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Prolotherapy & Connective
Tissue Damage Syndrome:

Why am I hurting, and no one seems to know what is wrong?
From the Journal of Prolotherapy,
Mark Johnson, M.D.,
writes that
Prolotherapy is an important clinical tool to treat damaged
connective tissue—ligaments, tendons, cartilage, meniscus,
labrum, fascia, etc. But perhaps a greater contribution made by
Prolotherapy is that it sheds light on an important medical
mystery. That is, when someone has pain in a joint, or in the
neck, or back, or when someone has symptoms going down an arm or
leg, or various other distressing symptoms, what disease process
is actually causing their symptoms? I see patients on a daily
basis who have had the origin of their symptoms misdiagnosed. I
hear patients on a daily basis give accounts of lengthy odysseys
through the health care system, often involving multiple
attempted treatments, including operations, who are not better,
and perhaps worse, after all the medical attention they have
received. Or I see patients with significant symptoms who have
been told that “nothing” is wrong—because all their tests are
“negative.” One can read the medical literature and see many
purported mechanisms for back, neck, and joint pain. Then read
the results of patient treatment based on these proposed
mechanisms, and see failure rates that are remarkably high. One
can also see in the literature a large group of patients who, at
the outset, do not fit into any known “diagnostic category.”
Practitioners cannot be exposed to diagnosing and treating
patients with musculoskeletal pain for long before a question
becomes glaringly obvious. “Are we missing something
here—is there a disease process that is right under our noses
every day that is poorly understood, or totally misunderstood,
by the medical community at large?”
I believe that the answer is “Yes.” Thanks to observations
gleaned from successfully treating thousands of painful joints
with Prolotherapy, I think I have developed a fairly clear
understanding of this disease process. Many of these
observations have been made by others in the Prolotherapy
community for decades. What has been lacking thus far is
assembling these observations into a description of a disease
process. That process can then be named and understood by the
medical community, and the general community, in a way which
explains the mystery of many misdiagnosed and undiagnosed body
pains. To that end, here is an introduction to the Connective
Tissue Damage Syndrome.
Continue this article
Prolotherapy & Connective Tissue Damage Syndrome at the
Journal of Prolotherapy
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