Are within any homeopathic and/or physical psychiatric therapy treatments for spinal stenosis?


My friend thinks she have spinal stenosis (it runs in her inherited.) However, she can't afford health insurance and doesn't know of any treatments for it. Is in that any physical therapy she could do on her own? Maybe even a special diet? I will be surprised if anyone can answer this one!


Answers:    Although spinal stenosis does own to be confirmed on imaging studies, mere presense of "stenosis" does not imply that it correlates near one's symptoms.

When most people right to be heard "stenosis" they automatically think that it refers to a narrowing of the spinal strait or vertebral foraemen by boney obstruction which can create pressure on the spinal cord or nerve roots, respectively. Yet, the permanent status stenosis can also refer to a narrowing due to disc protrusion or other lesion.
The former is irreversible, the later is highly often reversible.

No thing what the imaging study shows, however, it needs to be correlated near a physical exam. This is because imaging studies...especially MRI, often show anomalies that exist within a pain-free population. In otherwords, if you x-ray or MRI 100 pain-free people, a solid percentage will show spinal stenosis, a disc protrusion etc. Therefore, we often prefer that patients come to us WITHOUT any imaging studies (unless nearby are any red flag signs that warrant it) before they are told they own an "incurable" or "degenerative" type of condition that may or may not be true and does nothing but upset the merciful.

Only after a mechanical evaluation (seeing how the twinge responds to movement/positioning) can it be determined if this is a "reversible" stenosis, or if boney obstruction does, indeed, appear to be the compelling factor.

I do recommend that your friend hope out physical therapy from a shrink who is credentialed in performing powered evaluations. It should be known in the first 1-3 visits if this can be help with conservative methods. You can find a document of credentialed providers at: http://www.mckenziemdt.org
If reversible, she will be shown what exercises to do to correct it, prevent it, and monitor it.
Spinal stenosis is a osteoarthritic disease. Some people can grasp this from wear and tear on their body, trauma or in recent times bad genes. The first step is finding where on earth the stenosis is located. She must get x-ray's. They may execute a myelogram on her and the result could be a surgery for a fusion of vertabrae or stent into the spinal canal.
Not much for PT that can be done for stenosis,

The bandaid for this disease are steroid shots that they supply at the hospital. Also if the stenosis persist than she will perceive numbing and tingling in her legs because of nerves person strictured and pushed against each other.
If the stenosis is within the lumbar spine (lower back), a back brace might oblige relieve symptoms of back niggle, pain, tingling, or numbness within the legs. It's called an LSO, import "Lumbo-sacral orthosis" and what it can do is provide compression to your abdominal cavity to provide support to the spine, and lift the vertebrae slightly farther apart. This can support relieve a nerve that may be pinched by the stenosis.
It really is best to consult beside an orthopedic doctor and/or get a referral to an orthotist to be evaluated for this type of brace. However, near no insurance, maybe she could budge to a drugstore and look at the back supports nearby.
If the problems are in the upper put money on, neck, or symptoms within the arms, this type of brace won't help.

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