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Doctors
of Naprapathy (DN) can treat your problem without a Medical Doctor’s
prescription, however, a Naprapath can also treat you with a
referral from your medical doctor, osteopath, podiatrist, or
dentist. Naprapaths design a program individually suited just for
you. Dr Varanauski, DN will evaluate your condition to
determine the best way to help ease your pain and help you get
better movement from the affected region. You will also be given
ways to take care of your body so you can avoid pain and prevent
further injury to the problem area.
Your
First visit to a Naprapath
On
your first visit, your Naprapath will want to gather some more
information about the history of your problem. This evaluation is
the same proceedure as any medical professional. You may be given a
questionnaire that helps you tell about the day to day problems you
are having. The information you give will help measure the success
of your treatment. You may also be asked to rate your pain on a
scale of one to ten. This will help your Naprapath gauge how much
pain you have now and how your pain changes once you've had
treatment. You will probably ask some more questions about
your neck problem to begin zeroing in on the source of your pain and
to know what will be needed to help relieve it. Here are some
questions your Naprapathic doctor may ask you:
·
How
long have you had pain?
·
Where
do you feel the pain?
·
What
makes the pain better or worse?
·
How
does your pain affect your daily activities?
·
Do
you have headaches?
·
Do
you have pain that radiates to your shoulders, arms, hands,
legs or
feet?
·
Do
you have any numbness or tingling?
Naprapathic
Evaluation
Once
all this information has been gathered, your condition will be
evaluated.
Posture/observation: Naprapaths
begin by checking your posture to see if your soreness is coming
from changes in posture. Imbalances in the position of your spine
can put pressure on sore joints, nerves, and muscles. Postures used
for a long time at school, with hobbies, exercising or when working
can change the balance of muscle strength and flexibility. Muscles
that have been stretched over time tend to be weaker, while muscles
that are put in shortened positions can begin to overpower the
weaker ones. This can put added strain on areas that can cause a
problem or make a sore area worse. Helping you improve your posture
can oftentimes make a big difference in easing pain.
Range
of motion (ROM):
Next, we will check the ROM in the affected area. This is a
measurement of how far you can move the area in different
directions. Neck movements include bending the neck forward and
backward (flexion and extension), bending to either side (side
bending), and turning the neck to one side and the other (rotation).
Measurements may also be taken of upper back and/or shoulder, hip
and leg, or foot movements, etc. Your ROM is written down to compare
how much improvement you are making with the treatments.
Neurological
screen: We
may need to do some tests to check the nerves. This part of the
evaluation looks at your reflexes, sensation, and strength in your
limbs. The results of these tests can help your doctor know which
area of the neck may be causing problems for you and can guide the
type of treatment to help your condition.
Manual
examination: You
may be given a manual examination of the muscles and joints. We
carefully move the area in different positions to make sure that the
joints are moving smoothly at each level. This will help guide
treatment to the joint that is tight (called a hypomobility) or
where a joint may have been injured and is moving too much (called a
hypermobility). Some of the movements you'll feel are where your
doctor is looking at the flexibility of the muscles around the
injured area. This type of examination can help guide us to
know where your soreness is coming from and which type of treatment
will help you the most.
Special
tests:
Other special tests may be done if your Naprapathic doctor thinks
your pain is coming from other areas or causes. Other areas that may
need to be looked at include:
·
Thoracic
outlet: This is where a group of nerves and vessels make their way
out of the chest cavity and travel down the arm. Problems in this
area can cause numbness, pain, or even coldness in the arm and
hands.
·
Temporomadibular
joint (jaw): Problems here can cause headaches, pain in your upper
neck, and even spasm in muscles of the neck.
·
Thoracic
and Lumbar spine: Problems beginning in the spine can include joints
and muscles of the thorax or lumbar region and even in the alignment
of one or more ribs, which can cause pain to radiate toward the
neck/shoulder, internal organs or even lower limbs and
feet.
·
Nerve
tension: Nerves of the mid and lower neck travel down the arm to
service the arm and hand. Nerves of the low back travel down to the
legs and feet. Irritation or scarring around the covering of these
nerves can cause pain that radiates from the neck to the upper back
or into the shoulders, arms, legs or feet. By locating scarred or
irritated areas along the nerve, a treatment called "neural
mobilization" can be used to free up movement in the nerve and to
ease the soreness you feel.
