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Category: Chiropractic

CONDITIONS THAT MAY BE TREATABLE BY ACUPUNCTURE ACCORDING TO W.H.O.

The World Health Organization (WHO) published an official report on four categories of symptoms, conditions and diseases that have been shown to benefit from Acupuncture. In a recent Health Report, we presented WHO’s Category #1 list – diseases, symptoms or conditions for which Acupuncture has been shown, through controlled trials, to be effective – as a guide for patients seeking treatment, and to help patients and healthcare providers seek insurance coverage by showing WHO’s official recognition of Acupuncture benefits.

The WHO report also contained three additional categories of conditions for which recognized controlled trials had not been done, but for which Acupuncture nevertheless has been shown to be helpful.

The Category #2 list includes diseases, symptoms or conditions for which the therapeutic effect of Acupuncture has been demonstrated but for which further proof is needed.

Here is the list:

Abdominal pain Acne vulgaris Alcohol dependence
Bell’s palsy Bronchial asthma Cancer pain
Cardiac neurosis Chronic cholecystitis Cholelithiasis
Competition stress syndrome Craniocerebral injury, closed Diabetes mellitus (non-insulin)
Earache Epidemic haemorrhagic fever Epistaxis, simple
Eye pain due to injection Female infertility Facial spasm
Female urethral syndrome Fibromyalgia and fasciitis Gastrokinetic disturbance
Gouty arthritis Hepatitis B virus carrier status Herpes zoster (human)
Hyperlipaemia Hypo-ovarianism Insomnia
Labor pain Lactation, deficiency Male sexual dysfunction
Ménière disease Neuralgia, post-herpetic Neurodermatitis
Obesity Opiate/opioid dependence Osteoarthritis
Endoscopic exam pain Thromboangiitis pain Polycystic ovary syndrome
Postextubation in children Postoperative convalescence Premenstrual syndrome
Prostatitis, chronic Pruritus Radicular/pseudorad pain
Raynaud syndrome, primary Recurrent urinary infection Reflex sympathetic dystrophy
Retention of urine, traumatic Schizophrenia Sialism, drug-induced
Sjögren syndrome Sore throat (and tonsillitis) Acute spine pain
Stiff neck Temporomandibular pain Tietze syndrome
Tobacco dependence Tourette syndrome Ulcerative colitis, chronic
Urolithiasis Vascular dementia Whooping cough (pertussis)

If you or someone you know is having trouble with any of the above conditions, check with your acupuncturist to see if they can help.

 

CHIROPRACTIC CARE FOR LOW BACK PAIN CAN SAVE INSURANCE COMPANIES 40 PERCENT

A study of 85,000 Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS) patients in Tennessee has found that a course of treatment for low back pain initiated with a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) cost the insurer 40 percent less than a course of treatment by a medical doctor (MD).

The American Chiropractic Association (ACA) study concluded that insurance companies that restrict access to Chiropractic care for low back pain are paying out many millions of dollars more than they would if the restrictions were removed.

The Tennessee study population of Blue Cross Blue Shield patients had full and open access to MDs and DCs with no limits to the number of visits, and no differences in co-pays. After risk-adjusting patient costs, BCBS payments were still significantly lower for the chiropractic group than for MDs. If all patients had chosen DCs instead of MDs, says the study, the insurance company could have saved $2.3 million a year.

National surveys show that up to 85 percent of Americans have low back pain at some time in their lives, seriously impacting employee productivity and adding $50 billion a year to health care costs, placing low back pain in the top ten most costly conditions.

The ACA study, “Cost of Care for Common Back Pain Conditions Initiated With Chiropractic Doctor vs. Medical Doctor/Doctor of Osteopathy as First Physician: Experience of One Tennessee-Based General Health Insurer,” is available online, and will be published in the December 2010 issue of the Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics.

“As Doctors of Chiropractic, we know firsthand that our care often helps patients avoid or reduce more costly interventions such as drugs and surgery. This study supports what we see in our practices every day,” said ACA President Rick McMichael, DC. “It also demonstrates the value of Chiropractic care at a critical time, when our nation is attempting to reform its health care system and contain runaway costs.”

The usual cause of non-chronic lower back pain are strains or injuries to the muscles and ligaments of the lumbosacral region of the spine, either caused by, or leading to, misalignment of the vertebrae and possible injury to the intervertebral discs.

