Saturday, July 6, 2013

Find Out How to Become a Chiropractor


Being a chiropractor can be a rewarding career choice. You can help people with their spinal and hip injuries by performing adjustments and manipulations. You can actually help patients manage their pain and make their lives better. You may be wondering how to become a chiropractor.

The trend in the undergraduate educational requirements are changing. Previously, it was only required that you have a two year degree. Now, the trend is that you must have a bachelor's degree. Some good degrees to obtain are biology, chemistry, or physics.

After you have finished your undergraduate degree, you must go on to a chiropractic college. If possible, attend one of the programs accredited by the Council on Chiropractic Education. Their website has a listing of schools and further information about the field that can help you.

Similar to doctors, nurses and others in the medical field, you must pass a licensing exam in the state that you will be practicing in. Since requirements vary by state, it is good to check with your state's medical board for the most up to date requirements.

If you are going to choose a specialty, bear in mind that you may need to perform some additional training. Some specialties include orthopedics, neurology, or sports related injuries.

The final step is finding a job. With a doctor of chiropractic degree, you can find work in many different environments, but you can also open your own practice. Whatever path you decide to take, you will find much enjoyment and satisfaction in the field.

How to Ease the Aches and Pains of Cold Weather


Winter is upon us again and most of the country is covered in layers of freezing snow. Some folks know winter is here because they can see the snow through their window or hear about it on the news, but some of us know winters is coming long before it arrives. We can predict the cold because our joints and body ache like the devil and old injuries that we barely remember come back to haunt us.

Whether you have arthritis, sinusitis, fibromyalgia, carpel tunnel syndrome or just a bad knee from that fall you took off grandma's porch 30 years ago, winter can be a time to cringe in pain rather than binge on eggnog. Luckily, there are simple steps you can take to ease the aches of cold weather pain.

It may sound like common sense, but it bears repeating. The best way to avoid cold-related aches and pains is to stay warm. Dress warmly, even when you're inside the house, and plug in that electric blanket and heater. You can also turn your house's heating system up or buy one of those snug new blanket-robes. When dressing to keep warm, you should also remember that several layers of clothing will keep you warmer than one overlarge jacket or sweater. By keeping your body warm, your joints won't stiffen up and hurt. Warm muscles and joints are a less likely to snap or spasm which can lead to new injuries and renewed pain.

Another way to combat winter-related joint pain is to drink sufficient fluids to keep your body properly hydrated. Dehydration can cause muscle cramps, lethargy and general muscle soreness. Those over 65 should take particular care to drink enough as seniors are more affected by dehydration than others. Even better, you can drink a hot beverage such as decaffeinated tea to stay warm and hydrated at the same time

When choosing your beverages, be careful to avoid caffeine. Restricted blood flow or poor circulation can bring on debilitating joint diseases including Reynaud's Phenomenon, where fingers and toes become numb and turn blue. Two of the many substances that cause blood to flow less freely are caffeine and nicotine. Reducing, or eliminating, your intake of both substances will reduce the chances of developing major joint pain. Caffeine is found in coffee, tea and most sodas and nicotine, in tobacco.

Another way to keep your muscles and joints warm and flexible would be to plan, and stick to, a regular exercise routine. The advantages of exercising include increased joint mobility and muscle strength and the maintenance of a healthy level of bone density. If you don't usually exercise, then start slowly with a relatively mild routine before moving on to something more strenuous. Another option would be to become a member of the local YMCA or gym and take advantage of the exercise equipment and personal trainers that these places offer.

The best treatment for any pain is prevention. If you suffer from joint, back or neck pain then regular visits to a chiropractor can do wonders to keep winter aches and pains at bay. Spinal manipulation and other chiropractic techniques may help by treating your specific conditions that are aggravated by the cold each year.

Cold and humid weather has been scientifically proven to worsen the symptoms of several disorders and to aggravate old injuries. However, contrary to some beliefs, winter aches and pains are not something that you must "learn to live with." Your chiropractor can determine a course of treatment and make recommendations to ease the pain and may have your muscles feeling like Spring again.

Health and Wellness Solutions for People Struggling With Food And Gluten Intolerance


NYC Chiropractor Provides Health and Wellness Solutions for People Struggling with Gluten Intolerance

Non celiac gluten intolerance is often a serious issue igniting constant inflammation within the body. The inflammation will be brought on by the immunity process targeting the gluten. Generally, the immune system makes antibodies for the gluten. It views the gluten as being a harmful bacteria, disease, or unwanted inclusion in the human body and goes into a mania to eradicate it. Every time our body encounters gluten, which often can be many times every day in the regular American diet, the immune system is activated. This generates persistent inflammation that leads to chronic disease processes and a whole host of symptoms.

Gluten prompts our bodies to release a substance called zonulin, which manages the permeability of the digestive system. Intestinal-lining cells will be pried apart by zonulin. Undigested food particles can go into the blood stream. The immune system reacts by releasing inflammatory substances. This is known as "leaky gut syndrome." Because impermeability is lowered, minerals, crucial vitamins, and essential nutrients are not readily absorbed into the body. This leads to underlying nutritional deficiencies. You may be thinking you are consuming and enjoying the benefits of eating healthy food items, but the body is not taking in as much of the vitamins and minerals as you think.

Another theory and proposed procedure of how gluten can affect various organ systems involves peptidase enzyme called DPP4. If there is a failure or a deficiency of DPP4, our body cannot properly break down the proteins in gluten. The immune system can be fooled by molecular mimicry as the undigested protein fragment can be wrongly recognized for a pathogen. Due to this, antibodies will be aimed at the protein and may damage cells in the auto-immune reaction.

Symptoms of Gluten Intolerance
The signs and symptoms which non-celiac gluten intolerance can provoke can vary from joint pain, anxiousness, depression symptoms, migraines, fatigue, cramping, stomach discomfort, indigestion, body aches, rashes, acid reflux, thyroid issues, infertility, for example. As you can understand these types of symptoms are so vast and may be linked to a number of disease processes. This is where the problem lies in the healthcare community recognizing this level of sensitivity as a dire health condition. Since, medicine is mainly dedicated to symptom relief; nearly all treatment methods for these kinds of indicators are targeted on pharmacology rather than possible nutritional causative factors.

Proper Diagnosis with Chiropractic Muscle Testing
The best way to check for non-celiac gluten intolerance is through muscle testing or blood screening for IgG and IgA. In my experience, I have muscle tested many people who have been blood screened for gluten sensitivity and have been informed that they do not possess gluten intolerance, and they show up as sensitive to gluten with the muscle test. This is probably not a life-long intolerance because there are methods to change how the human body responds to gluten. A proven way is through testing for the right digestive enzyme that will allow the gluten to become broken down correctly. Normally, my patients need to be off gluten for six months or even longer, and if they are getting corrective nutritional supplements their bodies can heal and accept gluten at some point.

There is also a desensitization process that I use to assist the body to not respond to gluten in the same manner. Whenever gluten intolerance is determined, a person will have to refrain from eating even small amounts of gluten. The person will begin feeling better in about seven days. The body is so resilient and has an innate capability to heal itself, once the stressor has been removed. If a person re-introduces the gluten right after being gluten-free, without having enzymatic assistance or a desensitization technique, their symptoms will come back.

Grains have only been in our diet for approximately the last 15,000 years or so. There exists formidable data in which 15,000 years ago humans subsisted generally on fresh vegetables and meats. This isn't much time in our two million year history. Approximately 30 percent of northern Europeans, those that lived farthest from the source of dietary grains in Mesopotamia, have the genes for gluten intolerance. 99 percent of our genetic makeup was already in position before we began ingesting whole grains. Consequently, some of us are not able to handle gluten, which is the protein in most grains. Currently, up to 90 percent of the protein in wheat is gluten, a 10 times rise in the past 100 years. The average American eats 150 pounds of wheat every year.

Grains that do not consist of gluten will be rice, quinoa, buckwheat, millet, amaranth, teff, sorghum, wild rice, and corn. You may test by fully removing gluten from your diet for just two weeks and change it with a few of these options.

Various other significant food intolerances include soy products, dairy, and corn, yet an individual can always be sensitive to anything. What one individual is sensitive to, another person may be okay consuming. The majority of these sensitivities derive from genetic factors. One of many causes somebody can feel so full of energy when doing a detoxification is because they may be off their particular key food sensitivity, such as wheat or dairy.

How Do I Know If I'm Happy?


"So, are you happy?" An old friend and I were having dinner, and I was completely unprepared for the question. My first knee-jerk reaction was to say, "Yeah, of course! Why do you ask?" But the more I thought about it, the more unsure I was. I mean, how do you know if you're happy?

We've all felt happiness before -- on a wedding day, with a promotion at work, or after winning a softball game -- but does this mean we have a happy life? Is it as simple as tallying up your 'happy points' and your 'sad points' and seeing which is higher? It seemed like there must be more to it than that.

Over the years I've discovered the secret to answering that question, "So, are you happy?" The secret to being happy is: Realizing happiness when you feel it!

So, I started by tuning in my 'happiness detector' to pick up every single high point in my day. And you know what? There were a lot more high points than I was expecting! Before I knew it, each day started to feel like an endless stream of small but satisfying victories. And by comparison, my daily obstacles seemed much less intimidating. And this totally makes sense when you think about it.

In a football game, every point is a small triumph, and the final score is merely a summary of these triumphs. If the scorekeeper decided not keep up with individual points & focused only on the final score, he'd have nothing to add up at the end of the game. Neither team would know how the game went. It works the same way in our lives. If we don't notice the good things in our lives (no matter how small), our days will become unremarkable drudgery. Pretty hard to be excited about that.

