Posts Tagged ‘back pain sufferers’

Hello again.

I just recently became aware of a new magnetic stimulation therapy that may (eventually) help chronic pain sufferers.

I always seem to be pressed for time (and energy), but I wanted to post a brief note about it in case someone wants to check it out.

(If you decide to research it and can come up with something worthwhile, you can guest post if you like and include whatever links — within reason — you like.)

Anyway, this seems to be the real deal. The technique has already been used successfully for depression.

Static magnets, of course, have been used for centuries for various ailments, but this involves using electromagnetic pulses to alter your brain activity. It's called TMS therapy (transcranial magnetic stimulation).

The Food and Drug Administration has approved it already for depression, for those who don't respond well to medications. And researchers are studying its use for controlling acute and chronic pain, among other things.

It's still very iffy in my view, very new, and the whole idea of messing around with a person's normal brain activity ought to give the saner among us pause, but if it turns out to be safe, it just may hold out some hope for those for whom other strategies have failed.

As soon as I can find time to learn more about it, I'll try to update you, but right now, I have to go pay bills and do my physical therapy exercises.

I hope you are doing well, but if not, I hope you are getting well.

Best.

Healing Back Pain: The Mind-Body Connection Review: ‘Healing Back Pain’ promises permanent elimination of back pain without drugs, surgery, or exercise. Here at Back-Pain-Therapy.com, we’re not too sure about the title, or even the premise. It is really about Tension Myositus Syndrome (TMS) and discusses only that one specific cause of back pain.

Also, much of the discussion, essentially, is that much of your experience of back pain resides in your psychology, and the book pretty much ignores many other factors which have been scientifically proven to be very significant, i.e., diet, nutrition, etc. This argument (that it is all in your head) was the prevailing one before modern medical science began to better understand the spine, nervous system, and the brain, and no doubt many who suffered probably suffered more after having been told their condition was merely psychological. Many who have back pain have demonstrable physiological injuries. Further, the best neurologists we are aware of will tell you that even now the brain and the nervous system are not understood well enough to make such sweeping claims about how much of a person’s pain may or may not be due to psychological factors. So to sum up, we’re not too sure how much of a service Dr. Sarno is doing for back pain sufferers by reviving this old idea.

But with all that said, the book does explain why conventional treatments for this type of pain don’t work, which is useful, yet the author then proceeds to claim this is the major cause of pain in the back, neck, and shoulders.

Hmm. Maybe. No doubt it will help some. Our founder hasn’t found the book all that useful, but he thought we should post it for those who might. It is informative, and it may very well help you better understand and discuss your pain issues with your physician, but it’s not definitive in terms of self-help. In fact, this is not really about self-help, nor even about healing back pain, not all that much anyway, but it may contribute to your understanding of the (sometimes major) role the mind can play, and like many others apparently have, you may find it far more helpful than we did.

For many back pain sufferers, much of the pain is in the muscles. Muscles contract as a reaction to inflammation, causing pain and potentially leading to more inflammation. It can be a vicious circle, and — surprisingly to some — regular exercise can help.

Whether and how much this resource will be helpful to you, and what kinds of equipment and exercises may be most suitable, will depend on the type of back pain you have, the cause(s) of that pain, and the severity.

Foremost, you'll need to okay it with your primary physician, and as a back pain sufferer, you should take great care before beginning any exercise program or adding a new piece of equipment or set of exercises to your existing routine. There is no question that it is of utmost importance to be careful, but in spite of what Rush Limbaugh says on his radio show, study after study prove that people who may have an occasional minor injury while making a sustained and appropriate effort to stay physically fit are most definitely not the ones driving up the costs of medical care.

Every credentialed expert there is seems to agree that there is virtually no end to the potential benefits of being physically fit.

Even so, some people seem surprised that someone who has back pain should, or would want to, work out at all.

But they shouldn't be.

For back pain sufferers — actually, for nearly everyone — there are many benefits to a regular exercise routine that includes both aerobic and progressive resistance strength training.

Further, the right kinds of exercise can do more to help control pain than most people realize, and there is nothing any better than being fit. The right kinds of exercise are good for almost everything, improving the functioning of all your tissues and organs, increasing your energy level and improving your endurance, helping to fight off disease as well as many of the worst effects of our modern, stressful lives. Exercise gets blood and oxygen into your muscles where it's needed, and that helps clean out and metabolize toxins in those muscles that can be related to increased inflammation, which can increase your pain.