·
Ergonomics:
Ergonomics is a way to look at where and how you do your work or
hobby activities. Your Naprapath may want to understand your
ergonomics to figure out if the way you do your activities is making
your condition worse. Sometimes even simple corrections of your
hobby or work station can make a big difference in easing sypmtoms.
Palpation: The
evaluation usually ends with palpation. Palpation is when your
Naprapath feels the soft tissues around the neck. This is done to
check the skin for changes in temperature or texture, which could
tell if you have inflammation or nerve irritation. Palpation is also
done to find whether there are tender points or spasm in the muscles
around the neck and upper back. This tool can give us a good
idea about which treatments will help you the most.
Treatment
plan:
Once the examination is done, your doctor will put together a
treatment plan. The treatment plan lists the types of treatments
that will be used for your condition. It gives an indication of how
many visits you will need and how long you may need therapy. It also
includes the goals that you and your doctor think will be the most
helpful for getting your activities done safely and with the least
amount of soreness. Finally, it will include a prognosis, which is
how your doctor feels the treatment will help you
improve.
Naprapathic
Treatment
Controlling
your pain and symptoms
Easing
pain:
Your Naprapathic doctor may choose from one or more of the following
tools, or modalities, to help control the symptoms you are
having:
Rest:
Resting the painful joints and muscles helps calm soreness, giving
your body time to heal. If you are having pain with an activity or
movement, it should be a signal that there is still irritation going
on. You should try to avoid all movements and activities that
increase your pain. In the early stages of your problem, your doctor
may want you to use a soft or hard orthopedic device/support to
limit movement of the injured area nearly completely.
Specific
Rest:
Specific rest encourages safe movement of the joints and muscles on
either side of a painful area, while protecting the sore spot during
the initial healing phase. Select exercises can be given to
encourage safe movement of the surrounding areas to give support. If
you've been prescribed a collar, brace or support, you may be
instructed to take it off a few times a day so you can do some
gentle and controlled exercises.
Positioning: The
results of the evaluation will give us a clear picture of ways
you can position your neck for the greatest comfort. A special
pillow, called a contour pillow, may be suggested to help get your
neck in the most comfortable position while sleeping or resting. A
commercial neck roll, or even a rolled towel, can be slid inside
your pillow case so that when you lie back, the roll fills in and
supports the curve in your neck. Other special ways to rest the
affected areas may be given by your doctor to help take away pain
that is coming from you’re the primary source of
injury.
Ice: Ice
makes the blood vessels in the sore area become more narrow, called
vasoconstriction. This helps control inflammation that is causing
pain. Some ways to put ice on include cold packs, ice bags, or ice
massage. Cold packs or ice bags are generally put on the sore area
for 10 to 15 minutes. Ice massage is done by rubbing an ice cube or
ice cup on a sore spot or tender point. It's as easy as freezing a
small paper cup full of water. Once the water freezes, simply tear
off the top inch of the cup and rub the exposed ice on the sore spot
for three to five minutes, or until it feels
numb.
Heat:
Heat makes blood vessels get larger, called vasodilation. This
action helps to flush away chemicals that are making the injured
area hurt. It also helps to bring in nutrients and oxygen which help
the area heal. True heat in the form of a moist hot pack, a heating
pad, or warm shower or bath is more beneficial than creams that
merely give the feeling of heat. However, topical analgesics can
give some temporary relief. Hot packs are usually placed on the sore
area for 15 to 20 minutes. Special care must be taken to make sure
your skin doesn't overheat and burn. It's also not a good idea to
sleep with an electric hot pad at night.
Ultrasound: An
ultrasound machine produces high frequency sound waves that are
directed toward the sore area. Passing through the body's tissues,
these waves vibrate molecules. This causes friction and warmth as
the sound passes through the tissue. The rest of the sound changes
to heat in the deeper tissues of the body. This heating effect helps
flush the sore area and brings in a new supply of nutrient and
oxygen-rich blood. Ultrasound treatments are a way for your doctor
to reach tissues that are over two inches below the surface of your
skin!
Phoresis:
This means to "carry or transmit." There are two methods
that practitioners can use to transmit substances across the
skin. Phonophoresis uses the high frequency sound waves of
ultrasound to "push" a compound or medication (e.g. - cortisone)
through the skin. Iontophoresis uses a small machine that produces a
mild electrical charge, which is used to carry medicine, often a
steriod, through the skin. The steroid is a very strong
antiinflammatory medication that actually stops the pain-causing
chemical reaction within the cells of the sore tissue in your body.
