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B.T.M.

Biomechanical Therapeutic Method

Multidisciplinary Consortium for Postural Reprogramming

A multidisciplinary team uses the innovative BTM method to treat and prevent disorders and pathologies affecting the musculoskeletal system

B.T.M. is an innovative and accessible therapeutic method for the prevention and treatment of disorders, dysfunctions and pathologies affecting the musculoskeletal system: chronic and acute back pain, muscle inflammation, tendonitis, joint disorders, motor and walking difficulties (even from post-surgical outcome), sports and non-sports traumas and polytraumas, neck pain, lumbago, sciatica, myalgia, muscle tension migraine, heel pain, fasciitis and plantar support disorders, etc.

The therapeutic intervention is developed by a professional paramedic team that approaches the patient, both following the ordinary specialized application of the therapy, and through a global approach characterized by the identification of the cause triggering the exposed problem. In fact, a new interesting therapeutic aspect opens up for the patient whose innovation is contained in personalized therapy of both the cause and the effect of the disorder, deficit or pathology; there are no application limits for both age and type of patient.

The choice to adopt this new investigation methodology and to carry out a subsequent personalized biomechanical re-education intervention, also through the aid of ad hoc rehabilitation tools, places the patient in the position of acquiring full autonomy in muscular work, in order to obtain both a state of daily physical well-being that leads to intense sporting muscular effort with a realistic result of 85% therapeutic success.

THE NEUROSCIENCE OF MOVEMENT

One of the key areas of the brain that controls body movement is called the motor cortex and is located in the frontal lobe. This area is located at the top of the head, extending from ear to ear. The motor cortex controls the largest muscles in your body. The pre-motor cortex, which is also part of the frontal lobe, controls the muscles closest to the spine ensuring correct joint stability. It is the combination of the motor and pre-motor cortex that allows our muscles to move, sending signals electrical signals from neurons located in the brain to groups of specific muscle fibers, causing the muscles to contract and allowing the body to move

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1. SENSORY AFFERENCE Everything you see and hear is information captured through sensors such as mechanoreceptors in your feet. These specialized receptors send messages to the brain's processing centers for analysis. This phase is known as “sensory afference”.

2. INTEGRATION PHASE Your brain then identifies the nature of the message and decides the best course of action, the “integration” phase.

3. MOTOR EFFERENCE The original signal becomes a command sent to the muscles to execute the movement, the final “motor efference” phase.

IT'S ALL CONNECTED

Take a moment to observe the world around you. Feel the floor beneath your feet. Your perception of the environment is rooted in the perpetual interaction between the brain and the senses. The diagram below clarifies how the nervous system influences posture and movements

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