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Showing posts with label how to treat sciatica. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to treat sciatica. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Chiropractic care helps back-related leg pain.



Foundation for Chiropractic Progress
Back-Related Leg Pain / Sciatica



Back-related leg pain is often disabling and costly. In people with back-related leg pain, spinal manipulation therapy (SMT) plus home exercise and advice (HEA) provided more short-term improvement in pain and ability than HEA alone, according to a 2014 study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

The trial consisted of 192 adults with subacute or chronic back-related leg pain who were randomized into two groups. Over the course of twelve weeks, one group received SMT along with HEA and the other group received only HEA. During this time, patients worked with chiropractors, exercise therapists, and a personal trainer to receive efficient instruction and treatment to relieve back-related leg pain.

Chiropractic care including the use of spinal manipulation therapy in conjunction with home exercise and advice offers a safe and conservative approach to effectively reduce hindering and costly back-related leg pain.

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Chiropractic Treatment of Sciatica

Flexion-distraction therapy is a chiropractic technique that utilizes a multi-function table that enables the chiropractor to combine decompression with other gentle non-force spinal adjustment techniques. Flexion-distraction is well suited for patients who need a lighter touch, such as those recovering from spinal surgery, currently undergoing rehabilitation, or those with osteoporosis or of an advanced age.

Flexion-distraction therapy is well researched and has been proven effective for:
  • Reducing pressure on the spinal nerves from a disc bulge or herniation
  • Increasing spinal motion within the disc and spinal joints
  • Improving posture
  • A conservative option to surgery for herniated discs known as discectomy. In fact a 2010 randomized clinical study found that spinal manipulative therapy is just as effective for the treatment of most patients experiencing sciatica secondary to lumbar disc herniation, with 60 percent of sciatica patients able to avoid low back surgery by going to a chiropractor.







Saturday, January 10, 2015

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT SCIATICA


The term sciatica describes the symptoms of leg pain and possibly tingling, numbness or weakness that originates in the lower back and travels through the buttock and down the large sciatic nerve in the back of the leg.  Sciatica (pronounced sighatihkah) is not a medical diagnosis in and of itself it is a symptom of an underlying medical condition.

SCIATICA NERVE PAIN

Sciatica is often characterized by one or more of the following symptoms:
  • Constant pain in only one side of the buttock or leg (rarely can occur in both legs)
  • Pain that is worse when sitting
  • Burning or tingling down the leg (vs. a dull ache)
  • Weakness, numbness or difficulty moving the leg or foot
  • A sharp pain that may make it difficult to stand up or to walk
Sciatica nerve pain pattern of inflammation
Sciatica Nerve Inflammation Pattern

Sciatic pain can vary from infrequent and irritating to constant and incapacitating. Specific sciatica symptoms also vary widely in type, location and severity, depending upon the condition causing the sciatica.

While symptoms can be very painful, it is rare that permanent sciatic nerve damage (tissue damage) will result.

THE SCIATIC NERVE AND SCIATICA

The sciatic nerve is the largest single nerve in the body and is composed of individual nerve roots that start by branching out from the spine in the lower back and combine to form the "sciatic nerve." When it is irritated, sciatica symptoms occur.
  • The sciatic nerve starts in the lower back at lumbar segment 3 (L3).
  • At each level of the lower spine a nerve root exits from the inside of the spine and then comes together to make up the large sciatic nerve.
  • The sciatic nerve runs from the lower back, down the back of each leg
  • Portions of the sciatic nerve then branch out in each leg to innervate certain parts of the leg [e.g. the buttock, thigh, calf, foot, toes]
The sciatica symptoms (e.g., leg pain, numbness, tingling, weakness, possibly symptoms that radiate into the foot) are different depending on where the nerve is pinched. For example, a lumbar segment 5 (L5) nerve impingement can cause weakness in extension of the big toe and potentially in the ankle.

THE COURSE OF SCIATICA PAIN

The incidence of sciatica increases in middle age. Rarely occurring before age 20, the probability of experiencing sciatic pain peaks in the 50's and then declines.

Often, a particular event or injury does not cause sciatica, but rather it tends to develop over time. The vast majority of people who experience sciatica get better within a few weeks or months and find painrelief with non-surgical sciatica treatment. For others, however, sciatica pain from a pinched nerve can be severe and debilitating.

There are a few symptoms that may require immediate medical, and possibly surgical, intervention, such as progressive neurological symptoms (e.g. leg weakness) and/or bowel or bladder dysfunction (Cauda Equina Syndrome).

Because sciatica is caused by an underlying medical condition, treatment is focused on relieving the underlying causes of symptoms. Treatment is usually self-care and/or non-surgical, but for severe or intractable cases surgery may be an option.

MOST COMMON CAUSES OF SCIATICA

  • Lumbar herniated disc (also referred to as a slipped, ruptured, bulging, or protruding disc, or a pinched nerve) occurs when the soft inner core of the disc leaks out through the outer core and irritates the nerve root. Sciatica is the most common symptom of a lumbar herniated disc.

  • Degenerative disc disease is diagnosed when a weakened disc results in excessive micro-motion at that spinal level, and inflammatory proteins from inside the disc become exposed and irritate the area (including the nerve roots).

  • Isthmic spondylolisthesis. This condition occurs when a small stress fracture allows one vertebral body to slip forward on another (e.g. the L5 vertebra slips over the S1 vertebra). The combination of disc space collapse, the fracture, and the vertebral body slipping forward, can cause the nerve to get pinched and cause sciatica.

  • Lumbar spinal stenosis is related to natural aging in the spine and is relatively common in adults over age 60. The condition typically results from a combination of one or more of the following: enlarged facet joints, overgrowth of soft tissue, and a bulging disc placing pressure on the nerve roots, causing sciatica pain.

  • Piriformis syndrome. The sciatic nerve can get irritated as it runs under the piriformis muscle in the buttock. If the piriformis muscle irritates or pinches a nerve root that comprises the sciatic nerve, it can cause sciatica- type pain.

  • Sacroiliac joint dysfunction. Irritation of the sacroiliac joint - located at the bottom of the spine - can also irritate the L5 nerve, which lies on top of the sacroiliac joint, causing sciatica- type pain.