So my challenge to you is, look for the little pleasures in your day. Notice a sunset. Smile when gas prices go down. Rejoice when traffic is light. Tell a silly joke. Who knows -- you might be happy already and just not know it! And the next time someone asks you if you're happy, you'll know!

How to Work With Your Scar Tissue to Get Rid of It!


First off, let me congratulate you that you are trying to do your own healing! So many people go to their MD/DO/physical therapist/chiropractor/massage therapist, etc. and expect that that person is going to be able to heal them completely. I often tell my clients who have chronic conditions (health related issues which last a long time) that even if they come for massage three times a week, they won't see the kinds of improvements they want until they're willing to do their own work to improve (be that stretching, doing their own massage, eating right, ice/heat, etc.). So congratulations on your willingness to do your own healing!

While I have never had multiple surgeries on the same area, I had four surgeries in a 6 year time span (including an ACL replacement in my right knee), and I understand the pain that often accompanies scar tissue.

I was fortunate with my ACL injury in that I had a surgeon who believed it was important to keep the knee moving and stretching. When I came to (from surgery), my knee was already moving in a machine called a CPM unit (Continuous Passive Movement - delivered by Colorado Professional Medical), which allowed me to set the speed and degree of the angle which my knee was moved to. It constantly moved my leg up and down, bending the knee each time. When I got home, I automatically started using the CPM unit again, which had been delivered to my house and which the delivery person had taught me how to use prior to surgery. I increased the speed and angle of degree every day and stopped using the CPM unit one week after surgery, because I had gotten back the full range of movement which the CPM unit allowed for (120 degrees). It was about 6 months after my knee surgery when I learned that some orthopedic knee surgeons believe in keeping the knee immobile for up to a month after ACL surgery. I was surprised and disappointed to hear this because keeping the knee immobile for that long of a time is setting the person up for a longer (and often more difficult) recovery.

Scar tissue develops all the time in muscle. When you pull muscles, some amount of scarring can occur. That scar tissue can be gotten rid of through normal stretching and activity. However, when serious scar tissue develops (as is often the case in whiplash and surgery) it can take a lot more to get that tissue to be reabsorbed into the body. If it is not gotten rid of, it can cause numbness of the nerves in an area, decreased flexibility, and ultimately, pain.

Many people think that scar tissue will simply go away after time, but most often, it does not. It is an injury which needs to be worked with in order to re-heal as effectively as possible.

Healing, depending on whom you talk to, is a complex process. Some people believe that prayer alone will heal, while others believe that only pills and western medicine will heal. Some have great success with acupuncture, others with chiropractic, and others with nutrition. I believe that healing is a combination of all of these things.

What I offer here is advice on how to massage scar tissue, with the hope that you will be able to use it and effectively break up your scar tissue. I hope this works for you, and hope as well that you will let me know your results. I hope you'll incorporate whatever else works for you, as that will help speed up your healing. Also, a point I'll make is that massage is all hands-on, so describing it using a non hands-on medium like email or the Internet is a bit difficult; I'll do my best, but if there's something you don't understand, please email me.

There are two levels of scar tissue which you can address with massage. One is the skin level, and the other is the muscle level. I will first address the skin level, and then address the muscle level.

When scar tissue develops, the brain/nerve connections, which have to happen to detect touch, never develop or develop very weak. This is because scar tissue develops primarily to heal and protect, and only secondarily to feel sensation. In other words, the tissue naturally develops a weak ability to notice sensation while it is being created. Because most people don't use or touch a part of the body which had a kind of trauma to it, (like that which comes from surgery or a car accident,) the tissue doesn't receive any stimulation. This means that in many cases (after surgery or other trauma), the secondary function of scar tissue, sensation, never or barely develops. Over time, this lack of sensation causes an area to be touched less (after all, why would a person touch an area that had no feeling?). It receives less touch, and because of this, it receives less stimulation, which means that the nerve endings and connections develop less, which means that the area has less feeling, so it is touched less; and the process goes on until there is a thick mass of non-sensory tissue, most of it probably scar tissue.

I have larger scars on two of my fingers (from surgery). While sitting in class or somewhere where I only need to listen to what's going on, I will take a sharpened pencil, paper clip, nail file, or even a needle (something with a small point), to see what kind of feeling I have in a specific spot on the scar. I will really pay attention to what kinds of sensations I'm having in the spot that I'm touching. I don't pierce the skin, as that would only cause further injury to a healing area, but I do test to see how much sensation I have. I have done this since having surgery over 8 years ago. Over time, the sensations have become stronger and more definite in the scar tissue itself, and as the sensation has come back, the scar tissue has been reduced (not gone away), and become much less painful. It probably also helps that I am a massage therapist, and while working on a client, I use the sensations coming from my hands to understand when a muscle is tight, or when it has knots, etc. I pay a lot of attention to the sensations coming from my fingers.

For the skin level on a knee, you will want to work on the scar itself. Touch it with an object with a small point in several specific spots on and around the scar. Can you feel the sensation? If not, start by going around the edge of the scar. Can you feel that sensation? Notice what it feels like. Does it make a difference if you press hard or light? What about if you move it around a little?

Set an intention that you want to feel sensation in that specific point you are touching. By doing this, and focusing your attention on it, you are forcing your brain and your body to focus in on the sensory information you should be receiving from those nerves. Just like working to develop more flexibility by stretching the same muscles over an extended amount of time, you are working to develop those nerves on a daily basis by using different kinds of touch. Over time, you will redevelop more feeling in the area than you previously had.

Moving on to the deeper layers, it is important to know that just as scar tissue develops on the outside layers of the skin, it develops in the muscle. Muscle can be divided into two groups with regard to scar tissue; areas which can be worked through direct massage, and those which are much more difficult to work with using massage. Most massage therapists have developed an ability to work at a deep level within the muscle that most non massage therapists have not. For the areas which are difficult to get to when doing massage yourself, I would recommend getting into a regular stretching program and getting regular massage. Most recreation/fitness centers now offer Yoga classes. If yours doesn't offer Yoga or another kind of stretching program, ask them why they don't, and consider joining one that does.

Also, consider getting regular scar tissue massage for a while. If you don't know a good massage therapist, ask a friend who gets regular massage, or even look up a CMT in the phone book. You can find criteria for selecting a massage therapist by clicking here. You may have to take some time researching, but it will be worth it when you find a therapist with whom you feel comfortable, and schedule an appointment. Massage can range from $20 to upwards of $300/hour. The cost doesn't necessarily determine the quality of the massage, so don't think you have to pay an arm and a leg to get a great massage. Let the therapist know your wants with regard to getting your scar tissue broken up, and they should be able to help you.

Another thing to consider (when getting massage for a trauma area) is that the muscles around the area will be tightening up in protection of the injury. In the case of a knee surgery, this would be the quadriceps, hamstrings muscles, calf muscles, and all the muscles on the anterior (front) side of the lower leg. A therapist should know to work these muscles, and you can rub them yourself as well to help keep them loose.

On to the level of scar tissue in the muscle that you can work yourself, cross-fiber technique can be very effective. If your scar tissue is right over the knee cap you'll probably have to lift it up off of the knee and squeeze it between your thumbs and forefingers to get to it. However, if it is in a more substantial set of muscle (lower quads), you will be able to work your fingers across the muscle and use a cross-fiber technique on the muscle (or have someone do this for you).

Cross-Fibering

Start by using a cream, lotion, or oil (I personally recommend Lotus Touch cream, available from http://www.lotustouch.com) and use it on the area you want to work. Skinstore.com also sells a few creams and gels, which have been reported to help considerably to diminish the tightness and the overall thickness of scar tissue. Remember that you are using the massage cream to allow your hands or a tool to more easily move across the skin, so if the skin soaks all of it up, you may need to reapply. You will then want to work across the muscle fibers. In the case of the muscles around the knee: as you are standing, most of the muscle fibers go up and down, so you will want to work across the leg. You can use massage tools and/or implements to get into the muscle deeply and work across the muscle, or you can use your hands. One good hand position is to bend the middle and ring fingers and use the second knuckle (closest knuckle to the hand-but not the knuckle joining the hand) on the middle and ring fingers, to get into the muscle fibers of the quads/calves, while the second and pinky fingers are straight and glide across the leg. Move up and down the muscle, making sure to focus on areas where it feels like there is more binding of the tissues. You can finish by doing a gentle massage on the area to calm it down. This is one possibility for cross-fibering.

Whatever hand position or tool you use with cross-fibering, remember that your goal is to break up the scar tissue by going across the muscle, and remember that this isn't going to happen overnight. By using cross-fibering, you are actually causing minor traumas to an area which promote the healing in that area. You don't want to re-injure the area to the point where more scar tissue develops because of your working on it. A generally good way to know how much pressure is enough is that it should be on the level between uncomfortable and painful. So it should be uncomfortable, but not overly painful. As far as the time it takes for healing, a good general guideline is that you should give the scar tissue as long to break up (if you're working on it daily) as it did for it to be created. In other words, if you had surgery two years ago, and you just started working with the scar tissue yesterday, large improvements could take up to two years from yesterday. Healing doesn't have to take this long, but this should give you an idea of how patient you should be.

In summary:

Work with the scar as often as you think about it.
It is possible to overwork an area, but not likely that you will with the scar tissue.

Use heat to bring blood to an area, cold to take blood away from an area.
Generally speaking, you will want to take the blood away from an area before you work with scar tissue so that it will hurt less to work with it (the cold of ice will also numb the nerves so you can work with the scar tissue). You will then want to work with the tissue that is deeper in the muscle, using cross-fibering, while it is cold. When you are done, you will want to heat the area to bring blood in and carry away the toxins which are released as you break up the scar tissue and open up the area. (Too much time with the heat can cause an abundance of blood in an area, which can cause swelling and a different kind of pain. Generally, 20-30 minutes with the heat is a safe bet.) You will want to use moist heat if possible (i.e. a wet washcloth warmed up in the microwave or something comparable), as it will draw more fluids to the area and encourage the muscle to return to its natural state. (Don't get the heat so hot that it burns you.)

