Disclaimer/Privacy Policy
September 2, 2009 by admin
Filed under Privacy Policy
The information published on this blog has been gathered from sources we have deemed reliable. In spite of this, all information is subject to errors, omissions and changes. Information accuracy is not guaranteed. All information provided should be verified prior to execution. Any reproduction of this blog is strictly prohibited. The information found in this blog is not intended nor should be used as a substitute for professional medical advice. Consult your physician before considering any medical treatment method available.
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SIRA: Low Back Pain
This program presents Dr. John Chardos Department of Medicine (VA) on the cause, treatment and prevention of low back pain. Read more.
Dr Reza Ghorbani, treating chronic pain with spinal cord stimulator implants
Acupuncture Neck gua sha
Gua sha (scraping) move blood, reduce heat, boost body immunity, increase capillary circulation. for more info visit http://www.learnacupuncture.com/index…
Chronic Pain Management
December 13, 2008 by admin
Filed under Pain Medicine
From over-the-counter and prescription drugs to mind-body techniques to acupuncture, chronic pain can be treated in many ways. However, no single method can guarantee you total pain relief. Rather, a combination of options may help you get rid of the pain.
Mild pain may be relieved by over-the-counter medications like acetaminophen or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Although both relieve pain caused by muscle aches and stiffness, only NSAIDs can reduce inflammation. Lotions or creams can also be applied to the skin in order to relieve pain from sore muscles and arthritis.
If over-the-counter drugs fail to bring relief, your doctor may prescribe stronger medications like muscle relaxants, anti-anxiety drugs, antidepressants, prescription NSAIDs, or a short course of stronger painkillers or steroid injections.
Patient-controlled analgesia, in which the patient is able to self-administer a pre-measured dose of pain medicine, is another method often used in hospitals. In the nerve blocking method, a drug is injected around the appropriate nerve to prevent the pain message from reaching the brain. Trigger point injection is a method to treat painful areas of muscle that contain trigger points, or knots of muscle that form when muscles do not relax.
When standard medicines and physical therapy are unsuccessful, surgical implants may be required. In intrathecal drug delivery, the surgeon makes a pocket under the skin that can hold a medicine pump. A catheter, inserted by the surgeon, carries pain medicine from the pump to the intrathecal space around the spinal cord. In spinal cord stimulation, low-level electrical signals are transmitted to the spinal cord or to specific nerves, blocking the passage of pain signals. TENS (Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation) therapy uses electrical stimulation to reduce pain. Psychological treatment uses safe, non-drug methods that treat your pain directly by reducing high levels of physiological stress.
In recent times, mind-body therapies, acupuncture, and some nutritional supplements have become popular. Although no concrete evidence is available, other alternative therapies such as massage, chiropractic therapies, therapeutic touch, certain herbal therapies, and dietary approaches may diminish pain in some people.
Pain Management provides detailed information on Pain Management, Pain Management Clinics, Chronic Pain Management, Pain Management Doctors and more. Pain Management is affiliated with Back Pain Relief.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Max_Bellamy
http://EzineArticles.com/?Chronic-Pain-Management&id=253046
What Do You Know About Physical Therapy?
December 13, 2008 by admin
Filed under Physical Therapy
Physical therapy is now a booming business that has come a very long way in a very short period of time; in fact it’s one of the fastest growing industries in the world. New physical therapists are entering the field every single day to treat the ever growing pool of people requiring treatment for all different kinds of injuries and ailments.
Injuries are a fact of life, not just for professional athletes but for regular people too. An elderly person who slips in the shower and breaks a hip, or the dock worker that injures his back lifting heavy box after heavy box or the middle aged woman that gets banged up in a hit and run collision all require the services of a properly trained physical therapist.
Where are Physical Therapists Employed?
The answer to this question could go on and on – Professional, amateur and college sports teams often employ their own physical therapists. Hospitals, free clinics and nursing homes all may also one or more physical therapists on staff.
Specialists in sports therapy, specific types of injuries or bariatric care may operate their own office and see several patients from varying backgrounds a week.
There are a multitude of different specialties and paths that are available within the wide field of physical therapy, and that means that there is an ever widening array of physical therapy equipment and physical therapy supplies available, so that every general and every specialized physical therapist can have everything that he or she needs to be able to properly treat the injury of what ever patient happens to walk through the door next.
Tools of the Trade
Sports therapists use probably the widest variety of physical therapy supplies to deal with everything that they may encounter on a daily basis. A sports therapist needs to be prepared to handle everything from the minor aches and pains that their athletes incur on the field every single day, but they also need to be prepared to deal with the rehabilitation of serious injuries that require surgeries and sometimes months of treatments to heal.
A large sports therapy treatment center will often almost appear to be over run with equipment. There could be a fully stocked hydrotherapy section with standing and seated whirlpools; mobility stations complete with parallel bars, standers and stair training equipment; and most will also have a full array of massage therapy equipment with massage table and chairs as well as a variety of creams, oils and other massage therapy supplies. Many specialized physical therapists today are also certified in one or more types of massage therapy as well.
Depending on the particular area of specialty, a physical therapy clinic may even have a variety of x-ray and imaging equipment available as well as a full array of chiropractic supplies and massage therapy equipment so they can be as full service as possible to their potential clients.
Regardless of the avenue of specialty a physical therapist chooses, he or she will surely need a wide variety of equipment to be able to perform the job to the best of his or her abilities.
Getting the best result possible from a physical therapy session, whether it’s just to work on a strained muscle or rehabilitation from a major surgery, requires not only an adept therapist but also the best possible equipment for the method of treatment. That’s why there are so many options available and why new and better ones are being developed and implemented every day. Physical therapy is a very involved and precise trade, one where perfection is an absolute must in order for the correct outcome to be achieved – so for as long as the trade of physical therapy continues to be a booming one, most likely so will the development of new pieces of physical therapy equipment.
Physical therapy equipment provider offers physical therapy supplies including massage tables, medical equipment, and chiropractic equipment. When doing research for massage therapy tables, consider Source1 Medical.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Amy_Nutt
http://EzineArticles.com/?What-Do-You-Know-About-Physical-Therapy?&id=1708006


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