Either type of phoresis may be used in place of a cortisone
injection.
Electrical
Stimulation:
This treatmemt stimulates nerves by sending an electrical current
gently through your skin. Some people say it feels like sort of like
a massage on their skin. Electrical stimulation can ease pain by
sending impulses that are felt instead of pain. Two respected
scientists discovered a theory, called the Gate Theory. This theory
says that when you feel a sensation other than pain, like rubbing,
massage, or even a mild electrical impulse, your spinal column will
actually "close the gate" and not let pain impulses pass to the
brain. In the case of electrical stimulation, the electrical
impulses speed their way across the skin and on to the central
nervous system much faster than pain. By getting there first, the
electrical information "closes the gate" to pain, blocking its
passage to the brain. Once the pain eases, muscles that are in spasm
begin to relax, letting you move and exercise with less discomfort.
Other settings on the machine can be used to help your body release
endorphins. These are natural chemicals formed within your body that
behave like a strong drug in reducing the perception of pain for up
to eight hours at a time.
Soft
tissue mobilization/massage:
Naprapathic doctors are trained in many different forms of massage
and mobilization when treating the body. Massage has been shown to
calm pain and spasm by helping muscles relax, by bringing in a fresh
supply of oxygen and nutrient-rich blood, and by flushing the area
of chemical irritants that come from inflammation. Soft tissue
treatments can help tight muscles relax, getting them back to a
normal length. This will help you begin to move with less pain and
greater ease. Naprapaths have a very specialize training in a
variety of different ways to mobilize or massage. These can include
gentle strokes, called effleurage. Myofascial release techniques
help restore better movement by getting the thick layer of fascia
below the skin and around muscles to "give". Strain-counter-strain
is a type of therapy that is especially helpful when tender points
are causing muscles to restrict movement. The treatment is usually
done in a way that the muscle is put in a special position, usually
where the muscle is shortest. The position is held long enough to
"reset" the nerve input to the muscle. Another way to help soft
tissues "move" is by the use of muscle energy technique. Your
therapist will place your muscle in a certain position and then
direct you to use your muscles against the therapist's force. As you
relax, your therapist will gradually "take up the slack", giving a
stretch on the muscle.
Joint
mobilization:
These are graded pressures and movements that are done by skilled
Naprapaths. Gentle graded pressures help lubricate joint surfaces,
easing stiffness and helping you begin moving with less pain. Pain
that is left unchecked can quickly escalate to an uncomfortable
"cycle of pain and muscle guarding." In other words, the pain can
make your muscles go into spasm, in which your muscles try to guard
the sore joints, keeping you from wanting to move the area at all.
When movement stops, your brain gets an uninterupted flow of pain
sensation. Ouch! This leads to a cycle of even more muscle spasm and
pain because your muscles try to "protect" you from painful
movement. By applying gentle pressures, or mobilizations, your
doctor will begin to halt the flow of pain information, which helps
muscles relax. Once your muscles begin to relax, you will begin to
feel other sensations than pain. As your pain eases, more vigorous
grades of mobilization may be used to lengthen tissues around the
joint helping restore better movement in the injured
area(s).
Traction:
Sore joints and muscles often feel better when a traction "pull" is
used. Your Naprapath will test at first to see if you can get relief
with this type of treatment. Traction can be done in a variety of
ways. Manual traction is a way for your therapist to put a graded
pull on your neck. There are also traction devices that can be
issued for you to use at home. The amount of pull that is used will
depend on your condition. A gentle on/off pressure may be better
early on to help control pain or if there is pain from arthritis.
More vigorous traction can help take away pain if a joint is mildly
sore or tight.
Exercises
Strengthening
-
Exercise
is important during all stages of recovery from neck pain. Different
types of exercises will be used by your doctor as you get better. In
the early stages, when your neck is still quite painful, specific
exercises may be suggested to help reduce your pain. Supporting the
injured area in certain positions as suggested by your therapist can
take pressure off sore or injured areas. These positions are
sometimes easier to get into by using a pillow, rolled towel, or
commercial neck roll. You may need to relax back on a recliner or
matress for best results. In cases of significant pain, you may be
given a set of breathing exercises. Deep, diaphragmatic breathing,
helps air to reach even the lower lobes of your lungs. Combining
deep breathing to a slow relaxing count can help muscles relax,
while bringing much needed oxygen to sore tissues. For example, neck
pain can be physically and emotionally draining. Relaxation
exercises may not correct your problem, but they can help control
pain and its accompanying stress.