An important factor not mentioned in the study are the results of treatment by Chiropractic, which addresses the clinical source of the pain, compared to medical doctors who routinely prescribe nothing more than pain pills. Treated only with pills, lower back injuries can progress to serious, chronic conditions which plague people for the rest of their lives.

Chiropractic care, on the other hand, zeros in on the sources of the problem and corrects them, heading off the tendency toward chronic pain and reduced quality of life.

CHIROPRACTIC COMPARED TO PHYSICAL THERAPY

Three independent studies were conducted to analyze different modes of Chiropractic treatment with physical therapy treatment.

The first study showed that after four weeks of Chiropractic treatment, walking asymmetries were corrected to the same degree as the reference population. Physical therapy patients did not show improvement at any time during the study.

Study two found that wearing a back belt did restrict motion, but it also causes larger forces of impact when subjects were walking.

The third study measured the forces exerted by chiropractors during Chiropractic adjustments. The force applied to the patient before the actual thrust was positively correlated to the amount of force during the adjustment.

Additional studies are underway to measure the force exerted during Chiropractic adjustments under a variety of conditions and for a variety of patient-chiropractor combinations.

Call Remmel Wellness Center today

Chiropractic Services

The Remmel Wellness Center helps patients maintain their body structurally and physically to alleviate pain and improve quality of life through chiropractic services. Chiropractic as a profession has only been around for about 120 years, although manipulation has been around for centuries. The art, science and philosophy of chiropractic believes many conditions, both musculoskeletal and visceral, relate to nervous interference which may relate to a minor misalignments or subluxations of one or more of the spinal bones (vertebrae). Chiropractic manipulation is a leader of the CAM (complimentary and medicine) therapies offered. The following are several of the techniques offered at Remmel Wellness Center.

Adding Chiropractic to Orthopedic Care Greatly Improves Aching Low Backs

A highly unique, cooperative study between the orthopedic department of a hospital and Chiropractic presents very positive results for patients enduring the onset (start) of sudden and painful lower back pain. The findings show that adding Chiropractic to traditional medical treatment made a world of difference in terms of patient recovery and their being able to resume the activities of their regular daily lifestyles.

The study was initiated by the hospital with full support of the staff. It was conducted at the Department of Orthopedics, Central Hospital of Sogn and Fjordane in Førde, Norway. According to researchers, it was the first report of a chiropractor participating with an Orthopedic Department in Norway with such hospital and staff support.

A total of 44 patients who consecutively reported to the hospital with sudden and painful low back conditions were included in this lengthy study. Orthopedic surgeons examined each person eliminating disease as a possible cause. None had violent trauma in their past. X-rays and magnetic resonance imaging showed all to be normal from a medical standpoint.

The follow-up examination by the Doctor of Chiropractic indicated the patients had subluxations (partial dislocation) in their lumbar region (the area of the back and sides below the ribs and above the hipbone). The Chiropractor treated 33 patients at his clinic, and 11 other patients who could not be transported received their adjustments at the hospital.

Patient follow-up lasted for an average of 2 years. During that time, all but 2 were able to return to work. Sick leave was reduced by two thirds compared with conventional medical treatment. The normal loss of time from work for these patients under medical care is 72 days. The patients in this study were able to return to work in an average of just 21.1 days.

The results bode well for both patient recovery and for the future of Chiropractic in the Norwegian hospital system. The researchers concluded, “Based on our experience, we believe that the inclusion of chiropractors within hospital orthopedic departments is feasible and provides a patient care resource that may benefit not only the patients but also the department as a whole.”

At Remmel Wellness Center, we have the best of both worlds.  Dr. Kyle Remmel is a Chiropractic Physician who focuses on Orthopedics and orthopedic health.  Getting the most important part of your body, your spine, fine tuned is the most proactive medicine you can practice.  Come by and talk with “Doc”.

Use of Alternative Medicine and Chiropractic Treatment Rising

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Use of Alternative Medicine, Chiropractic Rising in Both the United States and Canada

Two recent surveys point to widespread and growing use of alternative forms of medical treatment in both the United States and in Canada. In the US, more that 37% of households regularly turn to alterative treatments over those provided only by a medical doctor and drugs. In Canada, the figure is over 50%.

The US survey involved 23,000 adults and was conducted by Thompson Medstat in 2006. Findings included 37% of US households seeking out alternative treatments, including Chiropractic, for everything from headaches to control of diabetes. Herbal supplements, Chiropractic and massage were the highest ranked items used among respondents.

