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Prolotherapy
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Prolotherapy
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How
Does Prolotherapy Work?
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How
Prolotherapy Helps?
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Indications and Contraindications
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Introduction to Prolotherapy
● Why Get Prolotherapy?
● What is Prolotherapy?
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How Does Prolotherapy Work?
● Are You A Prolotherapy Candidate?
● Tendon, Ligament, Reconstruction
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How Safe Is Prolotherapy?
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Finding a Prolotherapy doctor
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When Prolotherapy May Not
Work
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20
Questions About Prolotherapy
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The History of Prolotherapy
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Curing Chronic Pain
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Sclerotherapy?
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Turning to Prolotherapy
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Prolotherapy and Chronic
Pain
● The Proof Prolotherapy is Working?
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Prolotherapy: Creating Collagen
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How To
Support Treatment
Prolotherapy injections
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Growth Factor Basis of
Prolotherapy
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The Journal of
Prolotherapy |
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Prolotherapy
Research
Table of Contents of all
issues of
The
Journal of Prolotherapy |
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Neck
Pain
Marc Darrow, M.D.,J.D.
After
low back pain,
neck pain is probably one of the most frequent problems we see in the
office that Prolotherapy is often successful in healing.
Aside from having neck pain, patients may also complain of associated
symptoms like
headache,
jaw pain, irritable bowel syndrome,
Barre-Lieou Syndrome
with associated facial pain, ear pain, vertigo, tinnitus, loss of voice,
or hoarseness.
One reason neck pain is so prevalent is that the weight of the head is
not proportionate to the strength and size of the neck. Often times,
laxity in the ligaments create pain down the arms, when most doctors
think there is a radiculopathy, needing surgery.
I can't remember one instance that I have recommended neck surgery. And
be careful if you have pain down an arm which has been diagnosed as
coming from a
herniated disc. Prolotherapy injection treatment has been
successful in ending the neck pain and the arm pain, no matter what the
diagnosis is.
Case Study: One of my patients came to me seeking pain
relief from headaches. His surgeon told him that he had a herniated disc
on the right side of his neck, and that without surgery, he would have
terrible headaches the rest of his life. The headaches, however, were on
the left side of the bottom of his head. When I touched his head (the
occiput) he jumped, letting me know the headaches were coming from a
sprain of the muscle attachments to the bottom of his head, and not from
a herniated disc on the other side. After Prolotherapy treatment, the
intensity of his head and neck pain is greatly diminished, and he is no
longer taking anti-inflammatory medications.
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Neck and Cervical Pain
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Cervical Spine Pain
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Cervical Radiculopathy
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Cervical
Stenosis
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Neck Pain, Herniated Disc
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Neck Pain C2 - T1
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Neck Pain
C2 - C7
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Nerve Pain
in the Neck
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Neck
Stiffness
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General Neck Pain
For the Doctors
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Prolotherapy Training
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