletal pain is another enigma, as it, too, has little literature elucidating its physiological basis.
Fortunately, John Iams has researched and evolved a method that takes into account reflexes and addresses splinting and muscle spasms and their relationship to musculoskeletal pain. PRRT elegantly and rapidly assesses and treats using the very reflexes we were gifted within our muscles, tendons, joint capsules, and even skin.
PRRT – Helping You Help Your Patients
The assessment and treatment of overly protective joint and muscle reflexes are a natural addition to any pain-relief practice. It will blend seamlessly with any other techniques you may use and will enhance their effectiveness by removing the barrier of resistance that primal reflexes trigger. The PRRT methods often eliminate or alleviate pain in as little as one treatment. The quick results make treatment affordable for patients, and specialized training is easy to master.
PRRT is used to great effect in over a dozen countries worldwide by nearly 2,000 practitioners. Practitioners have found PRRT to be very effective used in conjunction with other therapies, such as:
The combined result is quick relief of most musculoskeletal, even chronic pain. Patients often see lasting, markedly reduced or eliminated pain after only one treatment. In fact, PRRT must show pain relief within one to two sessions or it is likely not the answer for that patient’s condition.
Contact us today to learn more about PRRT, it’s innovative, gentle manual therapy techniques and how it can benefit you.