Spinal Decompression

Spinal Decompression | A Quick Introduction

Spinal decompression refers to non-surgical treatment used to treat specific types of chronic back aches. It is one of the most innovative medical treatments since it is completely non-invasive and produces good results.

Spinal decompression is most favored nowadays for treating herniated discs. In this kind of a condition, pressure on the spine causes the disc herniations to expand, which in turn exerts stress on the spinal nerve roots in the vicinity. Spinal decompression treatment helps in easing this pressure so that the damaged discs contract and return to their original size.

Spinal decompression can also be used to treat degenerative disc disease. Spinal compression can result in the discs moving closer to each other. This could put pressure on the nerves and lead to back aches. Spinal decompression takes the pressure off the degenerated discs and thereby provides relief from back pain.

Facet joint syndrome is a medical condition that can be remedied through spinal decompression. However, spinal decompression cannot promise very lasting results for this condition. When a person suffers from facet joint syndrome, they have to deal with pain as a result of arthritic changes to their vertebral bones. Spinal decompression tries to solve the problem by creating more space between the vertebrae that helps in minimizing pain.

The older forms of decompression such as pulley and weight spinal traction systems are no longer used. Nowadays, chiropractors used a spinal decompression technique called Cox Technic. Other practitioners use methods such as Vax-D, DRX9000 and Accu-Spina.

If you have been looking at a spinal surgery option you may want to think about spinal decompression. Spinal surgery usually produces poor results and often results in pain and complications. If spinal decompression does not solve your back pain problem, the chances are that the cause of your pain may not have been diagnosed properly. Many patients who complain of back pain are usually suffering from psychosomatic back ache. This means that the condition of their spine is not really the cause behind the pain. In such cases, spinal decompression may be able to provide symptomatic relief and act as a pain reliever.

Spinal decompression, despite being non-invasive and non-surgical in nature, is not totally free from risks. You may need a thorough physical examination, an X-ray or an MRI scan done before you can opt for this form of treatment. Always consult with your primary care giver before going in for spinal decompression so that you know that it is right for you.

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Spinal Decompression – What It Is

Spinal Decompression, also known as Vertebral Axial Decompression, is a non-invasive, non-surgical, and cost-effective treatment of typically more than fifteen sessions for treating chronic lower back and neck pain which are usually caused by herniated disc, degenerative disc disease, facet joint syndrome, or other deformities of the disc. This treatment is best recommended for patients avoiding surgery.

People who suffer from back and neck pain usually experience symptoms such as weakness, numbing, and tingling, hence, affecting their daily activities. Pain-killers and other drugs may be able to relieve these pains. But if a person has tried medicines, as well as, chiropractor and physical therapy and yet the pain does not subside, he can either have surgery or spinal decompression. Surgery, as we all know, is painful and could cause complications. It is also very expensive and risky; that is why spinal decompression, which is an alternative to soothing back and neck pains, is available. It does not require needles or operations so it is less costly and more convenient.

A very obvious advantage of spinal decompression to surgery is its recovery time. A person who opts for spinal decompression does not need to stay in bed for long periods of time to recover. Treatments for spinal decompression are done per session. And once a spinal decompression session is completed, the person can go out of his physician’s clinic and go on with his daily activities. Unlike sedatives and painkillers, spinal decompression, has no side effects. It will not make you nauseous, dizzy, or drowsy. A person does not need any drug to go with this treatment. Also, spinal decompression will not interfere with one’s other medications; so a person receiving heart treatments may have both spinal decompression and heart treatments at the same time without having to worry about complications.

However, there are also certain disadvantages that should be considered before deciding on this kind of treatment. Firstly, a person should go for a physical examination to see if he is qualified to receive spinal decompression. If his physician allows him to take the treatment, he must make sure that he takes it without interruptions or breaks in between. Today, computer guided spinal decompression is used. Although manual spinal decompression has been proven effective for centuries, technological advancements in medication are preferred by many. The equipments and machines used in computer guided spinal decompression are expensive; thus, costs for this treatment are relatively high. One must also be willing and capable of traveling to places where this treatment is available because computer guided spinal decompression is new. Accessibility and feasibility are very important.

Spinal decompression is a proven safe method and is effective when adminstered by a qualified professional but precautions must still be observed for one’s own personal safety.

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Why Surgical Spinal Decompression Scares So Many People

Before the advent of the non surgical spinal decompression (around which there has been so much talk in the recent past), the conditions that the technology addresses could only be addressed through surgical spinal decompression. Indeed, even up to this date, there are people whose only hope for relief from the problems addressed by non surgical spinal decompression is through surgery, these mostly being people for whom non surgical spinal decompression is contra indicated, like expectant mothers, people suffering from osteoporosis as well as people with severe nerve damage.