Working with the scar tissue may hurt initially.

Pain should decrease over time, but may not fully go away. Be prepared for this, but don't psyche yourself out. It does get better.

You can do the work yourself

You can have great results just from working on the scar tissue yourself. You will be most successful if you will work on it yourself because you are the only one who is with you 24 hours a day, so you can be there all the time to work on it. However, just like it feels better to get a massage from someone else than it does to give yourself one, you may experience good results from someone else working on you as well. Just make sure that you communicate with them (and that they are willing to listen) when there is too much pain, or not enough pressure, etc. Also, there may be cases where you can not reach the scar tissue (i.e. back surgery. If this is the case, have someone else work with you, and get into a regular stretching program). Caveat: Make sure you say thank you to the person who is helping take care of you. They're much more likely to help again.

Nutrition is important.

Eating well can have a huge impact on how quickly the body will heal. With regard to scar tissue, nutrition plays an important role in how quickly the body will be able to develop feeling in an area and breakdown the scar tissue. It needs the vitamins and minerals to build tissue, create chemical connections, and carry away toxins.

Be patient.

The human organism is amazing in what it can do, if given the time and resources it needs to do so. If you re-injure the area by doing more than it can handle (i.e. bungee-jumping two weeks after surgery), don't expect your body to respond well.

Be patient!

Friday, July 5, 2013

Quantum Touch - You Can Learn to Heal Yourself Naturally


For those who are new to Quantum Touch, watching a demonstration may seem like something a little mystic or unreal. Patients who are crippled with pain are noticeably better within minutes of working with someone trained in Quantum-Touch. How does this work? Is it real, or is it a gimmick?

These are excellent questions, and understanding the answers starts with understanding the technique. Quantum-Touch developed from the belief that the body is innately equipped to heal itself using its own natural healing energy, known as Life Force Energy. When the flow Life Force Energy is disrupted, the healing ceases or slows down. Quantum-Touch teaches individuals to use Life Force Energy to help someone who is hurting begin the natural healing process. Those trained in Quantum-Touch know how to focus, amplify, and then direct Life Force Energy into someone else, often producing incredible results.

What Conditions Can Be Helped Through Quantum-Touch?

An endless number of conditions can be helped through Quantum-Touch. Each person has the ability to heal his or her own body, and the person trained in Quantum Touch simply aids in this natural healing energy process. Those with chronic pain and stiffness report almost instant results from a healing session. Inflammation is visibly reduced for some people, and misaligned bones slide effortlessly into place with just a few moments of a QT session.

Some patients have even seen spontaneous remission of their cancer after a session. Injuries, burns, and cuts can heal faster with the technique, and individuals with organ disorders often experience relief after a session. The results vary tremendously from individual to individual based on the person's own ability to heal. All healing is self-healing; it is simply assisted by the Quantum-Touch professional.

Is Quantum-Touch Dangerous?

Quantum-Touch is not dangerous, because it involves no forceful manipulation, surgery, or medical procedure. Through nothing more than a gentle touch, someone trained in the techniques can channel energy to someone else to aid in the healing process.

Many people who are interested in Quantum Touch wonder if there are any side effects. Because there is no force used in this procedure, the body does not balk at the changes and become stiff and sore. Patients report relief from pain, not added pain, after a QT session. Because the technique empowers the body's own healing mechanisms, the body is refreshed and revived, not hurting, after the session.

Can I Benefit from Quantum-Touch While Going to the Chiropractor?

Again, because QT does nothing more than enable the body to heal itself more efficiently, it can be used alongside other health treatments. Chiropractic care, massage therapy, acupuncture, and traditional medicine do not interfere with Quantum-Touch, and Quantum-Touch does not interfere with them either. In fact, many patients find that their other health care professionals are impressed with their healing after they receive Quantum-Touch.

Is Quantum-Touch Something New?

Quantum-Touch is a new method using ancient ideas. Life Force Energy is not a new discovery. The ancient and modern Chinese practiced techniques harnessing it, but in their books it is called "chi." The energy is called "prana" in Sanskrit teachings. Both ancient societies believed in a flow of energy that sustained all living beings. QT teaches people how to use their hands to harness and then direct that energy, bringing surprising and pleasant benefits to others.

Who Can Perform Quantum-Touch?

Quantum-Touch is a simple, natural healing method. It is so simple that even children can learn the techniques. Because there are no special skills needed to perform Quantum Touch, anyone can learn it. It does not involve any medical skills or training, although many doctors and health professionals are using these techniques in their own clinics, with much success.

Because it is so easy, Quantum-Touch workshops are held regularly across the nation. In just the first day of class, students will be able to move bones into alignment through light touch. All it takes to do Quantum-Touch is a new understanding of body awareness and breathing techniques. Once the two are connected, students learn to control Life Force Energy and bring healing to others.

Flat Back Syndrome: A Common Characteristic Of Back Pain


A healthy back has natural curvature. A straight lumbar spine is often an indicator of pain in the L4, L5, S1 region. People lacking lumbar curvature will commonly indicate pain on or near their sacrum. A straight spine involves numerous muscles in the lower body being overly tight. Gaining curvature of the lumbar spine requires lengthening numerous lower body muscles. The psoas muscle, in particular, must be lengthened to bring curvature to the lumbar spine. Active Isolated Stretching (AIS) restores curvature to the lower spine. And more importantly, AIS helps people recover from chronic back pain.

When a person is tight in the lower body, the lumbar region loses its natural curve. The psoas, gluteal (buttocks), and hamstring muscles are almost always involved in a lumbar region that lacks curvature. Many more muscles are involved, but these three are almost always a contributing factor. All three muscles can become tight from numerous hours of sitting. Unfortunately, modern society requires many of us to sit eight to ten hours a day. And this is a major reason why one third of the world population suffers from back pain.

A tightened psoas muscle cannot be massaged to normal length because there are too many points of attachment to be released manually. Chiropractic adjustments would be more effective after AIS treatment because chiropractic does not address psoas tightness in their procedure. PNF stretching uses the wrong position for psoas stretching, which can cause herniation to the discs around the L4, L5, S1 region. Active Isolated Stretching is most effective at opening the psoas muscle, which is essential for restoring the natural lumbar curve. Some therapists incorrectly advise laying and rolling on a foam roller to gain curvature in the lumbar region. This exercise does not bring long term curvature to the lumbar spine because the psoas does not get stretched while using the foam roller.

Muscles attach to bones. Tightness in the psoas, hamstrings, and gluteal muscles will put excessive strain on the pelvis and spine. This tightness will cause the lower spine to lose its natural curve and the discs around L4, L5, S1 will often become strained to the point in which they herniate, bulge, or degenerate. This abnormality in the low back discs can also be restored with AIS therapy because the cause is excessive muscle inflexibility. A herniated, slipped, or bulging disc can return inside the vertebral column when muscular pressure is discontinued. Similarly, a degenerative/herniated disc will stop pinching on the spinal nerves because removing muscular tension will remove nerve pain.

Weakness in the lower body muscles also contributes to a straight spine. Complete rehabilitation from flat back syndrome entails doing lower body strengthening exercises to maintain the natural curve in the low back. After the psoas muscle is lengthened, it needs to be strengthened. Abdominal exercises are an important part of rehabilitation, but it is important to do correct abdominal exercises. Many people perform full sit-ups as abdominal exercises. Full sit-ups are when the hands are interlocked behind the head and the person performs a full ab crunch to the point in which their elbows touch their knees. This is the wrong way to practice abdominal exercises! Full sit-ups will tighten the psoas muscle, which will decrease curvature of the lumbar spine.

A flat back is more of an indicator than a cause of lumbar back pain. Active Isolated Stretching can restore curvature to a straightened spine because one of the primary causes is inflexibility. Conventional stretching, PNF stretching, yoga, Thai massage, or any other type of stretching has failed to grasp key mistakes they are making in their procedure; which is why AIS therapy can restore lumbar curvature while other forms of stretching cannot. One-to-one AIS treatment is the kick start to gaining curvature in the lumbar region. At-home exercises are what maintain correct posture.

Conservative Treatments For Retrolisthesis


Retrolisthesis is one type of vertebral misplacement, or subluxation, that can occur in the spine. It is the backward slipping of a vertebra in relation to one above or below it. Retrolisthesis is less common than forward slipping, called spondylolisthesis. It occurs most often in the cervical or lumbar segments of the spine, as these are the most mobile.

A number of mechanical or external forces can cause vertebral misalignment. Conditions like arthritis and degenerative disc disease can cause a vertebra to shift. An injury, such as a hard fall, can sometimes jolt the spine enough to cause misalignment. Years of improper body mechanics can create enough stress on the spine to throw it out of alignment, as can being overweight. Blunt trauma can also cause the shift.

A number of changes occur in the back surrounding retrolisthesis. The joints that connect vertebrae are stressed when they become misaligned. The discs surrounding the shifted bone will be pushed toward the innermost part of the body and caused to bulge, providing inadequate shock absorption to the spine and potentially allowing friction between the bones. The slipping vertebra may begin to compress nerve roots exiting the spine. Soft tissue surrounding the shifting area of the spine - namely, ligaments and muscles - become stretched and injured.

Symptoms of retrolisthesis vary greatly depending on the degree to which the vertebra has shifted and whether or not it is impinging spinal nerves. Decreased range of motion and localized back pain may be felt. Tenderness due to muscle and ligament injury is possible. If nerves are being compressed, then sharp pain, tingling, numbness and weakness may be felt along the nerve pathway.