Movement
is also important, even when your neck is still painful. Careful
movements suggested by your doctor can safely ease pain by providing
nutrition and lubrication to injured and sore areas. Movement of
joints and muscles also signals the nervous system to block incoming
pain. Common movement exercises include active range of motion, in
which you are encouraged to move your neck toward directions that
don't hurt. Your doctor will evaluate which movements will be safest
and best for you. In some cases, pain will ease with the addition of
pressure into one or another direction. Again, your Naprapath will
need to determine which movements are best for your condition. Avoid
movements that hurt or seem to irritate the soreness.
As
the area becomes less painful, the exercises will be changed to
focus on improving the overall health of the entire affected region.
These changes will focus on exercises for:
·
Flexibility
·
Strength
·
Coordination
·
Aerobic
conditioning
Exercises
that increase flexibility help to reduce pain and make it easier to
keep your body in a healthy position. Tight muscles cause imbalances
in spinal movements. This can make injury of these structures more
likely. Flexibility exercises can be helpful in establishing safe
movement. A slow progression of stretching exercises can increase
flexibility in these areas, ease pain, and reduce the chance of
reinjury.
The
next stage of exercise focuses on the strength of the muscles that
support the region. These muscles help bring the spine into a safe
position--and keep it there! Trained muscles can keep you healthy by
getting it into better posture. A series of strengthening exercises,
called stabilization training, is a way to get better balance in the
muscles around your neck, chest, and upper back. These stabilization
exercises are helpful in supporting you in safe positions while you
are working or when you are doing other daily activities.
Strengthening and stabilization exercises are simple to do at home
and don't have to require any expensive equipment. By practicing
these exercises often, you will become comfortable keeping your body
in healthy positions and postures with all your
activities.
Strong
muscles need to be coordinated. As the strength of the spinal
muscles increases, it becomes important to train those muscles to
work together. Learning any physical activity takes practice.
Muscles must be trained so that the physical activity is under
control. Muscles that are trained to control safe movement of the
spine help reduce the chance of injury. You will be taught exercises
to help train your neck, chest, and upper back muscles to work
together in protecting your spine.
Finally,
attention will be directed to increasing your overall fitness. The
word aerobic means "with oxygen". By using oxygen as they work,
muscles are better able to move continuously, rather than in spurts.
Fitness training allows the muscles to become more efficient at
obtaining nutrients and oxygen from the blood. As the muscles use up
the nutrients and oxygen, chemical waste products are created that
can cause pain. Training also increases the ability of muscles to
get rid of these waste products.
Exercise
has other benefits as well. Vigorous exercise can cause chemicals
called endorphins to be released into the blood. These chemical
hormones act as natural pain relievers in reducing your pain. It
will be important that you pick an aerobic activity you can enjoy
and stick with it!
Once
your pain is controlled, your range of motion is improved, and your
strength is returning, you will be progressed to a final home
program. Your Naprapathic doctor will give you some ideas to help
take care of any more soreness at home. You'll be given some ways to
keep working on the range of motion and strength too. Before you are
done with your therapy, more measurements will be taken to see how
well you're doing now compared to when you first started your
treatment.
Prevention
and long term self care
Is
this is your first experience with a problem? Maybe you've had
ongoing problems for many years. In either case, your best bet for
avoiding problems in the future is to get a handle on ways you can
prevent further pain and/or injury. It is also helpful to know how
to take care of your pain if it strikes again.
Posture:
Using healthy posture and gait is like holding a defense shield
against future problems. Pain and injury CAN be prevented. When your
joints are positioned in their safe--or neutral posture--the body
works like an elegant machine. It works safely and even more
productively. When unbalanced postures are used, problems are more
likely to happen. Prevention of injury has a lot to do with keeping
a balanced position of the spine and extremities. When standing,
this balance follows a plumb line from ear to ankle. In a seated
position, this line descends from the ear to the hip. A rule of
thumb for the extremities is to keep them in their relaxed
positions.
There
are three natural curves in the spine. From a side view, the neck
(cervical spine) curves slightly inward. The midback (thoracic
spine) curves slightly outward. The low back (lumbar spine) curves
slightly inward. Keeping this relationship while standing, sitting,
or moving is the basis for healthy posture. When moving, bend at the
hips to avoid rounding or straightening the spine. This keeps the
spine safe during activities like lifting and walking.
