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#1
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wow. I didn't know they could be had for so cheap. I was looking at a particular one but I guess for the money I could go for one like this. thanks smoke. gonna hafta show this one to the boss.
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hammer aint. stinkpot aint. sawdust aint. rainbow aint. maco sure as sh!t aint. randle? ha ha ha. |
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#2
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Good luck... Hope it works better for you than me....
I'm staying off mine till I get around to having an MRI or whatever is needed to see what is actually wrong w me.... Maybe weeks or years or .... Lol |
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#3
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next time at PT, have them try traction, if traction is good for you the inversion table will help. But you have got to get swelling down before you try anything like that. Getting off the inversion table after stretching is what got me bad. Go see a back specialist
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#4
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Yeah same here... Hurt so bad I was terrified I had done major damage
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#5
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i'm thinking the swelling must be down after 6 weeks. i'm not going back to PT. I just tried to get on the floor to do some exercises and I couldn't get down. then I couldn't get up. this is bad. gonna try the inversion table at a very conservative angle.
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hammer aint. stinkpot aint. sawdust aint. rainbow aint. maco sure as sh!t aint. randle? ha ha ha. |
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#6
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the swelling will not be down if you are still aggravating it. Lay on your back for several hours without moving.I found my couch was more comfortable than my bed, I used pillows to keep from moving when I fell asleep
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#7
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A bunch of comments, general and agreeing with a lot of what the other guys are saying:
I had a friend who was a PT and he would get me in, do traction (an automatic contraption that would alternately pull and release) then do massage. It felt great but didn't do much to get me back in the game. When I learned about the press ups, my life changed radically for the better. If you have health insurance you should be able to see a specialist (not a neurologist - that was a waste of time - gave me muscle relaxers and said to stay imobile). A CT scan is the likely diagnostic tool, but you need a good doc reading it. If this is the first time you've had the problem and some severe trauma didn't bring it on it's pretty unlikely that you have any ruptured disks, so no fragments to worry about and trying the press ups, cautiously, shouldn't do you any harm, but getting pictures of the problem is absolutely he right idea. I would ask around and try to find someone you know (or someone they know) who has had a good experience with a medical provider specialist. I agree with Smoke - you don't want anyone cutting on your back unless you have a lot of unanimous opinions that it's really necessary. I have a friend who had something like Spare was mentioning - a bunch of stuff inside his spine that was pressing on the nerves and he got to where he had almost no use of his legs. In that situation, there's no choice but your sudden onset makes me doubt that's your problem. I agree with Spare - if you're still in serious pain, the inflamation/swelling hasn't gone down. Try the ice, but mostly work on finding a competent specialist and trust your gut if you don't think they have it right -just reading the pictures doesn't necessarily tell the whole story. A few years ago, I really did myself in. I hadn't been stretching and did some hard exersize - it felt like an electrode in my back and it really hung on. I finally went for a CT scan and met with a surg3on My PT friends are VERY scepticle of chiropractors - there are LOTS of quacks in the business. Don't give up on all PT's just because you got a jerk. My experience convinced me that most doctors and a lot of PT's don't understand spinal problems.
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