Treating Restrolisthesis

Many surgeons jump prescribe spinal fusion surgery as a treatment for subluxation. There are a number of safe, conservative treatments that should be tried before surgery is even considered, however. The goal of treating retrolisthesis is to realign the spine, and to do so, a number of things must be accomplished: 1) The joint must be mobilized to move the bone back into alignment; 2) the disc, if degenerating, must be re-hydrated; 3) surrounding soft tissues need to recover their tone in order to provide structural support to the realignment.

Chiropractic care is the best conservative option for restoring alignment to the spine. Chiropractors specialize in joint range of motion and alignment of vertebrae. If disc degeneration has caused your misalignment, or if the misalignment has caused disc degeneration, look for a chiropractor equipped with a decompression machine. Decompression treatments gently pull your vertebrae apart to increase intervertebral space and allow discs to reabsorb lost fluids. These machines have biofeedback technology that assesses how surrounding tissues respond to the pulling force exerted to separate vertebrae. If the pull is too great, your muscles will react by contracting against it, thereby limiting the effectiveness of the treatment for your discs and causing injury to the muscles. Biofeedback technology makes decompression treatments preferable to the simpler inversion table treatment for people with injuries like retrolisthesis.

Repairing your soft tissues will likely take more time than restoring alignment. Once alignment is attained, the stress on tissues will be decreased, but restoring tone to the tissues will be a process. Physical therapy may be needed to target overstretched ligaments and muscles. Simple core exercises, such as the bird dog, may be prescribed to ensure balanced core strength to support the spine.

Your best chance of recovering fully from retrolisthesis comes with education. Make sure you are not being sent out of the doctor's office with nothing but pain medications to mask the symptoms or rushed into the operating room when conservative options are available. Ask for a referral to a well-reputed chiropractor and begin the path to safe, thorough recovery.

5 Benefits of Chiropractic Treatment


There are still many people who do not understand all the benefits that a chiropractic doctor can provide or how they can actually help you to improve your overall health. While even the traditional medical community are beginning to understand the benefits that doctors of chiropractic can provide to the medical field as a whole, many average citizens still look on chiropractors and chiropractic treatment with suspicion. There seems to be a lack of understanding on just how chiropractic treatment can be of benefit. For those who want to become informed about What chiropractic medicine can do for you here are the 5 most important benefits you can receive from a chiropractic care giver.

Increase Immune System Function. Perhaps the biggest benefit that chiropractic care has to offer is that it can improve your immune system. Since a healthy immune system is necessary to maintaining your overall health improving the function of this system is a huge benefit to your health. Studies have shown that people who use chiropractic care regularly have fewer colds and when they do the symptoms are less severe.

Helps to Manage Pain. Chiropractic care can also help you to manage your pain by helping to locate and correct serious nervous system stress, strengthen your muscles surrounding your nerves and advising you on the proper care of your body.

Can Increase Your Range Of Movement. By helping you to manage and control your pain and strengthen your muscles chiropractic treatment can often help to increase your range of movements following an accident or injury. Chiropractors will work with you to find exercises that will continue to aid you in recovering all or most of the range of movements you had before the injury or accident.

Avoid The Harmful Side Effects Of Many Drugs. Since chiropractic care is based on natural care they can help you avoid the use or overuse of pain medications and other drugs that often have serious side effects and can increase your health issues. The fewer drugs you take the less dangers await you down the road.

Get The Right Medical Attention You Need. Since chiropractic medicine deals with your overall health and well being a chiropractor often discovers health problems or conditions that are outside his realm of training. When this happens your chiropractor will refer you to a medical professional who can help you deal with these needs, helping to ensure your continued good health.

A chiropractic doctor is just one of the options available for those of you who are concerned about your health.

Understanding What Usually Causes Back Pain


When an episode of back pain comes on, people often try to associate it with one injury or trauma that occurred recently or in the past. While this may be true, it is usually not the cause of most back problems. What people often overlook is that back pain is often brought on slowly and may be caused from a series of events rather than one.

Back pain is rarely brought on by a specific injury or event. You may have felt twinges in your back when you bend over to pick up a pencil, stand at the bathroom sink, getting in or out of your car or performing other simple tasks. You may have noticed that the twinges you feel performing tasks seem to get worse over time. The pain may worsen over a couple days, go away and then return several months later.

This is often the result of repetitive stress on the joints that occur gradually over time. The ligaments around the spine undergo small micro tears that occur over the years. These can occur with improper lifting, bad posture or falls. Being overweight can cause extra weight and pressure on the joints. In time the ligaments become stretched allowing the vertebra or bones of the spine to become misaligned. The delicate nerves in and around the spine become irritated resulting in discomfort.

When the ligaments of the spine are stretched and torn, the repair mechanism creates scar tissue. The scar tissue is less elastic than before. This causes the joints to be vulnerable to becoming injured again in the future. It also results is reduced motion of the joints of the spine. Chiropractors are specially trained to detect these types of problems in the spine. They may use X-rays, palpation and other tests to locate the problem.

Chiropractors perform spinal manipulation using hands on techniques or instrumentation to correct the misaligned bones. This helps to remove the nerve irritation and restore normal motion to the joints of the spine. If the misaligned bones are left uncorrected, premature spinal degeneration can develop which leads to arthritis of the spine. This can result in chronic back pain and nerve damage.

When people have misaligned spinal bones, they often feel off balance because the bones of the spine are not symmetrical. Many people report feeling straighter and walking better following chiropractic adjustments. They report that the back twinges they had before are gone away. They are better able to move, sit, bend, stand, sleep and walk without the pain they had before. They are able to enjoy a better quality of life and do the things they enjoy without the pain.

Are You Really Gonna Become a Chiropractor?


So you plan on becoming a chiropractor? You will need to have a degree in Chiropractic Philosophy. You will also become well-versed with chiropractic principles.

Not only will you need to acquire theoretical knowledge, you will become well versed-with with practical knowledge, such as how to understand the symptoms, how to treat patients, as well as the course of action to be undertaken as per the symptoms should be understood thoroughly.

This profession is gaining wide acceptance as an alternative medicine, and has become very popular. We have a big problem with this as we only have maybe seventeen schools of chiropractic here in the USA. Therefore many of the chiropractic aspirants have to go to other countries to obtain a degree.

I am sure you know and are aware a chiropractor is an alternative professional that offers alternate health care in the form of medicinal and complementary treatments.

He is a true professional who focuses on treatment, diagnosis, and prevention of many disorders of the musculoskeletal structure.

He will also diagnosis and treat any disorders of the nervous system. A chiropractor is also known as a doctor of chiropractic, he will in most cases use different combinations of treatment.

These treatments will include soft tissue therapy, adjustments to the spine, counseling as to lifestyles, as well as specifications of different exercises.

Most chiropractic treatments consist of several different treatments such as full spinal treatment, postural advice, physical exercises, self care practices along with daily living activities.

Claims and straights are the two groups of chiropractors. With the Claims group specializing in adjustments to the spine.

Many of these will specialize in the adjusting of the extremities, early screening advice, disease prevention as well as stress reduction.

Many Chiropractic experts have a strong belief that the resistance associated to counteract illness has a direct relation to the balance of the skeletal and muscular system and with the spinal cord.

Then when we discover an imbalance in this system, we start to have different side effects manifested in sickness and illnesses in our bodies.

If you really care about becoming a chiropractor, it is best to get yourself into one of the schools here in the USA if possible. If not then you will need to find a good one and do your studies there, this profession is growing in leaps and bounds and you need to get started as soon as feasible.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Your Pain Isn't Coming From Your Hip or Low Back - It's Coming From Your Sacroiliac Joint


It is not unusual to have a pain that seems to be vaguely found in the hip and lower back region. The pain is neither found in the hip area of the upper leg nor is it in the middle of the spine in the lower back. When asked to point to it most people will locate an area at the top of the buttock where is a bony bump. This is an area called sacroiliac joint (abbreviated S.I. Joint) and it is the source of many people's complaints. One study showed it to be the source of 23% of lower back pain.

The sacroiliac joint is actually a joint in the pelvis between the sacral bone and the iliac bone. There is one on each side of the pelvis. The S.I. joint acts as a "sliding or gliding" joint that moves with each step. It carries a lot of the weight of the upper body and is a common source of pain.

It can be hurt with a sudden trauma or more slowly due to poor posture or repetitive stress. Many times repetitive twisting movements involved in activities like vacuuming, sweeping, raking and snow shoveling can aggravate the sacroiliac joint. It is also commonly irritated in women during or following pregnancy due to added weight-bearing of the developing child.

When the S.I. joint is injured the surrounding muscles can go into spasm. Also nearby nerves can become sensitive and feel "pinched". Sometimes the pain can be felt in the lower back, buttocks, hip and upper leg or even all of these areas at the same time.

Sacroiliac joint problems may be intermittent but reoccurring. Sometimes the complaint can be constant with occasional episodes of stronger intense pain.

Proper diagnosis is important in effective treatment of this pelvic joint. Often doctors and therapists confuse problems of the S.I. joint as coming from the hip joint of the upper thigh or conditions of the lower back and spinal discs.

Many times patients are treated with prescription medicines such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or corticosteroid injections, such as prednisone, but the improvement is minimal and temporary. At times, medications can actually be harmful to this pelvic joint and to organs such as the stomach, intestines and the kidneys. Therapies aimed at stretching and strengthening exercises alone are also usually ineffective.