For
better sitting posture, sit with a good upright alignment of the
spine by using a comfortable chair designed to support correct
posture. Avoid too much slouching by keeping your low back against
the back of the chair. Bending the head forward strains the neck and
affects the nerves and arteries leading to the arms. Your shoulders
should be relaxed, and the elbows, hips, and knees should be bent at
right angles (ninety degrees). Avoid pressure to the back of the
knees. Your feet should be kept flat on the floor or supported by a
foot rest.
Awkward
posture places stress on the body that can lead to neck pain.
Slouching with the spine or leaning the head forward puts the body
out of alignment, causing the limbs to be stretched and bent. Too
much bending (flexion) or straightening (extension) in the spine
increases the risk of injury. Symptoms of pain, tingling, or
numbness in the arm or hand may also come from poor neck posture.
The slight inward curve of the neck balances the head on the spine.
Avoid extreme postures, like gazing up at the stars, or bending your
head down for long periods when reading a book. Keeping balanced
posture is a measure you can use to prevent further injury and pain
in your neck. Movement is the key to health and keeping your body in
one position, even with good posture, is likely to cause tightening
and restriction in the joints.
Ergonomics:
Ergonomics is a look at the way people do work. What does ergonomics
have to do with the pain in your body? It could have alot to do with
it. It's possible that even minor changes in the way you do your
work or hobby activities could ease the pain you feel now while
preventing further injury or pain.
In
some cases, it is best to have someone trained in ergonomics, like a
Naprapath, Chiropractor, physical or occupational therapist, check
your work station and the way you do your work. The first step will
be for them to ask you some questions about your work, which makes
good sense. Since you're the one doing the job, you will have an
expert opinion about what seems to be working, what could be done
differently, and what tasks seem to be causing the most problems for
you. Once these questions are covered, the evaluator will want to
watch you do the work tasks. Areas that will be noted include the
postures you use, repetitions to complete the task, rest time
between tasks, and the amounts of weight you are dealing with. For
office workers, the examiner will look at alignment of the computer
monitors, chairs, desk heights, etc. Other areas that may be
evaluated include work heights, tools of the trade, lighting, and
temperature. It's also helpful to look at your work postures and
work tasks to see if what you are doing can be done with less stress
and strain on your body.
When
the work site evaluation is over, you or your supervisor will
probably be given some recommendations--some of these may even be
ones you came up with! Ergonomics doesn't always have to involve
expensive changes. Even minor adjustments can make a huge difference
in easing your pain and preventing further problems.
Work
Place Strategies:
These strategies are ideas of how to work with greater safety and
even better productivity. Have you ever felt stress or tension at
work? Chances are good that you wouldn't have a pain or worry if you
didn't. The reality is that people are often called on to do even
more with less resources. They are faced with more responsibility
and more deadlines to get their tasks done. The health of your body
may be at risk with these mounting pressures. But scientists have
helped us learn that there is a defence in the face of these
mounting pressures. They have shown the importance of using the
"Three R's" to help ease tension and reduce neck pain at work. Here
are the three Rs:
Rest:
This includes taking frequent breaks during the work hour. It also
means choosing alternate activities to get your mind ready for a new
job task. Activities include deep breathing, walking, napping, or
exercising.
Relaxation:
Take a load off. Lie back. Turn down the lights, and listen to your
favorite tape or CD. Attempt to breath slowly and deeply, allowing
your abdomen to rise and fall rythmically. Using visual imagery can
also aid in relaxation. Try to visualize each muscle relaxing one
after another.
Recovery: Our
bodies need a chance to heal. Repeated and prolonged activities can
take their toll if the body doesn't get a chance to recover.
Recovery helps repair these sore and achy tissues along the way,
keeping them healthy.
Whether
at work or at home, you can use these ideas to help prevent pain and
injury. Here are some additional tips to use at work to avoid
tension and keep you healthy:
Be
Relaxed. Try
to work with your muscles relaxed. To stay relaxed, look
relaxed.
Pace
Yourself.
Keep an even keel. Avoid sudden changes in your workload. Try to
avoid last minute "panics" to meet deadlines.
Take
a Break.Take
a thirty second "microbreak" every twenty to thirty minutes to do
some deep breathing and a few exercises. Take a few minutes each
hour to do some exercises, get a drink, or go bug a coworker. Use
your lunch break to take a nap or a walk.
Change
Positions.