“Alternative medicine use has become so widespread that it is now critical for traditional Western physicians to factor a whole new set of potential interactions into treatment decisions,” said Dr. David Schutt, associate medical director at Thompson Medstat. “Knowing the statistics behind alternative medicine use is a good start, but further study of this area is necessary.”

To the North, over one half of all Canadians are using some form of alternative medicine according to a survey conducted in 2006 by The Fraser Institute which has, just now been released. Interestingly, in the last 6 months of the survey over 3.6 million Canadians visited a chiropractor. That converts to 13% of all Canadians!

“This increased use of alternative therapies is another indicator of Canadians’ desire to have more choice and control over their healthcare options,” said Nadeem Esmail, the director of Health System Performance at The Frasier Institute and the author of the report.

A note of interest pointed out in the findings was that most alternative treatment options are not covered by the government health insurance plans in Canada. “When it comes to health and well-being, a significant number of Canadians are willing to spend their own money,” said Dr. Esmail.

CHIROPRACTIC CARE ENHANCES TREATMENT AT MAJOR CANCER CARE HOSPITAL

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CHIROPRACTIC CARE ENHANCES TREATMENT AT MAJOR CANCER CARE HOSPITAL

Volume 14 Issue 111

Chiropractic care has become a valued asset for patients at Cancer Treatment Centers of America (CTCA).

The hospital’s whole-patient approach to cancer treatment involves integrated medical teams that include not only the usual medical oncologists, surgeons and oncology radiologists, but also naturopaths, acupuncturists, nutritionists and chiropractors.

The holistic approach is intended to help cancer patients achieve the most benefit from their cancer treatments, while reducing any negative effects. And Chiropractic is playing an important role in that approach.

Chiropractic is used to treat pre-existing musculoskeletal problems that are adding to a patient’s stress. But Chiropractic is also a valuable adjunctive therapy frequently called on to relieve the pain and discomfort associated with cancer and with the cancer treatments themselves.

In a recent article in Dynamic Chiropractic magazine, Dr. Jeff Sklar, DC, discusses the exciting and incredibly gratifying experience of working with cancer patients alongside a full gamut of integrated care practitioners at CTCA’s Eastern Regional Medical Center in Philadelphia.

The Palmer College graduate recently accepted a position with the hospital, and now is Director of Chiropractic Services at the facility.

Dr. Sklar explained that there are a number of side effects to cancer treatments. Chemotherapy, radiation, and the stress and worry of being a cancer patient, each present a list of side effects for which Chiropractic can be extremely helpful.

For example, chemotherapy can lead to what is called “chemo-induced neuropathy”, which can be a tingling or numbness and other sensory nerve sensations. Gait imbalance and muscular weakness are also side effects of chemo treatments that can be treated with Chiropractic.

Radiation treatments can lead to tissue fibrosis, the formation of scar-like structures that cause tissues to harden and reduce fluid flow. Chiropractic is called upon to help alleviate the effects of fibrosis.

“The stress and anxiety that goes along with a diagnosis of cancer and its treatment,” Dr. Sklar said, “can create severe musculoskeletal tension and pain. Many patients have a combination of all the above and are very grateful that CTCA makes Chiropractic services available,” he added.

Having a team of naturopaths and acupuncturists to consult about different cases enhances the level and quality of care and treatment that patients receive, the doctor said. The different departments do the best they can to communicate with each other and to the patient so the patient will receive everything they can to improve their current situation. Whether it be a different supplement, an herb, Acupuncture or a Chiropractic adjustment, patients have an opportunity to receive any and all services that are indicated for their condition.

Those of us who look favorably on alternative and holistic treatment modalities can only hope that the example provided at CTCA will be followed by healthcare centers everywhere.

SOURCE: Dynamic Chiropractic, Vol. 28, No. 21, Oct. 2010,

Automobile Safety for Children

Kindersitz BxHxT 47x61x52cm / Child Car Seat
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Over the years we have treated thousand of people who have been injured in automobile accidents, and some of those people have been children.  As adults, we all know to wear our seat belt and to not deactivate our airbags, but the rules to keeping kids safe in the a little more complicated.

In order to help you keep your kids safe in the car – and we all know how bad people drive around here – we are sharing some advice from the CDC:

Reduce Their Risk

In 2008, about 4 children ages 14 or younger were killed in motor vehicle crashes every day, and many more were injured. But parents and caregivers can make a lifesaving difference.