Additionally, sufficient exercise, of the right intensity and type, releases endorphins (your body's natural pain-killing opiate) into your system, helping to control the pain and helping sometimes to break the vicious circle of inflammation causing muscle pain, and that in turn causing more inflammation.

Finally, though just about everyone knows by now that exercise helps to reduce your body's overall fat content, not everyone yet realizes the extent to which high body fat has been shown in various studies to increase inflammation, i.e., again leading to pain.

So if you always thought you'd get fit just as soon as you got rid of the pain, you may need to re-think that strategy.

Here at Back-Pain-Therapy.com, we are particularly impressed with the quality of Nautilus and Bowflex equipment. Standard free weights are far more dangerous, take up more space, are a lot slower and more difficult to set up between exercises, and are much, much harder to manage in virtually every context. Further, most other home gyms and trainers we've tested don't even begin to compare to Nautilus and Bowflex.

But the qualify and durability of this equipment is not the reason we recommend aerobic and progressive resistance exercise as a resource.

So long as you okay it with your primary physician, and no matter what equipment you prefer to use, quite simply, and because it works . . .

. . . Back-Pain-Therapy.com recommends exercise as a back pain therapy resource.

  Bowflex Revolution Home Gym

Bowflex Revolution Home Gym

  Bowflex Revolution SpiraFlex Resistance Plate Upgrade

Bowflex Revolution SpiraFlex Resistance Plate Upgrade

Bowflex Revolution Accessory Rack

Bowflex Revolution Accessory Rack

  Bowflex Revolution XP Home Gym

Bowflex Revolution XP Home Gym

  Bowflex Revolution XP Lat Tower

Bowflex Revolution XP Lat Tower

  Bowflex Revolution XP Ab Back Pad

Bowflex Revolution XP Ab Back Pad

  Bowflex Revolution XP Accessory Rack

Bowflex Revolution XP Accessory Rack

  Bowflex Revolution i-Trainer Software

Bowflex Revolution i-Trainer Software

  Bowflex SelectTech 552 Dumbbells

Bowflex SelectTech 552 Dumbbells

  StairMaster StepMill SM916

StairMaster StepMill SM916

  Nautilus T7.18 Pro Series Treadmill

Nautilus T7.18 Pro Series Treadmill

  Nautilus T716 Pro Series Treadmill

Nautilus T716 Pro Series Treadmill

  Nautilus T714 Pro Series Treadmill

Nautilus T714 Pro Series Treadmill

  Nautilus NS700X Strength System

Nautilus NS700X Strength System

  StairMaster StairClimber SC916

StairMaster StairClimber SC916

  Nautilus Freedom Trainer

Nautilus Freedom Trainer

  Bowflex Ultimate 2 Home Gym

Bowflex Ultimate 2 Home Gym

  Bowflex TreadClimber TC5000

Bowflex TreadClimber TC5000

  Bowflex TreadClimber TC3000

Bowflex TreadClimber TC3000

  Nautilus NR 3000 Recumbent Bike

Nautilus NR 3000 Recumbent Bike

  Nautilus NB 3000 Upright Bike

Nautilus NB 3000 Upright Bike

  VersaTrainer Home Gym

VersaTrainer Home Gym

  Bowflex Xtreme 2 SE Home Gym

Bowflex Xtreme 2 SE Home Gym

  Bowflex TreadClimber TC1000

Bowflex TreadClimber TC1000

  Nautilus NT 1230 Hack Squat-Leg Press

Nautilus NT 1230 Hack Squat-Leg Press

  Bowflex Xtreme XTLU Home Gym

Bowflex Xtreme XTLU Home Gym

  Schwinn Evolution – SR Indoor Cycling Bike

Schwinn Evolution - SR Indoor Cycling Bike

  Bowflex Xtreme SE Home Gym

Bowflex Xtreme SE  Home Gym

  Bowflex Xtreme XTLU Home Gym

Bowflex Xtreme XTLU Home Gym

  Schwinn Evolution Indoor Cycling Bike

Schwinn Evolution Indoor Cycling Bike

  Schwinn IC Elite Indoor Cycling Bike

Schwinn IC Elite Indoor Cycling Bike

  Bowflex 1090 SelectTech Package

Bowflex 1090 SelectTech Package

  Bowflex PR3000 Home Gym

Bowflex PR3000 Home Gym