Passive Physical Therapy
Posted: Thursday, April 03, 2008
by Doc Tel Boy
Back Trouble UK
Physical therapy has a significant benefit for mechanical back pain. Studies show that, for patients presenting with acute back pain, spinal mobilisation and/or manipulation is more effective than placebo in the short term and thus reduces the period of morbidity, allowing an earlier return to work.
The timing of the treatment is important. If the medical practitioner is unskilled with physical therapy, referral is appropriate. Spinal manipulation is contraindicated or ineffective in patients with acute low back pain with spasm, fixed lateral scoliosis or sciatica.
Such patients who have received relief, sometimes instantaneously, in the past for a similar disorder will seek out therapists who provide this treatment.
Manipulation's bad name, particularly among surgeons who have to deal with subsequent disrupted discs is related to inappropriate spinal manipulation that aggravates the problem or fails to help over a long period of time.
The management of back pain is incorrectly portrayed as a difficult problem shrouded in medical ignorance. The physician has to provide optimal circumstances for the dysfunction problem to heal itself.
The key to successful management is for the GP to be well informed, confident and believable, and be prepared to give or organise safe effective physical therapy for back problems which are slow to respond to conservative methods of treatment."
Terry O'Brien
Back Trouble UK.
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