Guest guest Posted May 5, 2010 Report Share Posted May 5, 2010 Maggie, I am wondering, when you say you spoke to your doctor after things flared up, did you mean a GP kind of doctor, or an ortho or neuro surgeon? Many of us drifted along for a number of years after original surgery doing alright, and then had a fairly precipitous down fall once the nerves were compressed due to either a disc problem or the spine slipping. My understanding is that once you are " on " that nerve, the only way to stop it from " singing " is to decompress it. While I dont pretend to know what somewhat else's pain is, I believe there is a difference between nerve pain and muscular fatigue pain....but both are certainly present in the later stages of flatback. My guess is that exercise and other modalities might help strengthen the muscles that hold one erect, thereby decreasing that kind of pain. Might also help hold a slipping disc in better position, off a nerve. I think with the higher grades of spondylolithsis (slipped spine) the correction must be surgical to decompress nerves. I can imagine a scenario where the impact of the crash did cause just that kind of slipping. Anyway....all that is to say...with our complicated spines there really needs to be an assessment by a very qualified doctor, preferably 2, before deciding that where one " is " physically is sustainable or can benefit from therapies short of surgery. Of course there is no harm usually in exhausting every option short of surgery first. It will probably increase strength and flexibility which will be important going forward....no matter what. I am so sorry you had to put up with the supercilious lout of a PT. You should have reported him. Take Care, Cam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.