Whenever you’re on the road, make sure your child passengers are buckled into appropriate safety seats. The safest place for children of any age to ride is properly restrained in the back seat. Data show that:

•In 2008, restraint use saved the lives of 244 children ages 4 and younger. Child safety seats reduce the risk of death in car crashes by 71% for infants and 54% for toddlers ages one to four.

•For children ages 4 to 7, booster seats reduce injury risk by 59% compared to safety belts alone.
Children ages 12 and younger should always be buckled up and seated in the rear seat of vehicles. Infants in rear-facing car seats should never ride in the front seat of vehicles with airbags.

Know the Stages

Follow these guidelines for child passenger safety:
•UNTIL AGE 1/20 LBS – For the best possible protection keep infants in the back seat, in rear-facing child safety seats, as long as possible up to the height or weight limit of their particular seat. At a minimum, keep infants rear-facing until at least age 1 year and at least 20 pounds.

•UNTIL AGE 4/40 LBS – When children outgrow their rear-facing seats (at least age 1 year and at least 20 pounds) they should ride in forward-facing child safety seats, in the back seat, until they reach the upper weight or height limit of the particular seat (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds).

•UNTIL AGE 8 OR 4’9″ TALL – Once children outgrow their forward-facing seats (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds), they should ride in booster seats, in the back seat, until the vehicle seat belts fit properly. Seat belts fit properly when the lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest (usually at age 8 or when the children are 4’9″ tall).

•AFTER AGE 8 OR 4’9″ TALL – When children outgrow their booster seats (usually at age 8 or when they are 4’9″ tall), they can use the adult seat belts in the back seat, if they fit properly (lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest).

Remember: All children younger than 13 years should ride in the back seat. Never place a child in the front seat facing an airbag

Hopefully this information will help to keep you and your children safe.  If, however, you do get in an automobile accident, please seek the care of a caring and competent doctor.  If you don’t live or work near Remmel Wellness Center, we will be more than happy to refer you to a great doctor in your area.  Don’t call a referral hotline – they are in it for the money, not for the patient care.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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The Cost of Car Accidents

Drivers around here really suck.  Maybe you don’t like my language, but you still probably agree with me.  And I’m going to give you my two cents worth as to why I think that is.  #1 – distractions; #2 – lack of personal responsibility; #3 – lack of capability. 

#1 Distractions:  Distractions are the obvious culprit for why there are so many bad drivers on the road today.  People are more focused on their phoone or text conversations or email communications on their cell phones/smart phones.  More and more business people have computers in their cars, which provide an oh-so-tempting distraction while driving.  And don’t forget the DVD players installed in cars, SUVs and minivans of all the moms and dads out there.  Sure, it keeps the kids from being a distraction, but can’t you see how the movie could be a distraction?

#2 Lack of Personal Responsibility:  Let’s face it – people don’t accept responsibility for their actions anymore.  It is always someone else’s fault.  Spill a cup of hot coffee in your lap?  Surely you didn’t fumble the cup and place it on precariously on your lap – so it must be McDonald’s fault.  Same thing on the road.  That is why you see drivers rolling through stop signs and running red lights, weaving in and out of traffic, speeding through town and school zones.  Because if something bad happens, of course it won’t be your fault.  Blame it on the person who was driving too slow in front of you.  Blame it on the person with the right-of-way who didn’t see you coming or didn’t get out of your way fast enough.  Blame it on the kid who was talking to friends while getting of the bus – he should have been paying attention! 

#3 – Lack of Capability: This really covers a lot of different situtations.  The drivers who are impared from alcholol, illegal drug use, or legal prescription use.  It also incorporates young drivers who haven’t developed the reflexes and skills that come with experience behind the wheel.  And finally, it includes our aging population who maybe shouldn’t be driving anymore, but are reluctant to give up the freedom that it represents.

So what are the costs associated with lousy drivers (regardless of the reason)?  In a one-year period, the cost of medical care and productivity losses associated with injuries from motor vehicle crashes exceeded $99 billion – with the cost of direct medical care accounting for $17 billion, according to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The total annual cost amounts to nearly $500 for each licensed driver in the United States, said the study in the journal Traffic Injury Prevention. See the CDC press release.

