Is acupuncture successful in pain relief from lumbar spinal stenosis
I am presently trying a corrective therapy device which involves electrical stimulation but after only 5 weeks nothing has improved. I thought maybe I should try acupuncture instead. I am having great pain when walking.
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I have severe spinal stenosis and cannot do surgery so the best thing I can do for it is stretching that lumbar out by bringing my knees up to my chest . That will work for a while I haven’t tried acupuncture but I think I might try it. Someone told me Medicare will pay now but I haven’t checked about that part I will be interesting in knowing if it helps you
@jfsherley Medicare advantage plans probably pay, but Original Medicare does not. I have supplemental insurance, that will pay if Medicare denies claims. I’m working through this right now. Crossing my fingers or all goes well for that submittal.
The best of luck to you. I’m thinking if stretching works , the acupuncture would help loosening muscles and that area. I had muscle spasms - we think from breast surgery - and I no longer have spasms. 💪🏼
Well Delia I'm glad you found something that works for you. I am a little surprised that icing would not help a bulging disc shrink, and also surprised the disc hasn't retracted.
My understanding is that heat, while providing almost instant relief, draws blood to the area where it is applied (on any part of the body). This is an inflammatory reaction, and once the heat is removed, the pain comes back, sometimes worse than before due to inflammation.
There is no "one size fits all" for back pain. Way too complex. And as for that surgeon and his attitude, the hell with him. You deserve better!
Surgery can remove arthritic growth inside vertebra and this can give the nerve bundles more room. Surgery is never without its risks. Stenosis is a narrowing of the spinal canal, usually caused by bone growth inside the canal (arthritis).
Gracias for responding, Joe...
My pain management doctor (who has been handling my back and hip pain, as well as the CRPS in left foot), supports using the pad for alleviating my at-times seriously intense pain. No, heat does not provide instant relief, it does take time, and whether applied to my back or my foot/ankle, will take a minimum of about an hour (for ankle) and up to a few hours for the lumbar area. But how sweet it is when I can finally move without intense pain! Residual low pain yes, but no high-scoring pain. And no, I do not experience worsened pain after heat is removed, nor does it come back with vengeance. When it does, it is not biting into my back, thank God!
My pain management doctor provided relief this past Friday, because the hip pain did not allow me to ambulate. Dang those needles hurt! But what blessed relief! I was actually smiling yesterday, and able to make rolls to go with the homemade pasta sauce (with ground chicken meatballs). Today, Monday, I am still happy to have been released from the pain in lumbar area. The hip joint still hurts a bit (P.Scale 5 to 6) but there's osteoarthritis at play also. And I can walk, and ambulate the stairs.
Will be seeking help from spine specialist (which my pain doctor supports, seeing how complicated the issues are in my lower spine).
@heyjoe415 I just wanted to chime in here. Spinal discs in adults do not have a blood supply so probably don't respond like other body parts to heat or cold. That is why damage to them becomes a problem and over time. The moisture in the discs dries out as we age and discs naturally shrink a bit. If they are herniated and the inner jelly like nucleus is spilled out, the disc will loose some height because of that. I had that situation and my disc lost half it's height before my cervical fusion spine surgery. While the spine is forming and growing, there is a blood supply, but it disappears during normal development. Discs are also under a lot of pressure bearing 80% of body weight on the discs in the spine while the other 20% is on the facet joints of the spine. I have heard of bulging discs that can stop bulging, and I've had that with one of mine as a result of physical therapy and seen that on my MRIs of the thoracic spine.
Jennifer
Thank you so much for the great info!
Question: Do you mean that PT contributed to one of your discs stop bulging? As in "get back into place"? Was PT on that area painful?
I am opposed to having anyone touch/manipulate my spine, especially a chiropractor. About 35 years ago, a chiropractic adjustment resulted in my leaving with pain, which continued for several days. I crossed off chiropractic care altogether. And I did not have bulging discs at that time, so with the present spinal condition the thought of anyone touching those areas is not at all appealing.
I have been told that original Medicare may pay for acupuncture.
@bayhorse I filed acupuncture invoices to Original Medicare in December. The claims were denied. 🤷♀️
After sitting for five hours reminiscing with old school friends, my sciatica acted up!!
For the first time, I tried acupuncture and it absolutely worked. I did go 2-3 times a week for a few weeks.
Medicare does not pay.