Sciatic Leg Pain Relief with Chiropractic – Even After Back
Surgery!
Options for relief of back pain and leg pain are surgical
and non-surgical. Pain reducing chiropractic care is
non-surgical and even post-surgical. A recent published paper
questioned the long-term outcomes of randomized clinical trials of
surgical microdiscectomy for lumbosacral radicular syndrome. A high-volume
spine center collected long-term outcome reports from 246
surgical patients. The review found that 26% of patients underwent re-operation. Further, 35% of patients who related
a negative recovery also experienced worse back
and leg pain than the 65% who reported a favorable
recovery outcome. The authors concluded that patient selection
for surgery is vital to outcomes and explaining
fully the chances for a less than perfect
outcome. (1) It surely comes down to the right
treatment for the proper condition as well as having realistic
expectations for all involved. We know there is a place for
conservative care and surgical care. We work with great
local spine surgeons for those patients requiring their skills.
For one patient who had spinal surgery for cauda equina
syndrome, chiropractic care relieved symptoms she had
after that surgery - low back pain and radicular leg pain – as well as
reduced her opioid medication use and bettered
her low limb function. (2) Luckily, there is rising
interest in the part spinal manipulation plays in easing low back pain symptoms following lumbar spine
surgery, a condition that was formerly called “failed back
surgical syndrome” and today is more readily referred to as
“persistent spinal pain syndrome” or “post-surgical continued pain syndrome”
(PSCP). (3) Whatever it is called, it’s
spine-related pain that remains or occurs after spine surgery.
Cox® Technic spinal manipulation utilized at Aaron Chiropractic Clinic is garnering notice for its use and its successful
pain-relieving clinical outcome publication. In one study of 69 PSCP
patients, 81% demonstrated better than 50% reduction
in pain levels with Cox® Technic. Two years later, 78% had continued
pain relief of greater than 50%. (4) Non-surgical chiropractic
care at Aaron Chiropractic Clinic is relieving for many Fort Wayne back and sciatic leg pain sufferers without and even
post-surgically!
Listen to this PODCAST with Dr. William Hoffman on The Back
Doctors Podcast with Dr. Michael Johnson as he details the
relieving treatment of back pain and sciatic leg pain with the Cox® Technic System of Spinal Pain Management.
Fort Wayne CHIROPRACTIC TIP OF THE
MONTH: Nutrition’s Role in Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy
The most common cause of Fort Wayne myelopathy in the
cervical spine is cervical spondylosis. Due to chronic compression of the spine
cord and its resulting neurological disability in sufferers 55 years of age and
over, cervical spondylosis lowers sufferers’ quality of life.
Researchers desiring to help patients with this condition also
want to have some answers for them. Does nutrition play a
role in cervical myelopathy’s care, its development, and its influence on
surgical outcomes? In one review of 5835 papers of which 44 were pertinent,
poorer recoveries physically and mentally and
complications after surgery were seen in obese patients. An unbalanced diet,
history of alcohol abuse, and malnourishment were associated with
lower post-operative outcomes, leading the researchers to state
that nutrition may have a significant role in optimizing
the surgical outcome for degenerative cervical myelopathy patients. (5)
One beneficial nutritional approach for cervical myelopathy is olive extract as
it is found to suppress inflammation and decrease
oxidative stress and thereby safeguard cervical spondylotic
myelopathy. (6) Aaron Chiropractic Clinic is ready to talk about this
condition and present chiropractic’s role in examining, diagnosing,
and managing cervical myelopathy.
CONTACT Aaron Chiropractic Clinic
Happy New Year! We look forward to taking
care of you in 2022!
Schedule your next Fort Wayne chiropractic
appointment today. We treat sciatic leg pain non-surgically and
post-surgically and understand the nuances of cervical spine
myelopathy enough to see that nutrition is an essential piece of its treatment plan. See you soon!
"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the
DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by
Dr. James M. Cox I."