The one-year costs of fatal and non-fatal crash-related injuries totaled $70 billion (71 percent of total costs) for people riding in motor vehicles, such as cars and light trucks, $12 billion for motorcyclists, $10 billion for pedestrians, and $5 billion for bicyclists, the study said.

So the message here is that getting in an accident ain’t cheap.  Slow down, take your time, put away the cell phone, turn off all electronic devices when you are driving and be present and aware.  If you are taking medications that can impair your ability to drive a car, stay home or get a ride.   Don’t even think about driving if you are drinking or doing drugs – you might get what you deserve, but the innocent victim of your irresponsibility doesn’t.  If you are young use common sense, practice in less trafficed areas when possible, and follow all of the advice above.  And if you are elderly, talk to your family about whether you should consider retiring your driver’s license.  These steps won’t just keep you safe, it will keep your passengers and the other travelers on the road safe as well.

And, if you do get in a car accident, be sure to seek quality, competent medical care from a reputable doctor.  Dr. Remmel has been treating patients who have been injuried in automobile accidents for over 30 years.  If you can’t see him, see someone that is recommended by someone you know and trust.  Don’t call a “doctor and attorney referral service.”  They aren’t about getting you better, they are about making money off of you.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Dangerous Prescription Drugs

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I don’t think this is shocking news … we’ve been hearing about it for a couple of years now. However, it is important to keep reminding ourselves and others that deaths caused by prescription drug are real, and deaths from prescription drug abuse are quickly rising in Florida.

A new report from the state’s medical examiners showed deaths from the painkiller oxycodone jumped 26 percent in 2009 from the previous year.  26% – that is HUGE.

The new report showed Prescription drugs continued to claim more victims than illegal drugs, accounting for almost 2,500 fatalities. Drug control officials said the most of those were accidental overdoses.

But pain pills aren’t the only prescription drugs that are dangerous.  Some people argue that the tough FDA standards are one reason why prescription drugs are so expensive.  Others argue that the FDA is too lax and approves drugs that are presented to it with sloppy or incomplete documentation on the trials.  No matter which side of the argument you fall on, one thing is clear – when you put something that is chemically manufactured into your body, intending it to render a change on your internal chemistry or on an organ, system or bodily function, that same chemical may also affect areas of the body that are unintentional. 

When a drug’s risks exceed its benefits, the federal Food and Drug Administration may ask or order a company to withdraw it from the market, or a company may do so on its own. Here are some drugs withdrawn in recent years.

2010

Mylotarg

Use: Acute myeloid leukemia

Risks: Liver disease

Manufacturer: Pfizer Inc. (formerly Wyeth)

2009

Raptiva

Use: Psoriasis

Risks: A rare brain infection

Manufacturer: Genentech

2007

Zelnorm

Use: Relieves constipation

Risks: Increased risk of heart problems

Manufacturer: Novartis AG

Permax

Use: Parkinson’s disease

Risks: Heart valve damage

Manufacturer: Valeant Pharmaceuticals International

2005

Cylert

Use: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

Risks: Liver problems, including death

Manufacturer: Abbott Laboratories

Bextra

Use: Painkiller

Risks: May increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes; also may cause rare but serious skin conditions

Manufacturer: Pfizer Inc.

Tysabri

Use: Multiple sclerosis

Risks: Rare, but life-threatening side effect

Manufacturer: Biogen Idec Inc. and Elan Corp. PLC

Note: Drug returned to market in 2006 under a restricted distribution.

2004

Vioxx

Use: Anti-inflammatory

Risks: Heart attacks, strokes

Manufacturer: Merck & Co.

2001

Baycol

Use: Lowers cholesterol

Risks: Severe damage to muscle, sometimes fatal

Manufacturer: Bayer

2000

Lotronex

Use: Irritable bowel syndrome (women)

Risks: Intestinal damage from reduced blood flow

Manufacturer: Glaxo Wellcome (now GlaxoSmithKline PLC)

Propulsid

Use: Nightime heartburn

Risks: Fatal heart rhythm abnormalities

Manufacturer: Janssen Pharmaceutica

Rezulin

Use: Diabetes

Risks: Severe liver toxicity

Manufacturer: Parke-Davis/Warner-Lambert

1999

Hismanal

Use: Antihistmine

Risks: With other drugs or high dose can cause fatal heart rhythm

Manufacturer: Janssen Pharmaceutica

Raxar

Use: Antibiotic

Risks: Fatal heart rhythm abnormalities

Manufacturer: Glaxo Wellcome (now GlaxoSmithKline PLC)