In trying to correct the problem it is important to look at why the sacroiliac joint is causing complaints. Many times, the S.I. joint is out of alignment or moving improperly. If this is the case chiropractic treatment can be a safe and effective way to address the problem. Chiropractic manipulation or adjustments work to realign the pelvis and introduce proper movement into the malfunctioning joint. Following chiropractic adjustments exercises can then be given to stretch and strengthen the supporting structures. At-home therapies, such as using applications of cold packs, can be helpful to hasten the improvement of the problem. Education regarding proper posture and the correct way to perform physical activities is important to keep the condition from returning.

If you are having problems in that area around the hip and lower back consider that it may be coming from a sacroiliac joint problem and see a chiropractor for the proper diagnosis and treatment of the condition.

Reverse Neuropathy Before It Reverses Your Lifestyle


Peripheral Neuropathy is a fairly common disease in United States. Peripheral Neuropathy results from the damage to peripheral nerves and may affect both sensory and motor functions of the nerve. There are innumerable causes of peripheral neuropathy and symptoms vary depending upon the degree of involvement of nerve and which nerve is involved. Peripheral neuropathy may have profound effect on one's lifestyle.

Diabetic neuropathy has myriad presentations. One very common form being loss of sensations in glove-stocking distribution in which there is loss of sensations in the distal portions of both upper and lower limbs. This problem may greatly alter a person's lifestyle both at work and at home. Affected people may find it difficult to drive vehicles as they have lost sensations in the feet. In fact, the loss of sensation is so troublesome that they may get injuries and not be aware of it. Such wounds don't heal quickly and may form ulcers and also get secondarily infected. Sometimes the infections may be so severe to warrant an immediate amputation to save life. Loss of sensations in hands also has profound effect on a person's lifestyle. Patient may burn his hands while cooking and not know of it until he or she sees it. Also may not able to perform simple tasks like writing and knitting. If the neuropathy also affects the muscles of the hand, the functional impairment is more profound. Many a times neuropathy presents with severe pain which often becomes worse at night and keeps a person awake. This is very troublesome not only because of pain but also lack of sleep which impairs a person daytime functioning.

Involvement of the nerves of autonomic nervous system may sometimes result in severe problems. Neuropathy affecting the autonomic nerves carrying innervations to heart and blood vessels may cause "postural hypotension". In this condition, the blood pressure of a person falls suddenly when a person stands up from a lying down or sitting position and the person may develop sudden dizziness and momentary loss of consciousness along with many other symptoms. This places a person at risk for sudden fall and the person has to be very cautious.

Autonomic Neuropathy may also cause sexual dysfunction. Diabetic neuropathy is a well-known cause of impotence. Other than impotence, the autonomic dysfunction may also result in retrograde ejaculation, a condition in which the semen is ejaculated into the bladder. A person's sexual life may be greatly disturbed by this.

Autonomic dysfunction associated with neuropathy may also result in urinary incontinence and sometimes even fecal incontinence. Urinary incontinence is involuntary leakage of the urine. This problem may drastically alter the lifestyle of a person. People afflicted with this problem tend to avoid all social gatherings and try to stay at home as much as possible due to fear of embarrassment.

Hence the treatment of neuropathy in the early stages when it is still reversible or at least stalling its further progression whenever possible is of paramount importance. Depending upon the cause of neuropathy numerous therapeutic options are available in most of the cases.

Herniated Disc During Pregnancy


Back pain is a common occurrence during pregnancy. The weight gain, shift in your center of gravity and loosening of your ligaments caused by hormones all contribute to pain throughout the lower back and pelvis. Some women may find that their pain is caused by a bulging or herniated disc.

Disc problems are common. Many people over the age of twenty would show some signs of disc degeneration if they received spinal imaging tests, and nearly everyone in the elderly population has degenerated discs. With its commonness, it may seem that almost everyone should be suffering from chronic pain, but degenerated discs usually aren't symptomatic. They can occur or become symptomatic during pregnancy due to the extra pressure exerted on the lower back by a growing baby.

Disc Anatomy

Spinal discs sit between vertebrae and absorb shock. They are composed of a tough exterior and a gel-filled center, a construction that allows them to have a cushioning effect. Through age, spinal misalignment, uneven forces from poor posture, improper body mechanics or injury, the exterior of a disc can degrade. The fluid inside can be pushed to the weakest side of the disc, causing a bulging disc. If the exterior of the disc cracks and internal fluids leak out, the disc is herniated.

If the bulge or the leaking fluid don't cause changes in spinal mechanics or interfere with nerves, then the disc degeneration will be asymptomatic. With the addition of a growing baby, the bulge or herniation can increase and cause symptoms to arise.

The most common symptom of a herniated disc is nerve pain. In the lower back, sciatica can occur when the sciatic nerve, running from the lumbar spine to the foot on each side of the body, becomes impinged or irritated by disc material. Sciatica causes pain to radiate from the lower back down the buttock and into the leg. The pain is sharp and generally shoots down the nerve path.

Treatments

Pregnant women can still use some conventional pain treatment methods like heat and certain medications, but it is important to find something that addresses the problem directly.

Poor posture can exacerbate pressure on a damaged disc. Taking prenatal Pilates classes can help you maintain alignment and strengthen muscles around the spine that help support discs.

Chiropractic care may help alleviate pain from a herniated disc if it is caused by an alignment issue. By aligning the spinal and sacroiliac joints, a chiropractor can relieve pressure off discs and the sciatic nerve.

Acupuncture and acupressure are two types of pain management that are generally safe during pregnancy. Both interfere with pain sensations, acupuncture with the use of tiny needles and acupressure with applied pressure to specific points of the body. These therapies may work by targeting nerve clusters, releasing endorphins and/or unblocking energy meridians throughout the body (this latter explanation is the one supported by thousands of years of traditional Chinese medical practice). When seeking out a practitioner, be sure to find one well-versed in working with pregnant women. There are some pressure points believed to induce labor, which should be avoided unless that is the goal. Also, practitioners should be careful to avoid triggering muscle spasms, since the uterus is a muscle.

After delivery, the pain from your disc may subside since there will be less pressure on the lower back. It is still a good idea to pursue core strengthening exercises to provide support to the healing disc. If herniated disc pain continues well after labor, consider seeking inversion treatments that aim to expand interdiscal space and rehydrate damaged discs.

A herniated disc during pregnancy can cause lower back, buttock and leg pain. There are a number of options for safely managing pain while pregnant.

Race Fuel: Carbo-Loading Or Fat-Loading?


It's ubiquitous in endurance sports - the pre-race carbo-load. It comes in the form of stuffing every pore in your body with pasta and bread. God help you if you don't eat enough, for you will collapse on the course due to glycogen depletion, and be shunned by your training buddies and all passersby.

Sounds familiar? If you are an endurance athlete, or know one, there is no doubt this is something you have experienced before. We follow this unwritten nutritional law without question, but does carbo-loading actually work? The short answer is - it depends. Early studies examining the effects of carbo-loading on delaying fatigue during endurance performance were positive - those who loaded performed at a higher level for longer than their non-loaded controls. These results seem reasonable, but as with any research study, one needs to look a little deeper than the results.

The problem with these studies was that they did not allow for nutrition during the bout of exercise. They simply measured how long the subject lasted until fatigue set in - not what you would consider a real life scenario. Do you typically feed once and race until you can go no farther? No - you get some calories before the start, and then periodically consume small amounts throughout the race. In fact, when you adjust the experiment to allow for periodic consumption of calories, the benefit of loading is negated. Secondly, most of these studies were performed using a stationary bike - a non-weight-bearing exercise. For a runner, the additional weight gain from loading, which can exceed 5 pounds, is actually detrimental to performance.

When we control for the above problems, there is no benefit from carbo-loading in events of 2 hours duration or less. So for most half marathon and shorter distance triathlons, stick to your normal diet and race day nutrition. For events of longer duration the carbo-load is one option, but may not be the most efficient.

Our bodies are filled with a virtually limitless supply of fat, making it a great fuel option to achieve maximum economy. So how do you increase your body's reliance on fat during endurance sports? Let's focus on the two most important strategies: endurance training and fat-loading.

Prior to beginning endurance training your body will utilize approximately equal parts glycogen and fat for energy during exercise. Following a season of training, the percentage will be closer to 60% fat, 40% glycogen. This means less reliance on blood glucose and muscle glycogen for energy, and ultimately delayed fatigue. The reasons for this are quite complex, but if you are reading this article you are probably either currently or are close to beginning your training cycle for next year, and will see the benefits of this change on your performance.

The second strategy for improved performance I want to explore is fat-loading. The principle here is that we can teach our bodies to use fat by feeding them fat, with the results being you will rely less on carbohydrates and improve performance. Again, the mechanisms are complex, but in a nutshell your body will adapt to the sources of fuel available - fat being no exception. The introduction of more fat into your diet will trigger a change in enzyme production and metabolic pathways, resulting in more efficient utilization of fat. In theory this sounds reasonable, but does it work in a real-world race setting? As with carbo-loading, it depends. Research has found that during bouts of sub-maximal exercise, time to fatigue was delayed utilizing a high-fat load. However, a second study found that no benefit was seen during a time trial, which more closely represents the stresses of a race.

Great - now what to do? This article should bring home a very important point regarding nutrition for endurance athletes. In an era of extremes in both training and nutrition, it's good to take a step back and realize that the best approach is usually to follow the middle road instead of the fad. While some athletes are great carbohydrate utilizers and some great fat utilizers, the reality is that the vast majority of us utilize a fairly even mix and do best with a normal balanced diet with perhaps slightly more fat than a non-endurance athlete, and a slightly higher intake of carbohydrates the days leading up to your longer races. The takeaway is to not overdo it on either extreme. High carbohydrate intake may leave you several pounds heavier on that 50 mile run, while high fat intake offers its own set of problems. As in life, there are no quick fixes here and operating on the extremes will almost certainly do you more harm than good. Practice moderation, train appropriately, and you will be just fine.

