Chiropractic Care: A Natural Cure for Chronic Pain
By, Tracey Roizman, DC,
DACBN
The experience of pain is alarming,
stressful and usually signals some sort of health crisis. Pain that
persists beyond six months is known as chronic pain. Often there are
reasons why pain persists, such as degeneration at the joints, but
oftentimes the scenario of chronic pain is such that the original injury
may have occurred years before, damaged tissues have long since healed but
symptoms continue. Several progressively stronger courses of therapy may
have been used including surgery, steroids and drug injections into the
spine, all with limited or no results. Chronic pain effects 15-33% of the
population and is estimated to cost $70 billion per year, making it more
costly than cancer and heart disease combined.
The Benefits of Chiropractic Care
In the realm of pain therapies chiropractic
care offers a particularly effective approach for pain relief in all
phases of healing, including chronic conditions of longstanding duration.
Chiropractic has historically utilized all available means to promote
healing in ways that agree with the body’s inherent healing mechanisms.
Spinal adjustments in conjunction with nutritional therapies, physical
therapy modalities and targeted exercises to strengthen and stretch
weakened or damaged tissues are some of the aspects of a wholistically
oriented chiropractic program. Additionally a variety of gentle
specialized techniques are available as part of the chiropractic method.
These techniques are designed to evaluate and treat injuries in unique
ways that are derived from experience in approaching health from a
wholistic perspective and are aimed at promoting the body’s inherent
healing mechanisms.
There are a number of factors responsible
for perpetuating pain. Each one needs to be addressed in order for pain to
be eliminated or managed satisfactorily. The solution for chronic pain
seems to be that no single solution exists and that a multimodal approach
is most effective in most cases.
Overactive Nervous System
Occasionally chronic pain can result from a
self perpetuating feedback cycle whereby oversensitization and
overactivation of pain pathways sets in, creating a pattern that is
difficult to break. To prevent this from happening, attention to injuries
at their early stages is key. In the initial 1-2 weeks following an injury
it is imperative to give appropriate rest to damaged tissues while doing
as much as possible to reduce and control inflammation and thereby break
the cycle before it gets established.
Structural Imbalances
In spite of proper care during the initial
phase of recovering from an injury if pain persists into the next phase,
known as the rehabilitative phase, then other factors must be considered.
Mechanical stress and nutritional inadequacies are at the top of this
list. Structures that were severely injured may not heal back to their pre
injury status. Fractured or degenerated vertebrae develop shapes and
positions that reflect their history. The muscles and ligaments around
these bones must accommodate their altered states. Stress tension and pain
result. Reinjury can occur when we try to go about our daily activities
before injuries are fully healed. Bones tendons and ligaments take a
considerable time to heal and it is often inconvenient and impractical to
alter one’s activities sufficiently to allow full healing. The spine,
arms and legs are unstable in the vulnerable early stages of
rehabilitation. Even normal tasks such as sitting at a desk or driving can
be treacherous. Careful monitoring at these stages helps to keep
structures aligned and stress free.
Nutritional Needs
Nutritional deficiencies are an important
and too often overlooked component of chronic pain. Healing is slowed when
the body lacks the essential elements that form the building blocks for
regeneration of cells and tissues. Simply put, you can’t expect good
quality products from substandard building materials. Nutritional
requirements increase when healing is happening so it stands to reason
that strategically supplementing those substances that will become
depleted is a good idea. Studies have shown that chronic pain sufferers
have substantially higher rates of vitamin and mineral deficiencies than
the general population. This raises the usually unanswerable question of
whether these deficiencies were present before pain became chronic,
thereby acting as a contributing cause of the chronic condition or if the
increased demands of the body during healing led to the depletion. In
either case, regaining nutrient status is imperative in order for healing
to proceed.
Sleep Disturbance
Sleep disturbance is also part of the
chronic pain picture. Sleep is when our bodies do the majority of their
internal housekeeping; replacing old worn out cells with new healthy ones
and eliminating toxins. Loss of sleep slows healing time and increases
symptoms considerably. Restoring healthy sleep patterns becomes a high
priority for people with chronic pain. Accomplishing this without
resorting to strong medications and their associated risks, or decreasing
reliance on medications already in use requires a carefully coordinated
program of gradually strengthening the body toward self reliance. A
wholistic chiropractic treatment approach accomplishes this goal by
addressing all aspects of the healing process.
Emotional Stress
Finally, there is the mental and emotional
stress that goes along with chronic pain. A host of emotional anxieties
ranging from social pressure that says we should carry on in spite of pain
to fear of being discredited to fear and denial of being given a
frightening diagnosis are all present to varying degrees in chronic pain
situations. These anxious thoughts prevent us from taking action while at
the same time creating more physical tension, adding insult to injury. It
is important to acknowledge these stresses and take steps to resolve them.
If you suffer from chronic pain or are
close to someone who does it is important explore all avenues of help. It
is particularly beneficial to have a team of experts that you consult with
concurrently from a variety of fields. In this way you will be ensured of
the best possible and most comprehensive treatment for all aspects of your
particular condition.
Tracey Roizman,
DC, DACBN offers traditional chiropractic structural corrections and
functional neurology techniques along with kinesiology testing and
nutritional therapies. Contact Dr. Roizman for chiropractic treatments and
health consultations at 828 225-5575. www.DrRoizman.com
or email: traceyroizmandc@gmail.com
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