1998

Posicor

Use: High blood pressure, chronic stable angina

Risks: Dangerous interaction with other drugs

Manufacturer: Roche

Duract

Use: Pain reliever

Risks: Severe liver damage

Manufacturer: Wyeth-Ayerst

Seldane

Use: Antihistamine

Risks: Fatal heart rhythm abnormalities

Manufacturer: Hoechst Marion Roussel, Baker Norton

1997

Pondimin

Use: Obesity

Risks: Heart valve abnormalities

Manufacturer: Wyeth-Ayerst

Redux

Use: Obesity

Risks: Heart valve abnormalities

Manufacturer: Wyeth-Ayerst

Sources: FDA, The Associated Press, FDAnews Drug Pipeline Alert

Compiled by Associated Press news researcher Rhonda Shafner

In many cases, natural, holistic remedies are available that don’t pose any risk of dangerous side effects.  Schedule an appointment with a reputable holistic health care physician.  At the Remmel Wellness Center, we look for the least invasive alternative available, while partnering closely with like-minded western medicine physicians so that our patients get exactly what they need in terms of health care.  You can get better without prescription drugs.  Your body can heal and function the way it was designed to.  You just need to give it a chance. 

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida

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Back Pain? Don’t Cut Me!

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Working at a wellness center that also treats chiropractic patients, we see a lot of patients with back pain. The treatment options are wide and varied, and many times we will incorporate multiple modalities (or therapies) in treating a patient.  In our office, we use manual manipulation, instrument manipulation, massage therapy, EMS, cold laser therapy, traction, hydrotherapy and physical therapy.  We also have a relationship with a couple of MDs who handle the pain management end of the spectrum.  For the vast majority of patients, surgery shouldn’t be an option.  This story that ran on Bay News 9 explains it all:

“Why did they cut you?”

The shocking question came from a respected spine surgeon tracked down by Keith Swenson, who was still in severe pain after an earlier back operation.

He didn’t know what to believe. Two other surgeons had urged more operations, different ones.

And Swenson, who’s from Howard Lake, Minn., is far from alone. Even though only a fraction of people with back pain are good candidates for surgery, complicated spine operations are on the rise.

So is the hunt for any relief.

By one recent estimate, Americans are spending a staggering $86 billion a year in care for aching backs - from MRIs to pain pills to nerve blocks to acupuncture. That research found little evidence that the population got better as the bill soared over the past decade.

“The way medicine is so Star-Treky these days, they believe something can be done,” said Dr. Charles Rosen, a spine surgeon at the University of California, Irvine.

The reality is that time often is the best antidote. Most people will experience back pain at some point, but up to 90 percent will heal on their own within weeks. In fact, for run-of-the-mill cases, doctors aren’t even supposed to do an X-ray or MRI unless the pain lingers for a month to six weeks.

Yet a study last year found nearly one in three aching Medicare patients get some kind of back scan within that first month.

Why is that a problem? Those scans can be misleading. By middle age, most people who don’t even have pain nonetheless have degeneration of their disks, those doughnut-looking shock absorbers between vertebrae. So in someone who does have pain, pinpointing that a particular black spot or bulge on a scan is the true cause is tricky.

The bigger problem: When the misery lingers, there’s no one-size-fits-most treatment.

“There are a lot of procedures going on for patients in whom we don’t have good scientific evidence that it’s going to help,” said Dr. Richard Deyo of Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, who long has studied how people fare with different options for this tough ailment.

For example, there’s a wide variety of spinal injections that aim to numb back pain, using different drugs and targeting different spots. Which one works depends on what study you read.

When the Institute of Medicine recently listed the 100 how-to-treat questions that doctors most need answered, back pain neared the top of the list.

Lots of things can cause chronic back pain, from arthritis to bone-thinning osteoporosis, which has its own controversy over whether cementing cracks in the spine really helps.

But those cushiony disks are a big reason. They naturally thin and shrink with age. Sometimes they herniate, or rupture, so the gel-like center leaks and pressures a nerve. Sometimes a vertebra slips out of alignment. Sometimes the spinal canal painfully narrows, a condition called stenosis.

The right operation can help, but specialists say only about 10 percent of people with lasting pain are candidates. More than 333,000 of the simpler decompression operations - laminectomies and diskectomies that cut away part of a bone or disk to relieve nerve pressure - were performed in 2007, the latest data compiled by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. There were nearly 381,000 spinal fusions - more complex, riskier surgeries that bind vertebrae together with a bone graft and sometimes metal hardware.