Avoiding Computer Use And Lower Back Pain Problems


Unfortunately, these days computer use and lower back pain go hand in hand. With a growing number of employees, students, and recreational computer users spending hours upon hours sitting in front of the PC, back problems are now more than ever a concern. This is especially true for younger individuals who are now exposed to this risk from an early age.

Back pain for many is unavoidable with the American Chiropractic Association reporting around eighty percent of individuals will experience some level of back pain throughout their lifetime. Pain caused by continuous computer use is mostly a concern for individuals working on a PC for prolonged periods of time. However, it is also a concern for younger children who are not paying attention to their posture when spending hours gaming or on their favorite social network.

These are the reasons why it is extremely important for all PC users to make sure they educate themselves on techniques recommended by the experts for avoiding these issues. Most people know the importance of having good posture in order to avoid future problems. However, most of us could use a reminder on what the professionals recommend when sitting for long periods of time.

There are a few rules of thumb that you should always be keeping in mind when it comes to computer use and lower back pain. However, the first thing to do is invest in a good chair. Keep in mind the chair you choose should focus on allowing you to have good posture. Avoid chairs that allow you to sit in a way in which your posture may be compromised.

Spine support is always the most important thing to consider when choosing the right chair. An ergonomic chair will support the natural curves of your spine and not put on unnecessary stress on your muscles. The arm rests and depth of the seat pan can also be variables that will ultimately affect your posture.

It is important to remember that not all chairs will be suitable for all individuals. If you are using a PC utilized by a number people, you may have to have a bring your own chair policy. Likewise, you may have to request a chair that suits your specific needs if supplied an inappropriate or ergonomically-incorrect chair by an employer.

The key to preventing injuries is allowing for proper muscle, ligament, and joint alignment through good posture. Some tips for doing this include keeping your head centered over your shoulders and erect. Your elbows should also be at a 90 degree angle from your body.

While you may be focusing on having a good posture when sitting in front of the PC, it is important to stretch to avoid common computer use and lower back pain problems. Staying in the same position for prolonged periods of time can often remove the elasticity from your tissues. This is why it is necessary to walk stand up and walk around approximately every two hours. However, you may have to do this more often as stress builds in your muscles and you become uncomfortable.

3 Stretches For Nagging Upper Back Pain


You're driving into work and it strikes you - a throbbing pain in between your shoulders. You're finishing up a report at your desk and notice - it's there again, that same nagging upper back pain. Both times the back pain from sitting developed while you were involved in a simple activity.

There can be many reasons for upper back pain. You may have an old injury, you are sitting without good ergonomic support, your seat is poorly adjusted - whatever the reason you know your situation best and should try new stretches to lessen or address the pain with care and never increase your pain. These are simple, gentle moves adapted from Yoga and physical therapy.

Here are a few stretches that may address nagging upper back pain:

1. In the car perhaps you hunch forward, your chin jutting towards the steering wheel with your arms tense while gripping the wheel. Perhaps you hold this same posture when at your desk? This extended posture may strain the upper back and that can lead to a host of painful injuries.


  • Make sure that your seat is adjusted to allow the proper distance from the steering wheel, or your computer monitor. Your elbows should be comfortably bent and relaxed. Your shoulders should be relaxed and down. Your hands need to be relaxed.

  • Sit up straight with good lumbar support. Try this stretch at a stop light or before the car is moving. When done at your computer, your hands can rest on the edge of the desk. You will see how simple and safe this small but profound stretch can be.

  • Now gently pull just the top of your right shoulder slowly and gently towards the center of the steering wheel or lower monitor. Be sure to keep breathing and pause a moment feeling into the stretch. Next bring that same shoulder up and then press it back and down into the seat behind you.

  • Repeat a few times to melt shoulder and upper back pain. Then do the same for the opposite shoulder.

2. Back arches can ease some of the tension in the upper spine.


  • Sit up straight again and relax your shoulders and hands.

  • Next push the center of your back towards your seat, bringing your shoulders forward. Hold and breathe.

  • Then shift your rib cage up slightly and forward. Breathe again.

  • Repeat this small arching and shifting movement several times.

3. Minor spinal twists are a great tension reliever and increase energy.


  • Here you will isolate the upper torso only, keeping your hips facing forward. If in the car it's a small upper body twist originating with one shoulder at a time. At your desk you have more options to twist more deeply.

  • Sitting up with your hands comfortably on the desk or steering wheel, twist your right ribs and shoulder towards the steering wheel or desk.

  • Twist over to the other side and keep breathing. This is a slow steady move and can be very invigorating.

Over time you'll find that these simple stretches may become automatic whenever you notice the old tense, nagging upper back pain returning. If the pain persists there may be deeper chronic problems and you should consult your doctor or chiropractor for help.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Cowboys Are Athletes


While I was at home over the Christmas break, quite a few things changed and I learned some new stuff too. One night while visiting with the Jones family, at their place in Delburne, AB, I realized something that was quite obvious but didn't fully sink in until that night. What happened was while we were talking about rodeo, and all of the things that happened in the past year, we got to the topic of fitness and just how it affects us rodeo contestants.

As far as fitness most of us are pretty fit to begin with when we start our rodeo career. When beginning rodeo it can be much more difficult when you are not physically in shape. Once you figure out a system, it gets much easier. I see more young contestants being more successful in rodeo in the future when fitness, flexibility, and eating well become more deeply valued. Different transitions play a part too.

The biggest one I have seen in a few different rough stock competitors I am friends with is when they stop being a part of organized sports. I know when I won the most money bull riding was just a month after I was on the ice three times a day playing hockey, and in the gym on the off days. It was easy to do this at that time. I can remember being able to do 15 chin-ups and over 30 one legged squats like it was no big deal. The other day I tried, and I could barely do six chin ups, and it hurt my knee to do regular squats.

A big difference involved with being physically fit involves flexibility and just being able to be more resilient.

Guess when I started getting injured? Not long after I was done playing hockey. Anyone looking at it from the outside would realize this. It took breaking my collar bone and dislocating my shoulder a couple times to see it for myself. For some it might just be motivation. They think they can get by with not going to the gym and just being a cowboy, or being tough about it. Even if you are in great shape and in top physical condition you might still get hurt. The truth is that when you are in good shape your mind is in a better state of being too. With all cylinders firing at 100 percent your chances of getting hurt go way down; therefore, increasing your longevity in the sport.

Being physically fit is a big part of our sport. And physical fitness involves other aspects such as chiropractic treatment and massage therapy. Both of these help to keep you at your highest levels of fitness. Chiropractors have been the most helpful I have come across so far. I dislocated my shoulder on June 19th, 2009, in Killam, AB and with the help of my chiropractor I was able to ride again 100 percent on July 3rd in Brazil. Now this wasn't any ordinary chiropractor though. If you are looking for someone who can help you in these ways you need to find a chiropractor who does Active Release Techniques (A.R.T.).

A.R.T. quickly helps you to regain strength from muscles that were previously injured or tense from previous trauma. A chiropractor who is qualified to use Graston tools will also be a major benefit.

After the first go round of the 2009 WPB Finals, Miles Pennington found himself unable to straighten his back when he walked or bent forward to put his shoes or boots on without feeling severe pain in his lower back.

He contemplated turning out because he knew if he got on there was a high chance he would probably just fall of and possibly hurt it worse. He made the decision to get help and find treatment so that he could ride the next night. With the help of Chiropractor, Dr. Nicole Fox of Red Deer, Alberta, on New Year's Eve Miles was able to compete; he even rode his bull that night in the long go and took home some money.

Even though I am a bull rider, health is my number one value in my life. Without health, a person really wouldn't have anything else worthwhile in their life I figure. Now you might say that being a bull rider and having health as your number one value are contradictory values. I see this as being maybe slightly true; however, being a bull rider is rough on your body sometimes, but that's part of the game. I see riding bulls as being a way to live my life on my own terms. There have been times I have thought of doing things differently. When I get deep into thought about it I think more about what I am really worried about and realize that a person can get hurt anywhere.

We as Cowboys are our own bosses. Unlike other Professional athletes, we don't have athletic trainers at our side every moment of every day to tend to out every complaint and pain. We may have things bothering us and we don't do anything about it because we don't have the time, or we really just don't make the time to get it looked after. Some people think the way to go is to Cowboy up and deal with the pain. I love being a Cowboy and a bull rider and would say I am both. I would also say I am an athlete. However, since we don't have trainers waiting on us like other professional athletes in sports, like hockey or football, we need to take things into our own hands.

There are rodeo cowboys who look after themselves and then there are those who don't look after themselves. We get to all make our own choices in rodeo. We don't have a coach or a boss to tell us what we should and shouldn't do, what we should and shouldn't drink or eat, and whether or not we should go to the doctor when something might be wrong.

The ones who look after themselves are the ones who most of the time make it further in the sport. I have seen a few different people in my short career have to quit because they didn't look after themselves when they were my age or younger. You are the controller of your own destiny the choices you make ultimately help run the course of your life. You can live it however you want.

This article is my opinion. I write to inform you some of the things I have learned that I think will be a benefit to you. I hope you enjoy reading my articles. I sure enjoy writing them and hearing back from some people have helped.

BioFreeze Pain Relieving Gel Review


One of the most debilitating conditions that most people deal with in their lifetime is back pain. If you are constantly suffering from a stiff and sore back then get an appointment with your physician or a chiropractor. The chiropractor will ask you to get x-rays and undergo some other tests to give you the right treatment. And more often than not, every doctor or chiropractor would recommend buying BioFreeze Pain Relieving Gel manufactured by Performance Health.

