Are you in Canada? Click here to proceed to the HK Canada website.

For all other locations, click here to continue to the HK US website.

Human Kinetics Logo

Purchase Courses or Access Digital Products

If you are looking to purchase online videos, online courses or to access previously purchased digital products please press continue.

Mare Nostrum Logo

Purchase Print Products or Ebooks

Human Kinetics print books and Ebooks are now distributed by Mare Nostrum, throughout the UK, Europe, Africa and Middle East, delivered to you from their warehouse. Please visit our new UK website to purchase Human Kinetics printed or eBooks.

Feedback Icon Feedback Get $15 Off

50% off ebooks, CE with ebooks, and CE video courses

B1102
Online CE Exam With Ebook

The Anatomy and Physiology of Sports Massage Online CE Exam With Ebook

Author: Human Kinetics

$100.00 USD

This title will be released on March 06, 2026


Online CE Exam With Ebook
$100.00 USD

ISBN: 9781718238251

Online CE Exam With Ebook

Approved Credits:

Human Kinetics strongly recommends that you complete your exam within the calendar year of your date of purchase to ensure approved credits do not expire for your organization.

This package includes the following:

  • The Anatomy and Physiology of Sports Massage ebook
  • Online continuing education exam

To maximize treatment outcomes from manual therapy, you must understand both anatomy and the physiological response of the body to various techniques. The Anatomy and Physiology of Sports Massage guides you through this process by combining anatomical landmarks for palpation with the function of the muscles to help you pair specific treatment techniques with the intended response. You’ll get guidance on different types of manual therapies and their role in recovery from exercise as well as in treating and preventing chronic musculoskeletal injuries.

Photos throughout the ebook demonstrate hands-on treatments for each area of the body and are overlaid with anatomical illustrations, making it easy to pinpoint the muscles targeted by each therapy. The massage treatments are accompanied by explanations of how to perform the techniques, and descriptions of each muscle outline the origin, insertion, and action of the muscle at the joint, along with stressor considerations that are important to take into account as you work with an athlete.

Other features include advice on considerations for sports massage, such as avoiding lotions in certain scenarios, and Why Do the Clinicians Care? sidebars that reiterate the practical benefits for athletes or clients. Additional information about the types and benefits of self-care treatments is also included:

  • Compressive massage tools, such as foam rollers
  • Decompression items, such as therapeutic tape
  • Percussive techniques that use vibration, such as a massage gun
  • Hydrotherapy that uses hot or cold water, such as saunas or cold plunges

The Anatomy and Physiology of Sports Massage helps you understand the why behind many of the techniques and responses seen in manual therapy. Whether you are a seasoned clinician or a clinical instructor, there is value in reviewing your practice to ensure that you are providing the best possible therapies and techniques that match desired client outcomes.

After reading the ebook, certified professionals can take the companion CE exam to earn continuing education credits.

Learning Objectives

  • Identify the components of the myofascial unit.
  • Name and compare the three types of muscles in the body.
  • Define the muscle tissue properties of extensibility, excitability, elasticity, and contractility.
  • Differentiate between the types of massage techniques used during manual therapy.
  • Understand how manual therapy can be used to relieve symptoms in clients with common structural and functional issues or problems.
  • Recognize common stressors seen in various types of athletes and how the stressors affect treatment.
  • Identify the best position (prone, seated, side-lying, or supine) a patient should be in during treatment of different regions of the body, such as the anterior shoulder or lower leg.
  • Name the origin, insertion, innervation, and action of major muscles.
  • Explain how to use massage when treating various areas throughout the body and specify which massage techniques to use during treatment.
  • Evaluate self-care treatments such as massage canes and massage guns.

Audience

Certified strength and conditioning professionals, personal trainers, athletic trainers, and manual and massage therapists looking to learn more about sports massage and its role in recovery.

Part I. Foundations
Chapter 1. Muscles and Fascia
Chapter 2. The Physiological Effects of Manual Therapies
Chapter 3. Types of Manual Therapies
Chapter 4. Structural Versus Functional Considerations
Chapter 5. Common Compensations in Sport

Part II. Techniques
Chapter 6. Shoulder, Arm, Forearm, and Hand
Chapter 7. Upper Back and Neck
Chapter 8. Lower Back and Abdomen
Chapter 9. Hip, Thigh, and Knee
Chapter 10. Lower Leg and Foot
Chapter 11. Self-Care

Portia B. Resnick, PhD, ATC, BCTMB, boasts 30 years of experience in the sports medicine field as a board-certified athletic trainer and massage therapist. With a PhD in education with a concentration in kinesiology from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, her research delved into the use of heart rate variability as a clinical measure of recovery in NCAA Division I athletes. Having worked as an athletic trainer at the high school, collegiate, and professional levels and as a sole proprietor in therapeutic and sports massage, she currently holds the positions of associate professor and coordinator of clinical education at California State University at Long Beach.

Dr. Resnick has held numerous volunteer and leadership positions in both the athletic training and massage communities. Her current research delves into sports massage, evidence-based practice in massage therapy, and massage ergonomics as part of her work for the Massage Therapy Foundation. She has given numerous presentations on manual therapy, the autonomic nervous system, and sports massage.