Avoid holding your neck, trunk, or limbs still for a long time. Plan
ways to get the job done using different positions. Sit for a
bit--then stand for a bit. Or simply readjust your approach to the
task.
Rotate
Duties.
Rotating or sharing your tasks can be fun by offering a new
worksetting, while giving your body a chance to
recover.
Avoid
Caffeine and Tobacco.
These can heighten stress, reduce blood flow, and elevate the
awareness of neck pain.
Taking
Care of Your Body
If
you've had a problem once, there's a fair chance you'll have it in
one form or another in the future. When pain comes back again and
again, it is called recurrent pain. Even though you may have been
treated for neck or back pain or problems in the past, it's not a
guarantee you won't have pain again. The question, then, is whether
you can take care of your body if soreness does return.
Your
doctor will give you a home program when you get done with your
treatments. Some of the exercises will be helpful to keep up with as
a way to keep your body healthy over time. You may also be given
ways to help control pain or symptoms if they don't go completely
away, or if they return in the future. Although there are many good
"home remedies", you will want to visit your doctor if these
symptoms appear:
·
Pain
with no apparent injury that doesn't go away within a week to 10
days
·
Pain
that doesn't ease or change with movement
·
Pain
that actually wakes you up at night
·
Pain
that shoots from your neck down into your arm or back down to your
legs or feet when you cough or sneeze
·
"Visceral"
symptoms of nausea, diarrhea, dizziness, blurred vision, ringing in
the ears, etc.
·
Numbness,
tingling, or weakness in your arms or legs
If
you feel achiness or pain that is not associated with the red flags
listed above, here are some home treatment ideas you may be given to
ease your symptoms:
Rest:
When pain strikes, don't do activities that make your pain worse.
Remember the benefits of rest (see above).
Ice: For
the first two to three days, you may get help by appling a home-made
cold pack. Simply place two parts crushed ice in a plastic bag with
one part rubbing alcohol. This lets you reuse the bag without having
it freeze solid between uses. When you're ready to use the cold
pack, wrap it in a wet washcloth. Then place it on the sore area for
up to fifteen minutes a few times a day.
Contrast: On
day three, you may find more relief by using a "contrast" of ice and
heat. This is where you begin by placing a cold pack on the sore
area for 10 minutes. Then place a heating pad on for another 10
minutes. You can repeat the process a couple times, finishing with
the heat.
Heat:
Once the acute symptoms are controlled (two to three days), you may
get good relief using a heating pad. Remember to turn off the pad
before going to sleep. Check your skin regularly to make sure you
are not getting too much heat.
Traction: In
some cases, your therapist may have found out that you get good
relief with neck traction. That can be good news. There are a number
of traction units that can be used at home. Some of these work by
giving a traction pull as water is added to a bag. Others work by
pumping air pressure into a neck cushion. A simple way to do
traction at home is to place two tennis balls in a sock. Lay down
with the sock sideways just below the back of your head. The two
tennis balls will give a gentle traction, and the pressure of the
balls can help relieve headaches, neck pain, and upper back
discomfort.
TENS:
This stands for transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation. If
you've been treated in the clinic with electrical stimulation, your
Naprapath will have a good idea if this kind of treatment helps you.
If so, there are small, pocket-sized electrical stimulation units
that can be used up to 24 hours a day if needed to keep pain at bay.
Your therapist may choose to issue one of these, but only if you
can't get good pain relief in other ways. Also, a prescription from
your doctor is required for you to use one on your
own.
Exercise:
Some exercises are designed to help take pain away. After you have
completed your Naprapathic visits, your doctor will have gotten a
good idea what types of exercise help you control your pain. Your
doctor will go over the exercises that will give you the best relief
if you get sore again. Remember to only do the exercises in the way
your therapist has instructed. Overdoing them could make your pain
worsen.
Long-term
strategies: The
best way to treat neck pain is to avoid it all together. A good
exercise regimen can help. Also, remember the benefits of good
posture, ergonomics, and work habits--and use them. If you are
trying to take care of your neck but you're not getting adequate
relief, you may need to revisit your Naprapath for additional help.
Home
program:
Once your pain is controlled, your range of motion is improved, and
your strength is returning, you will be progressed to a final home
program. Your doctor will review some of the ideas listed above to
help take care of any more soreness at home. You'll be given some
ways to keep working on the range of motion and strength too. Before
you are done with therapy, more measurements will be taken to see
how well you're doing now compared to when you first started in
therapy.
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