Those who have used BioFreeze will tell you how effective the product is and how it has relieved them of severe back pain. The product is not meant for back pain alone, it can be used for any type of body pain including aching hips, shoulder, elbows and knees. The gel has also been proven effective in treating arthritis pain, plantar fasciitis and diabetic neuropathy and even bursitis strikes. Those suffering specifically from back pain will find the BioFreeze Gel to be a great pain reliever.

Performance Health produces BioFreeze in different forms and sizes. They are available in the form of sprays, roll on or gel. The form of BioFreeze you purchase depends on the type of pain you are experiencing. For back pain a gel tube is ideal, if you are suffering from pain in areas of the body that are hard to reach then use the spray and a roll on is perfect for those who don't want to get the product on their hands.

The BioFreeze gel is green and color and is cold when you squeeze it out of the tube. The gel has a very strong and mentholated odor which maybe unpleasant for some people. The product is applied to the affected area; the skin will quickly absorb BioFreeze when you rub it on. The gel is cold when you first apply it but as it penetrates into the skin you will feel a warm sensation. It is penetrates deep and works with the muscles to relieve the pain. The strong odor disappears once the gel is absorbed by the body. The product works quickly and is very easy to use.

The BioFreeze Pain Relieving Gel has another benefit. It does not stain like most other pain relief gel products. The gel is free of petroleum, oils, aloe or waxes which makes it completely non greasy. The smell of the gel doesn't lat long so you will not stink like pain relief gels and creams which have a mentholated odor. This product has become a trusted treatment aid for physical therapists and chiropractors. It can relieve all types muscular strains and sprains and even joint pain.

The only concern you may have is the price, it costs $8 for a 4 ounce tube and you may not find it in every retail store but the shelf life is long. The BioFreeze comes with a 30 day money back guarantee; you can return the unopened product and get a full refund. The benefits provided by BioFreeze makes it a complete value for money product.

Quick & Easy Chiropractor Treatment Guide Reveals How to Choose a Chiropractor


Many people fear dealing with Chiropractors just because they are nervous and they do not understand the benefits of doing so. The main reason for this is because many people are not informed in this field therefore they do not understand how a Chiropractor can help them in solving their problems. Actually when you need help, then you need not to fear anything. Many people have a problem of cracking or painful joints and the best solution to such problems is turning to the Chiropractor because Chiropractors are highly trained and experienced individuals who are capable of making you comfortable before you go ahead with other treatment methods.

When you are looking for the best Chiropractor, it is important to realize that people are different therefore not all Chiropractors are equal. Before you settle with one Chiropractor, you must work hard and carry out a proper research. You must first of all find out the important information concerning the doctor whom you are planning to deal with. Some of the important information may include whether the doctor went to a reputable school or not, the doctors background, if the doctor is a likable individual and whether his technique can suit your case among others. By looking at such matters, you can be sure that you are dealing with the best Chiropractor.

After carrying out a thorough research, you will be able to select the best doctor and arrange for an appointment. Ensure you are dealing with an easy going and friendly Chiropractor and his receptionist; remember you will be interacting with him more often throughout your treatment period when you have any appointment with your doctor. Other things to consider include the cleanliness of the office and if the office looks professional enough among others. When visiting the office for the first time, it is advised that you take your time since the necessary consultation and examination must be done in order to know why you are there and how you can be assisted.

During the first visit, your doctor may be forced to carry out several tests on you including the x-rays in order to find a way forward. This is fairly common. After finding out what is wrong with your back and knowing the treatment options, you are still at liberty to decline or to accept the treatment as it is your choice and you cannot be forced to take it.

Understanding and Overcoming Back Pain


From your own experience, you probably know that traditional therapies for back pain usually produce only short-term, partial relief or require regular -- even lifelong -- care. It need no longer be that way.

There is something better available -- a new discipline in the field of health care: clinical somatic education. Most back pain sufferers who resort to clinical somatic education should expect full recovery in a space of days or weeks.

Clinical somatic education retrains muscle/movement memory. Clients rapidly improve their muscular control and freedom of movement through a mind-brain-movement training process. Clinical somatic education affects the brain the way biofeedback does, but with importance differences, one being speed of results and the other being the durability of the improvement. Changes are usually definitive and need no further professional help.

Clinical somatic education recovers fitness for the activities of daily living.

A New View of Back Pain

Spinal alignment and disc condition are secondary to something more basic: muscular tension.

Tight back muscles get fatigued and sore; they get prone to spasm; they pull vertebrae together and compress discs, causing bulges and degeneration; they cause nerve entrapment, such as sciatica.

Back muscles are virtually never too weak; they feel weak because they're tired from being tight all the time, musclebound.

Rest doesn't help, much. Muscle memory, not disease or misalignment, keep them tight. Resting doesn't change muscle memory.

This statement applies as much to people with degenerative disc disease and herniated discs to those who have only a twinge, now and then. The underlying cause is the same: muscle tension.

"If that's true," you may ask, "why doesn't my doctor (or therapist) know about it?"

The answer is that until recently, the connection between muscle memory and back pain wasn't recognized. Effects are typically mistaken for causes. No method existed that could rapidly change muscle memory enough to be clinically practical. Word takes time to spread and gain credibility. People are attached to their methods and ideas.

You may think, "Back spasms are too painful, too serious to be dismissed that quickly, or that easily."

That's understandable -- but a misunderstanding of your situation.

Conventional Therapeutics and Back Muscle Spasms

Conventional treatment methods, as you already know, are not effective enough for most people. Most therapies try to strengthen, stretch, or adjust people out of back trouble by working on muscles or the skeletal system. But bones go where muscles pull them, the control center for the muscular system is the brain (not the therapist), and these approaches don't address the brain's control of muscle action, so the problem remains or returns. The problem isn't in your muscles; it's in your brain, the organ of learning and the seat of muscle/movement memory, which runs the show.

That's why the relief obtained by conventional therapeutic approaches to back spasms is usually temporary and you remains subject to re-injury and to prescribed limitations to movement, such as "neutral spine position".

Muscle/memory is acquired, learned. What's learned can be unlearned, and actually, relearning muscular control is the only approach that works for long term relief of back pain. You must dissolve the memory-based, reflexive grip of musclebound back muscles; it can't be manipulated away.

Medical doctors, chiropractors, physical therapists, osteopaths, and bodyworkers use predominantly manipulative methods.

But problems arising from muscle/movement memory cannot be "cured" by manipulation because muscular tension is not a disease, but a habit maintained in the brain.

A Correct Understanding of 'Strengthening and Stretching'

The idea behind the common "strengthening and stretching" regimen for back spasms is usually based on a misunderstanding; it's a misunderstanding because the muscles involved are almost never weak, but tired; it's a misunderstanding because the muscles involved are not "short" and in need of stretching, but "in contraction" and in need of relaxation. Sore muscles don't need strengthening; they need relaxation and a chance to be refreshed, again.

You need to regain your ability to relax, something you can't regain by being manipulated by someone else; you regain it by relearning to relax -- a form of learning, albeit a specialized one for which you will probably need training.

Back Muscle Spasms May be Painful, but Not Themselves an Injury

One of the automatic reactions of the body to injury is to tighten up. That's part of the pain of most injuries, particularly of musculo-skeletal injuries. It's a reaction that protects the body from further injury. There are cases where the tightening up of back muscles is such a protective reaction, and a necessary one -- where actual damage has occurred, such as a ruptured disc or a violent accident. In such situations, surgery may be necessary and changing muscle memory will either not help or produce only temporary relief, at least until after surgery, unhappy news for some, but realistic.

If you've seen a doctor for your back spasms, he or she has either discovered that you need surgery or that you don't. Surgery is a last, desperate resort and most doctors are reluctant to recommend it. If you have been sent for therapy or given drugs, yours is not a surgical situation, meaning that your spasms are not a protective reaction against injury, but chronic activity.

In the majority of back spasms, there is no injury. The back spasms are just a movement malfunction -- a tension habit formed under stress. It's the "tension" part of "nervous tension."

So, why do back spasms occur? You now have part of the answer. Let's look a little more closely.

Your muscles obey your brain. Except for momentary reflexes controlled in the spinal cord (tested by your doctor's hammer tap), that's the whole story. So, if you have tight, spastic muscles, they're caused by your brain.

This answer is a "good news/bad news" type of answer. The bad news is that your muscles are out of control, and it's your brain's fault! Your brain isn't broken, just trapped by the memory of stress or injury in your history. The good news is that your brain can be relearn to relax those muscles.

Where do Back Muscle Spasms Come from?

One thing you will almost always notice about people with back spasms, if you exercise your powers of observation, is their high shoulders and swayback. Touch the muscles of their lower back, and you will find the same thing: hard, contracted muscles, not soft, weak, flabby muscles.

The major source of back spasms is the lifestyle of being "on the go" -- driven, driving, productive, on time, and responsive to every situation. Tense. This is a new idea for most people, so here's the explanation.

Our post-modern lifestyle triggers an ancient neuromuscular (bodily) response (known to developmental physiologists as the Landau Reaction); this reaction involves a tightening of the muscles of the spine in preparation for arising from rest (sitting or lying down) into activity (sitting, standing, walking, running). The Landau Reaction consists of the muscular responses involved in coming to a heightened state of alertness in preparation for moving into action. The reaction may be mild, moderate, strong, or extreme; triggered incessantly for years, a muscle/movement memory forms -- one that often outlasts the moment (or stage of life) when it was necessary and makes you vulnerable to episodes of spasm.

Many Back Pain Issues Come from the Same Cause

Though injuries from traffic accidents, falls, etc., also trigger muscular reactions that can become habitual, the Landau Reaction is behind most of the back-spasm epidemic in our society. It's a consequence of accumulated stress.

