Scoliosis and Chronic back pain
I am a 59 year old female. I have scoliosis which is causing a great deal of pain. I don't want to go on narcotics if I don't have to. What do others do with this problem?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Spine Health Support Group.
Also look into a spinal cord stimulator implant. I'm not a candidate because my spine is too curved to put in leads.
The best way is to take a few lessons of zhi neng qi gong first. Then you can practice at home, using an instruction video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rny4oO39mmQ
can you tell me where they do this procedure? Is it for loosing up the muscles?
My spine is very curved too. Cobb angle now 56 degrees...
Thanks. I was thinking about looking into Tai Chi along with my stretching class
Your pain management doctor can do the trial test. Then if it works a neuro surgeon would do the permanent transplant
And maybe you're a candidate. My curve is 78 degrees
Lyme's disease? Relationship to scoliosis? I have been diagnosed twice, and caught it early on with the bullseye rash -- that disappears in 48 hours, so a nice payback use of my cell phone when I spotted the rash over a weekend. Please respond about relationship, anyone?
Hi -- my local public pool has a pool with a ramp inside the pool that provides wheelchair accessibility -- and a fun place for families with babies and toddlers to play before/during/after swim lessons. A free membership is offered to anyone who volunteers 4 hours a month to support the front desk.
But if you can find a doctor of osteopathy (DO) -- a DO has a medical degree, and in several states are eligible to sit for the medical exams. Fees for both may be covered by your insurance, and the co-pay may be similar, but the medical knowledge underlying the treatment is far different when being treated by a DO than a chiropractor. I live in a state that permits DOs to become licensed MDs and for muscular-skeletal issues, if I can find an M.D., D.O. -- that is my first choice. My father, a physiologist, was skeptical until he taught Physiology in a School of Osteopathy in Des Moines, Iowa. After meeting and teaching the students, he well understood the difference between a chiropractor and a DO, and became a proponent of manipulation as a therapy. The difference between a chiropractor and a DO, is like the difference between an optometrist and an ophthalmologist, note that I say like -- not the same as. One is a doctor, the other is a medical technical specialist. Provided of course, that the DO has passed your state's medical boards.
The mother of an adult who had the metal implants at age 16 in the mid 1980's was held to a pregnancy weight gain of 15 pounds, perhaps give her petite frame. Her child and husband are over 6 '; did her fetus lack sufficient nutrients because of her restricted caloric intake? She did not lose her teeth, however, so her nutrition may have been adequate for bone growth, and the scoliosis a genetic trait that was inevitable.