Tuesday, March 07, 2006

PROLOTHERAPY AFTER BACK SURGERY

Ross Hauser, M.D.

Many people only become aware of Prolotherapy after they have undergone a surgical procedure for back pain. Although the pain may not be as severe as it was before the surgery, most people continue to experience significant back pain after surgery. Why? Because the back surgery involved removing supporting structures, such as a lamina, facet, or disc, thus weakening surrounding segments.

Prolotherapy injections to the weakened segments in the lumbar vertebrae often result in definitive pain relief in post-surgery pain syndromes. Back pain is commonly due to several factors and surgery may have eliminated only one. It is possible, for example, to have back pain from a lumbar herniated disc and a sacroiliac joint problem. Surgery may address the herniated disc problem but not the sacroiliac problem. In this example, Prolotherapy injections to the sacroiliac joint would cure the chronic pain problem.

Unfortunately, it is common for a person to have lumbar spine surgery for a sciatica complaint diagnosed from an abnormality” on an MRI scan. The sciatica” complaint was a simple ligament problem in the sacroiliac joint and the MRI scan finding was not clinically relevant—it had nothing to do with the pain problem. For the majority of people who experience pain radiating down the leg, even in cases where numbness is present, the cause of the problem is not a pinched nerve but sacroiliac ligament weakness.

Ligament laxity in the sacroiliac joint is the number one reason for "sciatica,” or pain radiating down the side of the leg, and is one of the most common reasons for chronic low back pain. This can easily be confirmed by stretching these ligaments and producing a positive "jump sign.” Ligament weakness can cause leg numbness. Most people sense pain when they have ligament weakness, but some people experience a sensation of numbness. Doctors typically believe nerve injury is the only reason for numbness, a reason so many people believe they have a sciatic nerve problem. In reality, it is a sacroiliac ligament problem. The referral patterns of the sciatic nerve and the sacroiliac ligaments are similar. In this scenario, it is unfortunate that thousands of dollars were spent on surgery and post-operative care. Had Prolotherapy treatments been performed on the pain-producing structure, this could have been avoided.

1 Comments:

At 3:35 PM, expatient said...

"Ligament laxity in the sacroiliac joint is the number one reason for "sciatica,” or pain radiating down the side of the leg, and is one of the most common reasons for chronic low back pain."

I agree. And 99% of medical doctors don't believe that problem even exists! Most of the chiros and PTs haven't even heard of it.

"This can easily be confirmed by stretching these ligaments and producing a positive "jump sign.”"

If you use that technic you will diagnose the SIJD to wrong side! Stiffnes and pain is usually on the other SIJ where the problem is!

"Doctors typically believe nerve injury is the only reason for numbness, a reason so many people believe they have a sciatic nerve problem."

It is not nerve injury but stiff ligaments or muscles that cause pinched ischias nerve ie. "piriformis syndrome". When SIJD is corrected ischias pain is gone.

SIJD is very common disorder. About 80% of all people have it, yet medical doctors don't even believe it exists!

But if right SIJ shows stiffnes and pain it is because left SIJ is dislocated. That is more common disorder: Pain in right -> Left SIJ dislocated!

I am ex SIJD patient who had pain and stiffnes in right side. Few PTs and chiropractors tried to manipulate my right SIJ with no success at all.

Then I met one PT who said my left SIJ is dislocated and he pushed it down back to it's place. That was excellent treatment! All my pains and problems were gone after that!

You can read my story:
http://personal.inet.fi/koti/faro/Selkasivut/Others.html

 

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