Who Is Canine Massage for?
Who Is Canine Massage For?

The short answer is any dog. But that would be the most unhelpful blog post ever, so I’ll expand! When talking about Canine Massage, I like to roughly break it down into 3 sections,
PAIN MANAGEMENT
CANINE ATHLETES
RELAXATION
Today I will give you a whirlwind tour of PAIN MANAGEMENT.
Pain management, it’s a biggie and the most common one I see in my clinic. From rehab after surgery to the arthritic dog, there’s so many different variants but all have the same result, sadly a dog in pain.
Pain is a funny old thing and the ones I look at most closely are Chronic and Acute. Chronic is your long suffering engrained pain, which is associated with conditions such as arthritis. Chronic pain comes with its acute stages, which can present as onset of lameness.
Acute stages last typically 5-7 days and are slightly different in nature. These are easier to spot as usually accompanied by a yelp and or limp. That doesn’t mean to say that all dogs will do this but for the most parts those are the two more common signs of pain.
Something that I work tirelessly with is educating dog owners how to recognise pain. Dogs are designed to hide pain so please be under no illusion that despite your old dog still wanting to chase after a ball with his 9 year old arthritic hips, that they aren’t in pain.
You’re the dogs champion, their advocate! They can’t speak after all so we have to do it for them. When you get that ball out for Old Timmy (is that even a generic dog name?!) a rush of adrenaline surges through his body giving him super doggy strength to relive his youth with his favourite toy. However after exercise or the next day Old Timmy is unable to understand the correlation of the pain he now feels and the fun he had yesterday.
Ok so where does massage come into it?
When pain is present your dog will start to move their body differently, this is called compensatory tension. Imagine you had stubbed your toe, it’s not enough to warrant you not using the foot but you stand on your foot a little different to take the pressure off. Eventually after a few days you may notice that you get a bit of hip ache, maybe back ache too. You have asked your body to move in a different way in which it is used to so you have caused new tension.
The exact same happens to your dog. Its my job to find these areas of tension and use soft tissue manipulation techniques to release them (Trust me there is a lot more to it than that but for the purpose of a blog I’ll cover it more in-depth another time). Alongside this I give owners homework to be doing…
HOMEWORK AHHH DON’T PANIC!
It’s super easy lovely things you can be gently doing at home as part of your home care routine. There is a lot I can say about pain but my idea for this blog is to give people little snippets of information to be thinking about.
Love Yaz and The Pooches xxx









