Back Pain Treatment
Back pain Treatment is a huge and profitable industry within the healthcare system. Back pain is an epidemic condition which affects the lives of countless souls. Treatment for chronic back pain demonstrates some of the worst curative results in modern medicine and is also perhaps the most unenlightened and misguided of all healthcare specialties.
Back pain is traditionally treated by orthopedists and chiropractors, although many other care providers have gotten in on the action, as well. Rheumatologists, neurologists, orthopedic surgeons, neurosurgeons, massage therapists, physical therapists, reiki practitioners, Bowen therapists, Alexander therapy practitioners, herbalists, doctors of traditional Chinese medicine, osteopaths, physiatrists, acupuncturists, pain specialists, fitness trainers, psychologists, psychiatrists, nutritionists, alternative medicine providers, yoga instructors and orthotic makers are among many of the specialists who have profited greatly from the dorsopathic suffering of others.
There is certainly nothing wrong with wanting to help a person cure their pain and there is also nothing wrong with profiting from your good work. However, the back pain industry is paid far too well for a healthcare specialty which seems to rarely score a bullseye when it comes to accurate diagnosis and successful treatment. In fact, most care providers are lucky to even hit the target at all, since many therapy options are ill conceived, poorly executed and not even indicated for the diagnosis, given of course that the diagnosis is correct to begin with…
Statistics for back pain treatment are alarming. Chronic symptoms are reported in back pain patients more than any other type of health complaint. Up to 85% of adults will have moderate to severe back pain at some point in their lives. Back pain is the second most common reason for a person to visit a doctor or emergency room. Back pain is also the primary excuse given for worker absenteeism. Back pain sufferers, whose symptoms do not resolve within 6 months of treatment, have a better chance of agonizing for the rest of their lives, than they have of ever finding a permanent cure. These stats are simply unacceptable, considering the vast amount of care providers and resources available to back pain patients. So what is wrong with the system and more importantly, how can it be fixed?
Back pain is typically viewed as being sourced from a defect, deficiency or injury to the spine or one of its supportive tissues. This is typically called structural or mechanical pain, meaning there is a physical reason for the symptoms relating to an anatomical condition. The Cartesian philosophy embraced by most modern medical providers is the single more damaging influence on back pain treatment statistics. It has been well established by an ever growing number of respected medical research projects, clinical studies and therapy programs, that back pain, or any chronic pain, is far more often the direct result of the complex interactions between the emotional mind and the body. Being that most back pain care givers do not address this basic fact explains why so many treatment options fail miserably. After all, these treatments are trying to cure a physical structural condition, while all along, the pain is either completely psychogenic or psychosomatically worsened or perpetuated.
In order to fix this great injustice and end the seemingly endless suffering of back pain patients the world over, a paradigm shift in care must occur. Doctors must stop blaming purely coincidental and generally asymptomatic structural concerns and start acknowledging the common link between ongoing pain and the emotional mind. In essence, doctors must stop treating the human body like it was some sort of complicated machine and start treating human beings for what they truly are…People who live with the constant and ever-present interactions between body and mind, creating all conditions of health and disease.
Sensei Adam Rostocki
http://www.articlesbase.com/diseases-and-conditions-articles/back-pain-treatment-722398.html



what and where is the best nerve pinching (low back pain) treatment available?i have chronic pain since 5 yrs.on doing physio it goes off temporarily,in mri report :nerve is pinching on L5-S1 vertebrae on left side, osteophytes are also visible.pls advise me the best guaranteed permanent treatment for the same.
Going through the treatment now. The nerve could be pinched because of deterioration of the disc. If you consider a chiropractor, he /she might be able to realign the spine in order to relieve the pinching of the nerve. It beats the option of surgery. Use ice packs and occasionally heat. Heat will relax the muscles and allow more freedom of movement. Ice will aid in relieving any inflammation. Good LuckReferences :
http://buycarisoprodolonline.com/
.Carisoprodol (soma) is the BEST Medication you should use. Buy Carisoprodol online to aide as an muscle relaxant and to be used to relieve the pain and stiffness of muscle spasms and discomfort due to strain and sprain.References :
The actual term used for nerve pinching is Spinal Stenosis. I had the same problem in my L4-L5 since Dec 2005 and the pain became unbearable by Sept 2005.
I showed to many specialists in India and the final outcome was that I needed a full operation. Laser operation or laproscopic operation was not possible in my case because of the position of nerves.
So I underwent an operation on 12th october 2006 and now I am fully ok with no pain. I am highly diabetic and so it took more tiime for me to recover. A device called DIAM ( 'spacer' is the colocal term) was also fixed to keep the proper space in the spinal area which should be 2 mm to 5 mm.
I have lot of literature with me on Spinal Stenosis and DIAM which I can send if you so desire. Please feel free to contact me.
India, is the best country today for a cheap and full proof operation. It will cost you about US $ 6000 for the operation including the cost of one DIAM. Cost of travel to India would be extra. Apollo Hospital in New Delhi is recognised in USA also.References :