nekosensei (
nekosensei) wrote2007-09-18 10:37 pm
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Chiropractors -- Part Two
I talked to
doomsey this evening, and he's a bit skeptical on the whole me going to a chiropractor thing. His reasoning is that he thinks it is a quack science. I guess I'm waffling on this a bit because I a bit nervous that I'll end up with someone incompetent who will make my neck worse instead of better. On the other hand, if a chiropractor can do something to help me out, it would be better than sitting at home and taking muscle relaxants when I'm hurty. And I can't take them on days when I have work anyway because I'm not supposed to drive when I'm on them.
So...I guess...if in doubt, write an LJ poll and ask my friends' list, huh?
[Poll #1057581]
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So...I guess...if in doubt, write an LJ poll and ask my friends' list, huh?
[Poll #1057581]

no subject
I was having back and hip problems at the time. In four visits the "manual medicine" doctor did some nifty manipulations (details in a moment) and gave me some specific stretches and manipulations to do on my own, some of which I still use whenever my back flares up. Overall, it was a positive experience which definitely reduced the pain significantly and gave me tools to help in the future, though it was not some miraculous cure.
Visits were definitely a novel experience. One time in particular, a session started in which I indicated a tightness and pain in one spot of my back. He sorta frowned and set up his hands in specific spots on my shoulder and leg. Then suddenly he applied pressure and turned me into a human gumby. KKKRRRAAAAKKKK! Man, that was awesome! Dramatic! I thought for a second I might be paralyzed. :-)
Historically, there was a period during which there were a lot of quack chiropractors-- ones who claimed unrealistic cures for ailments not directly related to bones and joints. There may still be some of those, and they give the profession a bad name. But if your PCP refers you to a chiropractor, for reasons specifically related to joints, I would say give the chiropractor a try.
- Paul, who's normally pretty skeptical about these matters