Massaggio terapeutico · Mal di schiena
Massaggio Terapeutico
per il Mal di Schiena
Come Funziona e Cosa Sapere
Di Yang Wang · Chinese Massage – Tai Chi Tirana
Il mal di schiena è uno dei disturbi più comuni con cui i clienti vengono da noi. Alcuni lo portano da mesi. Altri arrivano dopo anni di calvario tra farmaci, fisioterapia e riposo forzato — senza trovare una soluzione duratura. La Medicina Tradizionale Cinese guarda al mal di schiena in modo diverso — e questo cambiamento di prospettiva porta spesso a risultati diversi.
Perché Fa Male la Schiena? Le Cause Principali
La schiena è una delle strutture più complesse del corpo — colonna vertebrale, muscoli paraspinali, tendini, legamenti e dischi lavorano insieme senza sosta. Quando qualcosa perde equilibrio, il dolore non tarda ad arrivare.
Lo stile di vita sedentario e la postura scorretta
8–10 ore davanti a uno schermo, con la schiena curva, la testa inclinata in avanti e le spalle bloccate. I muscoli della schiena si sforzano per compensare — e nel tempo questo sforzo diventa dolore cronico.
Chronic stress
Cortisol — the stress hormone — causes continuous muscular contraction, especially in the mid and lower back. Even without any physical injury, chronic stress produces real, muscular, physical pain.
Injuries & micro-traumas
Incorrect weightlifting, sudden movements, minor accidents — create fixed zones of tension that do not release on their own. A whole compensation network develops around the original problem.
Energy imbalance (TCM)
Back pain interpreted as a blockage in the flow of Qi through the Bladder and Kidney meridians. When energy stagnates, pain follows.
How Chinese Massage Treats Back Pain
Tui Na — Chinese therapeutic massage — is not a relaxation massage. It is a structured, focused therapy grounded in meridian anatomy. The therapist applies specific techniques — finger pressure (acupressure), deep friction, passive joint movements, and gentle manipulation — with a precise goal: releasing blockages and restoring flow.
Clinically validated effects documented in modern research:
- Reduction of muscular tension and release of trigger points — the hardened zones where pain originates
- Increased local blood circulation, delivering oxygen and nutrients to damaged tissue
- Stimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing cortisol production and cortisol-mediated muscle spasms
- Reduction in pain perception through the release of natural endorphins
- Restoration of mobility — many clients leave with full lumbar range of motion after just one session
What Happens During a Back Pain Session
Every session begins with a brief consultation — we ask where it hurts, when it started, how it presents (sharp, dull, radiating toward the legs?), what makes it worse and what provides relief.
Releasing surface tension and preparing the deeper layers.
Identifying and treating the main blockages along the energy channels.
Stimulating key points that influence pain and communicate with internal organs (in TCM terms).
Helping the spine rediscover its natural alignment.
How to preserve the effects and what to avoid between sessions.
How Many Sessions Are Needed?
Acute pain
1–2 weeks · Often 2–3 sessions provide significant relief.
Chronic pain
Months or years · We typically recommend 6–8 sessions at 5–7 day intervals, with a progress assessment after the third session.
Many of our clients report noticeable relief from the very first session — not necessarily complete elimination, but real reduction and improved mobility.
What Our Clients Say
I had back pain for 3 years. I tried everything. After my first session at Tai Chi, I slept through the night without waking from pain for the first time.
— Erjon M., TiranaI was working from home and my lumbar pain had become unbearable. After 4 sessions, I can sit normally and focus on work without any problem.
— Mirela K., TiranaWhen to Come to Us — and When to See a Doctor First
Chinese therapeutic massage is safe and effective for the vast majority of muscular and connective tissue pain. However, we recommend prior medical consultation if:
- The pain is accompanied by numbness or weakness in the legs
- You have unexplained loss of coordination
- The pain intensified following a recent accident
- You have an existing diagnosis of acute herniated disc
In these cases we work closely alongside your doctor's recommendations.
You Don't Have to Live With Back Pain
Often the solution exists — you simply haven't tried the right approach yet.