While you can't avoid the Landau Reaction (it's a necessary and appropriate part of life), you can avoid getting stuck in it. If your lifestyle puts you habitually in a state of reaction, you have to "de-habituate" yourself from it, so that your rise in tension occurs only as a momentary response to situations and does not become your chronic state.

Attempts to De-habituate the Landau Reaction

Most therapeutic approaches to back spasms are -- without knowing it -- attempts to de-habituate the Landau Reaction.

Cures for the tension and stress associated with the Landau Reaction include relaxation techniques, hypnosis, massage, skeletal adjustments, electrical stimulation, muscle relaxant drugs, and at last (as at first) pain medications.

Until recently, there was nothing better. Now, an effective way exists to rapidly improve muscular control, freedom of movement, and physical comfort. Once you have gained control of your Landau Reaction, a brief daily regimen of certain movements is sufficient to keep you from accumulating the daily tensions of a driven and overloaded life. You can keep refreshing yourself, as needed.

If you have numbness or tingling in your extremities, your problem is more severe and requires a medical evaluation to rule out serious conditions. Even if you have surgery, you will still need to learn to relax the tight muscles that initially caused the problem. If yours is not a surgical situation, then somatic education is probably viable for you.

The new methods used to de-habituate Landau Reaction are highly reliable and have no adverse side effects, apart from occasional temporary soreness the day after a session, soreness that fades out in a day or two, leaving you flexible, comfortable and stronger than before.

Pediatric Chiropractic Care Is Beneficial to a Child's Development


More and more parents are looking to chiropractic care as a complementary part of their children's health-care needs. The American Chiropractic Association reports survey findings showing an increase of at least 8.5 percent of chiropractic patients under the age of 17. A study by the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention also stated that almost 3 percent of children in the United States receive treatment with chiropractic osteopathic manipulation.

As such, chiropractic is the most prevailing type of alternative medicine employed by children. Experts concur that chiropractic care can be useful for children who suffer from spine-related ailments. Like adults, children benefit from spinal manipulation and adjustments, as well as other kinds of care that fall under the purview of chiropractic.

However, chiropractic care should work as a complementary treatment to regular pediatric care. Chiropractic care works alongside a pediatrician's treatment, but it does not replace the role of a regular doctor. The pediatrician may prescribe medications for certain necessary conditions, and treat the patient for more serious illnesses and injuries. A pediatric chiropractor, on the other hand, is instrumental in providing preventative, supportive wellness care, as well as alternative treatment in some cases.

Some studies indicate that chiropractic care may help children with various common ailments, ranging from colic and bedwetting, to asthma and ear infections. This is in addition to back and neck pain treatment. Studies have been conducted in order to determine the value and effectiveness of pediatric chiropractic care. These studies, which showed mostly positive results, concentrated on conditions other than musculoskeletal and included issues such as tonsillitis, enuresis, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, asthma and colic.

In the case of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), chiropractors are showing results with an alternative approach to treatment that focuses on nutrition, lifestyle, and postural muscle adjustments as opposed to the regular route of medication. This is no small gain considering how prevalent prescriptions for Ritalin, a commonly prescribed medication for ADHD, have become. Americans consume 90 percent of all prescriptions for Ritalin in the world - a fact that makes many parents weary of the traditional medical approach.

The widespread labeling and use of medication to address ADHD has become controversial, with many vague, but "undesirable" symptoms falling under the umbrella of ADHD. Some skeptics have also pointed to the link between the number of disabled children in a school and the amounts of funding a school gets.

In the case of ADHD, a chiropractic doctor begins by seeing the child as a whole, and seeks to consult with the child and the parents, asking questions such as, "Is the child bored or undertaking too many activities? Does the child have dyslexia, or a different learning pattern? Is he/she experiencing problems at home or with a teacher's style?"

This is a startling different approach to the standard, questionnaire-based evaluation for ADHD. Another criticism for the traditional treatment for ADHD is that drugs don't cure ADHD, and that most children who are diagnosed with it still experience ADHD symptoms in later years.

Chiropractic and chiropractic neurologists provide a non-invasive, holistic treatment approach that focuses on the underlying issue a child may be experiencing, not just the surface symptoms. Chiropractic neurologists identify the malfunctioning part of the brain, and seek treatment methods to address and correct the problem. A brain function exam is used, as well as tests focused on evaluating visual and auditory reflexes.

Once the underlying problem is singled out, patients are put on a treatment program that can often be done at home. Some patients might be asked to wear special glasses, smell a certain scent, or be put into timing therapies that help with planning, organizing, and coordination. It all depends on the individual child's needs. But the most striking element of chiropractic treatment is that it seeks to address brain activity itself, paving the way for long term results. Nutritional changes are also recommended in order to prevent biochemical imbalances that lead ADHD.

As for chiropractic spinal manipulation, the treatment itself is sophisticated and individually tailored; the treatment for children is also extremely gentle. Doctors of chiropractic employ an active, drug-free method of health care, which includes patient examination, diagnosis, and subsequent treatment. Most parents claim their children receive the benefits of improved health by regularly visiting a chiropractor, and their children enjoy their chiropractic visits and adjustments.

Can Chiropractic Help With Disc Problems?


In most cases, ABSOLUTELY!

While a disc problem can become painful, it doesn't have to take the fun out of your life. A Chiropractor may help provide you with instant relief, as well as avoid possible surgery to your spine.

It is very easy for us to resort to pain killers for immediate relief for our back pain, but is this fixing the problem, or just masking the pain? How many times have you taken pain killers for your back pain only to have the discomfort come on hours or even days later? While pain killers mask the symptoms of a disc problem, a good Chiropractor gets to the cause of your problem, providing you with long lasting results.

Before we can even understand how a Chiropractor may be able to help you overcome disc pain, we must first understand what spinal discs are, their role, as well as how they may become damaged.

What are spinal discs?

Spinal discs or intervertebral discs are small cartilage pads located between your spinal bones. They are composed of an inner jelly-like substance (nucleus pulposus) and a tough outer fibrous ring (annulus fibrosis).

The role of your spinal discs is to allow your vertebrae (bones of the spine) to move freely on one another as well as creating a gap for your spinal nerves to exit from your spine. Your discs also absorb 90% of the weight that goes through your spine and provides a degree of shock absorption. The remaining 10% of the weight rests on the small joints at the back of your spine (facets).

When healthy, discs allow normal turning and bending. Since your spinal discs have a very poor blood supply, they depend upon proper spinal mobility to nourish the disc and expel waste. If your spinal joints lose their normal motion your discs can become malnourished and the health of your spinal discs deteriorates. Like a wet sponge, a healthy disc is flexible. A dry sponge is hard, stiff, and can crack easily. This is how many disc problems begin.

There are various types of disc problems including, disc tear, bulging disc, herniated disc, prolapsed disc, and desiccated disc. Let's have a look at the difference in them all.

DISC TEAR

This type of disc problem refers to a crack or micro tear in the tough outer ring of the disc. This may lead to fluid leaking from the disc and causing it to wear thin.

BULGING DISC

Occurs when the soft jelly-like material in the middle of the disc pushes to one side -forwards or backwards - causing swelling. This swelling can contribute to pressure on the spinal nerves triggering off painful symptoms.

HERNIATED DISC

When a disc becomes herniated, the fluid from the centre of the disc ruptures through the outer fibres, stretching the disc beyond its normal limits.

DISC PROLAPSE

Refers to a condition in which part of the disc tears away and becomes a free floating fragment.

DESSICATED DISC

Occurs when the disc loses its fluid content, and degenerates down to a rough, worn down appearance. This occurs as the bones begin to fuse to each other.

What are some symptoms I may experience as a result of a disc condition?

Symptoms of a disc problem may vary with each individual person. For some, a disc condition may cause little to no pain. For others, a disc problem can push onto nerves in the spine, resulting in a lot of pain, and limited movement. Some symptoms you may experience as a result of this includes, a dull or sharp pain, muscle spasm or cramping, weakness, tingling or referred pain (pain into other parts of the body). It could even make standing, sitting, walking, lifting, urinating, defecating, sneezing, coughing, and moving nearly impossible. In extreme cases, numbness of the legs or foot, or a loss of muscle control may occur.

What causes disc problems?

While pain due to a disc problem may come on all of a sudden, it is usually the result of wear and tear over a long period of time.

For instance, a middle-aged accountant who sits for long periods of time suffers from disc dehydration, and has poor posture and spinal mobility, then lifts a heavy piece of furniture and experiences acute back pain and leg pain.

Or perhaps many months of repetitive lifting, bending or twisting, he experiences no pain at all, until he sneezes. Bingo! A herniated disc.

How can a Chiropractor help?

We mentioned earlier that a lack of spinal mobility may contribute to problems with your discs and may hence contribute to back pain. Subluxations (spinal misalignments) contribute to poor movement between your spinal joints, thus creating unnecessary pressure on your discs. Chiropractors are the only health professional qualified to correct these subluxations. By doing so, they are able to restore the mobility between your spinal joints, thus allowing the nutrients to pass through the joints and to the discs.

While results cannot be guaranteed, many patients have avoided needless surgery or a dependency on pain killers, by choosing to have Chiropractic care. The traditional approach to disc problems often ignores spinal function. Having regular Chiropractic adjustments is safer and often more effective than back surgery.

As a matter of fact, in one study, Chiropractic care had shown 96% effectiveness in helping disc sufferers, as opposed to those who underwent surgery (3% success rate). When you look at these statistics, Chiropractic for disc problems just makes sense!

Someone once said and I totally agree, "Try Chiropractic first, medication second, and surgery third".

If you are suffering from back pain or from other symptoms due to an unhealthy spinal disc, consider Chiropractic care as a safe, gentle and natural means for overcoming this debilitating ailment.