Not that I know much of anything, but I would suspect that a "cure" may be in the form of surgery, and only an MD can do that, so a chiropractor will continue to get his consulting costs from your wife, meanwhile a surgeon could theoretically cure it. I am sure you've considered that though.Originally posted by: kranky
My wife has been going 2x/month for a long time, after she got hit from behind in an auto accident. It really helps her, but what I don't like is that there never seems to be an actual cure.
Originally posted by: kranky
My wife has been going 2x/month for a long time, after she got hit from behind in an auto accident. It really helps her, but what I don't like is that there never seems to be an actual cure.
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Not that I know much of anything, but I would suspect that a "cure" may be in the form of surgery, and only an MD can do that, so a chiropractor will continue to get his consulting costs from your wife, meanwhile a surgeon could theoretically cure it. I am sure you've considered that though.Originally posted by: kranky
My wife has been going 2x/month for a long time, after she got hit from behind in an auto accident. It really helps her, but what I don't like is that there never seems to be an actual cure.
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
I had a muscle spasm in my lower back once. I was in so much pain I couldn't even stand up straight. Getting in and out of my car or even rolling over in bed were extremely painful. I went to a chiropractor and after one visit I felt at least 50% better than when I went in there. A couple more treatments and I felt almost 100%.
He showed me some exercises to help strengthen my lower back and that helped also.
After I started surfing my lower back got much stronger and I haven't had any lower back problems in years.
I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss chiropractors as a worthless option.
Re: Posture I'm 99% sure my back problems are related to posture, but I'm going to see this MD in a couple of weeks anyway just to be sure. If he can confirm they are I will double my efforts, but repairing bad posture after a quarter century of it is very difficult and requires constant attention.Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
The majority of problems that people see a chiropractor about can be solved with a good massage and improved posture. *sits up straighter*
And the ones that are more serious can usually be solved permanently by surgery. But since many people aren't comfortable with someone taking a knife to their back, metaphorically speaking, they go to the chiropractor.
- M4H
Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
I had a muscle spasm in my lower back once. I was in so much pain I couldn't even stand up straight. Getting in and out of my car or even rolling over in bed were extremely painful. I went to a chiropractor and after one visit I felt at least 50% better than when I went in there. A couple more treatments and I felt almost 100%.
He showed me some exercises to help strengthen my lower back and that helped also.
After I started surfing my lower back got much stronger and I haven't had any lower back problems in years.
I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss chiropractors as a worthless option.
Is your chiropractor also a physiotherapist? Because it sounds like that's what cured ya.
- M4H
Yes, this is indeed the case.Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
The majority of problems that people see a chiropractor about can be solved with a good massage and improved posture. *sits up straighter*
Originally posted by: kranky
My wife has been going 2x/month for a long time, after she got hit from behind in an auto accident. It really helps her, but what I don't like is that there never seems to be an actual cure.
Yep, right next to Soy and shampoo with mango extracts.That "holistic healing" is a load of bull.
Originally posted by: deejayshakur
if you want a fully-licensed doctor who can treat you for all the mainstream ailments plus perform manipulations, go find your nearest osteopathic physician (DO).
osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT) is different from chiropractic, but suffice to say that chiropractic branched off of osteopathic medicine back in the 1800s. so you know who the daddy is.
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find a DO
edit: to respond to some of the comments, a DO unike an MD, will give you drugs when drugs are appropriate and OMT when OMT is appropriate, or a combination of both if he/she sees that that regimen will offer you the maximum benefit for recovery.
to be fair, some MDs have been trained in OMT after med school, but only DO's are required to be proficient at OMT for graduation and licensure (in addition to all the other medical knowledge that MDs learn).
Originally posted by: DAGTA
The Chiro's opinion is: the human body is the best healing machine. Give it what it needs and it will take care of itself.