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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
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Will
your radiculopathy respond to Prolotherapy:
Five key factors to know
My own story,
Ross Hauser, M.D.
Lumbar and
cervical radiculopathy
are some of the most painful conditions every experienced.
What most folks don’t know is that most pains down the arm and legs (referral
pain)
stemming from the back and neck respectively
can be easily and effectively treated with
Prolotherapy.
I personally had suffered from severe
cervical radiculopathy
and had my condition resolved with Prolotherapy. As
you may have guessed pretty much every day I evaluate cases of
radiculopathy from locally to those that travel across the country to
see me. When I evaluate radiculopathy cases below are some of the
points I will use to determine if the radiculopathy will respond to
Prolotherapy. I hope they are helpful to you!
1. Is your radiculopathy constant or
intermittent?
Intermittent radiculopathy generally responds very well to
Prolotherapy.
Back pain
with intermittent leg pain typically means that the nerve is getting
“pinched” due to lumbar instability. One or two vertebral segments
have too much movement due an underlying
ligament injury in the
area. The best treatment to stabilize an unstable vertebral
segment is Prolotherapy. Generally within three to six visits the low
back or neck pain and subsequent leg pain often resolves completely.
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Constant radiculopathy, however, can also resolve with
Prolotherapy. I am a prime example of this. Please see my
neck
MRI
In January, 2010 after a vigorous swim I started to get
severe upper back pain near my scapula which over the next
few days progressed to severe, knife-like pain in my hand,
which was my worst pain, ranking a 100 on a scale of 0-10.
I received an MRI at this time because I thought I had blown
a disc. As you can see from the scan and the report, all I
had was tremendous
Osteoarthritis.
Nerves were blocked or crunched all over the place.
Interestingly enough, when I was 15 years old, my dad and I
were rear-ended in our vehicle and both of us suffered
terrible whiplash injuries, with subsequent neck
arthritis.
I was definitely not a surgical candidate, so I received
some
chiropractic care,
physiotherapy, and medications to get me through the day,
but ultimately what healed me was Prolotherapy.
Please read more about
my case and the comprehensive approach to
cervical
radiculopathy in the Journal of Prolotherapy.
When
someone has constant severe leg or arm pain (always 10 out
of 10) this typically means that the radiculopathy is
structural in the sense that the patient either has a
herniated disc
or bone spur hitting the nerve. If the case does not
quickly respond to Prolotherapy, then surgery may be needed.
Sometimes the only course of action is surgery, especially
if the patient experiences numbness and loss of muscle
strength. However, take these words with caution,
because I myself had true numbness and lost my muscle
strength in my brachioradialis muscle, but still resolved my
condition without surgery and I am now basically 100%. On
very rare occasions I’ll get a slight tingling in my hand,
but again it rarely occurs and as most of you know, I
recently ran 60 miles and had no neck or arm pain.
2. Do you have clicking in your back?
It is not normal for low backs and pelvic bones (sacroiliac
bones) to shift and move and thus
click. A person who needs constant
high velocity manipulation,
either by osteopathic or
chiropractic
physicians or self-manipulation, has spinal
instability and needs Prolotherapy. Any clicking or popping
sound in the neck or lower back is completely abnormal.
Low
back pain
associated with referral pain down the leg or neck
pain with referral pain down the arm, is a sure sign that
the Prolotherapy is needed to strengthen the weakened area(s).
By stabilizing the spine, Prolotherapy should get rid of the
low back and neck pain and subsequent referral/radicular
pains down the extremities.
3. True numbness or numbiness?
Most people with the diagnosis of cervical or lumbar
radiculopathy state they have a numb feeling but can
feel everything. This is what I call numbiness!
Numbiness is a numb type feeling but when sensation
is tested everything is completely fine!
Numbiness
is commonly found with ligament injuries. If you
have some neck or low back with referral pain down
the extremity combined with a numbiness there is a
good chance that your radiculopathy will respond to
Prolotherapy.
In 2008, I had true numbness in my hand.
There was a small section on the posterior (dorsal)
part of my hand that was numb. If you touched
it I could feel it. This is true numbness.
When someone has true numbness, meaning that the
area of their leg or arm is truly numb this is
typically a finding that the person has a true
radiculopathy where by a nerve is getting injured.
This is more likely the person will need something
in addition to Prolotherapy. It doesn’t
totally preclude Prolotherapy but it might be an
indication that Prolotherapy may not totally resolve
the pain. There are times where a person has
severe
arthritis
causing a true radiculopathy whereby the persons
nerve roots are getting pinched and serious or some
other therapy, besides Prolotherapy are needed.
4. Can you find a comfortable position?
If a patient can find a comfortable position where
the pain becomes nominal, this is a good indication
that Prolotherapy will be effective. In
general, this means that the radiculopathy is
intermittent in nature. Let’s be honest. A
bone spur directly pressing on the nerve or a
herniated disc depositing inflammatory contents all
over the nerve is going to cause constant severe
pain. It will not be positional. The pain is
typically excruciating and constant! When pain
comes and goes, this tells us that the pain is
positional. For instance the patient lies down and
the pain drastically lessens or lying on the side
reduces the pain. In such a case, typically
Prolotherapy will be a great treatment option and
the person should make a complete recovery. A normal
person with radiculopathy will require 3-6
Prolotherapy visits and will typically see complete
resolution of the issue.
5. Extremity pain and pain intensity.
If pain occurs primarily in the back or neck and not
in the leg or arm, then Prolotherapy is likely to be
successful at eliminating the pain. Structural
radiculopathy, however, results in much more severe
extremity pain, compared to the neck or back pain.
Let’s go over this again. If your pain is 80-90% in
the low back or neck and only 10-20% in the
extremity, then there is a great chance Prolotherapy
is going to get rid of your radicular symptoms.
Conversely if 80-90% of your symptoms stem from your
hand or foot, then surgery or some other therapy
besides Prolotherapy may be required.
A patient
with a pain level of 6 or under (on a scale of 0 to 10, with
10 being the worst pain ever experienced and 0 being no
pain), will most likely experience symptom relief with
Prolotherapy regardless of its origin. The pain of a nerve
irritation or pinch is excruciating - like a 100 on a scale
of 0 to 10. If your pain is almost exclusively in the
hand or foot and it is a 90 on a scale of 0 to 10, then by
all means go to the orthopedic surgeon and get it checked
out. If you are not a surgical candidate or desire a
second opinion, then see a Prolotherapy doctor.
Realize
most Prolotherapy physicians see plenty of true
radiculopathy cases resolve with Prolotherapy. Hopefully
these guidelines will help you make a better decision. |
Back Pain and Prolotherapy
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Spinal Cord Compression
Disc Problems
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Degenerative Disc Disease
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Complicated
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Back
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Scoliosis
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Sciatica
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Back Pain Videos
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Prolotherapy for mid-back
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Low back pain
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Lower back pain
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Back pain treatment
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Spondylosis, Spondylolisthesis
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Failed back surgery
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L4/L5 L5/S1 facet joints
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Cervical Spine Pain
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