Jennifer Chu, M.D., founder of eToims Soft Tissue Comfort Center® is also President and CEO of eToims Medical Technology LLC, a medical device company with training programs in eToims® Twitch Method. She is an Associate Professor in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School where she has been on faculty for more than 30 years. Dr. Chu retired in 2006 but still continues to teach U of PA residents in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation in the field of electrodiagnostic medicine and neuromuscular medicine.
The present state-of-the-art eToims® Twitch Method, developed since 1990, resulted from Dr. Chu’s more than three decades of experience in electrodiagnostic studies. She authored many peer-reviewed publications including a textbook entitled "Electrodiagnosis: An Anatomical and Clinical Approach.” Not only is she an active member of numerous prestigious national medical societies, she was awarded honorary membership in the European Society of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. She holds four issued patents, plus three pending patents, for the purpose of providing soft tissue comfort.
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I just wanted to point out something, although you sort of mention it, it isn’t clear and it can be misleading by the way it was described in the text about the shoulder and neck pain section. The serratus anterior’s function is NOT to elevate the arm. Although it does help for superior rotation and posterior tilt of the scapula in order to increase the subacromial space and make humeral elevation possible… it does NOT contribute to humeral levation. I was checking out some stuff and I saw it and sort of confused me for a moment.
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