There is some hopeful news - increasing evidence that more people should try pushing past the pain in aggressive exercise programs. Deyo calls them boot camps for back pain.

That’s what ended Swenson’s five-year pain odyssey. After a volleyball injury, scans showed he had degeneration in seven disks but one bulged in a way that doctors thought explained the pain radiating down both legs. They cut away part of that spot; it didn’t help. Neither did multiple pain-blocking options.

“Exercise is medicine, but it has to be the right exercise,” said Dave Carpenter, president of Physicians Neck & Back Clinics in Minneapolis, where Swenson finally turned.

The clinic’s rehabilitation program focuses on strengthening muscles that support the spine, and published a study showing that only three of 38 patients prescribed surgery still needed it in the 13 months after completing tailored rehab.

Swenson, now 51, said he was so debilitated that it took several months to improve, plus two years of “maintenance” conditioning. Today, he’s running a thriving gardening business near Minneapolis that ships peonies nationwide. It’s a job that requires tremendous manual labor.

“Do I have flare-ups? Yes. But now that my back is strengthened, instead of flare-ups lasting one to two months … the flare-ups last one to two days,” he said. “This form of treatment is a lifetime change.”

In New York City, Nicia Cortez wishes someone had told her of other options before her 2003 operation on a herniated disk.

“I was naive, and in severe pain. I didn’t think properly at the time,” said Cortez, who felt worse after surgery. It took her six years to work up the nerve to try again, this time a fusion that mostly relieved the pain: “I have my life back.”

Her new doctor cautions that scar tissue and altered anatomy mean each subsequent back surgery has less chance of success than the one before.

“It’s like trying to pave your driveway, layer upon layer, but at some point you replace the whole driveway. We don’t have that ability with the spine,” said Dr. Alok Sharan, spinal chief at New York’s Montefiore Medical Center.

He makes patients exhaust nonsurgical options first, knowing that about one in five who has one back operation will have another in a decade.

“Sometimes people jump to this and think it will be a cure-all, and then five years later you need another procedure. If you’re only 40, that’s a big deal,” Sharan said.

What’s the best advice? First, some types of back pain are accompanied by red flags that need immediate attention - such as numb or weak legs or urinary problems. But for most people:

  • Don’t expect an X-ray, MRI or CT until a month to six weeks has passed, unless the doctor suspects a more serious problem. Following that guideline is becoming a quality-of-care measure in many organizations.
  • Get back to normal activity as quickly as possible; the days of prescribed bed rest are over.
  • Patients with sciatica, pain radiating down the leg, have the best outcomes from those nerve-easing decompression surgeries, Deyo stressed. California’s Rosen said three criteria determine chances of success: a scan that correlates with the pain site; the patient has some weakness; and specific pain occurs when the doctor raises and straightens the legs.

           Herniated disks heal on their own over about two years, but surgery for a faster fix is reasonable in good candidates, he said.

  • Fusions are appropriate for far fewer patients, those with fractures, unstable or slipping spines, curvature of the spine and rare other reasons, Rosen said.
  • Deyo recently studied surgeries for stenosis, that painful narrowing, and found decompression surgery as effective and less risky than fusions, which are more complicated and costly.
  • A formal exercise program is especially effective if coupled with cognitive behavioral therapy that teaches patients to manage and function with pain, Deyo said.
  • What if surgery fails? Usually, it was the wrong operation or the wrong candidate, said Rosen, who sees one or two patients a week classified as having “failed back syndrome” because of multiple failed surgeries.

Always get a second opinion. Rosen, who founded the Association for Medical Ethics, also recommends asking about a doctor’s ties to companies that make spine-surgery products. That way you’ll feel assured that a recommendation to cut doesn’t come from a too-cozy relationship.

  • Not a good candidate? A primary care physician can be a neutral adviser in helping navigate next steps. Patients with more challenging back problems may fare better at a multidisciplinary spine center with numerous specialists - in rehab and pain management - under one roof.

“You don’t want to leave them hanging,” said Rosen.

The doctors at Remmel Wellness Center are happy to provide a second opinion when you are confused about what your treatment options are.  Call us at 727-525-1141.  If you are out of the area, call to schedule a consultation via Skype: Remmel-Wellness-Center.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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