Quite remarkably though, the patients whose only treatment option for back and neck pains is surgical spinal decompression often opt to live with their pain (maybe using coping aids like analgesics or physical therapies), rather than go for surgical spinal decompression. This begs the questions as to why surgical spinal decompression scares people so much.

To understand the reason as to why people are so scared of surgical spinal decompression, it is important to first understand the kind of conditions in which such surgical spinal decompression might be used as a treatment option and how they come about.

As it turns out, surgical spinal decompression can be employed in the treatment of the conditions where the vertebral disk gets ‘compressed,’ thereby forcing the disk material out of the disk and into space that accommodates nerves. This ultimately puts continual pressure on the affected nerves and results in chronic back and neck pains (depending on the disk under pressure) to the patient.

Now it should be noted that when we talk of vertebral disks, we are not talking of disks the size of compact disks, but rather very small and sensitive disks that nonetheless have a critical role in the body. And in a similar manner, when we talk about vertebral disk material, we are talking about what is often microscopic material – and which too performs very critical roles in the body.

So it follows that the main reason why many people are so scared of surgical spinal decompression is that the parts being operated here are very sensitive parts, and should anything go wrong during the surgery, the person in question would probably end up disabled for life. And since we are dealing with very small body parts here, it also follows that the risk of something indeed going wrong in the surgery is higher than for operations involving larger body parts, hence many people’s hesitation in undergoing surgical spinal decompression even when such surgery would relieve them of anguishing pain.

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Non Surgical Versus Surgical Spinal Decompression

People suffering from back and neck pains arising out of compression of the vertebral disks (and the subsequent displacement of vertebral disk material into space that is supposed to be occupied by nerves) can be treated through either non surgical or surgical spinal decompression. It is, of course, not a question of either just going for one or the other, since there are specific circumstances when the non surgical spinal decompression is used, just as there are circumstances where the surgical spinal decompression has to be used.

In terms of effectiveness, properly performed, both non surgical and surgical spinal decompression are equally effective in the treatment of back and neck pains resulting from the displacement of vertebral disk material into space that is occupied by nerves. Indeed, the only core difference between non surgical and surgical spinal decompression is the medium and method used to get the displacement vertebral disk material back into the disk; where in the non surgical case, subtle force application equipment backed by specialized software are used in getting the displaced material back into the disk, while in the surgical spinal decompression, the treatment involves surgically opening up the patient and performing procedures to get the displaced disk material back into the disk.

In terms of treatment times, it can be said that surgical spinal decompression is an ‘instant treatment’ (in that the patient leaves the operating table with the vertebral disk material that was causing trouble back in its rightful place), whereas non surgical spinal decompression is more of a gradual treatment process, requiring twenty sessions to get the displaced vertebral disk material back into the disk. But while surgical spinal decompression might be termed as an ‘instant treatment’ one need to keep in mind that they would need a considerable period of time to recuperate from the effects of the surgery, often ending up being grounded for longer than the three to four weeks it takes to go through non surgical spinal decompression.

In terms of cost, non surgical spinal decompression is often termed as a more cost-effective method for the treatment of the range of back and neck pains that can be treated through spinal decompression than surgical spinal decompression; although it should be noted that not non surgical spinal decompression is not a very cheap treatment either.

And in terms of risk, non surgical spinal decompression is termed as a less risky treatment method than the surgical spinal decompression – though it should also be noted that the non surgical spinal decompression is not absolutely risk free, and neither is it a treatment option of everyone, hence the need for extensive tests and physical examination, before one can be put through the non surgical spinal decompression.

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Factors Behind the Rising Demand for Spinal Decompression Machines

In spite of advances in the technology underlying them, the cost of spinal decompression machines has not been falling in the last few years. In fact, the cost of some spinal decompression machines has been rising, albeit marginally, leading to the question as to what could be causing the rise in price of spinal decompression machines.

The answer to the question about what could be causing the rise in the price of spinal decompression machines has tended to lie in the rising demand for the machines. It is an established principle in economics that when the demand for anything outpaces the supply, then price spikes are likely to be witnessed, and this seems to be indeed the case with spinal decompression machines.

So what could, in turn, be the reason behind the rise in demand for spinal decompression machines?

The rise in demand for spinal decompression machines can be largely attributed to increasing awareness on the benefits of spinal decompression therapy. And the most acknowledged benefit of spinal decompression therapy is that it provides people suffering from some forms of vertebra disk-related back and neck pain with relief from such pain without having to go for highly invasive surgery, which has for long been the only way to find lasting relief from this forms of pain before the arrival of spinal decompression therapy.

Now we are living in an age when information about new therapies and treatments spreads very fast, and within a few years of spinal decompression’s discovery, word about it has spread to pretty most of the world, so that even the people who are not using it are not doing so because of things like the cost-factor, rather than because of lack of awareness about its existence on their doctor’s parts.

As more and more people become aware of the benefits of spinal decompression therapy (forcing their hospitals to go looking for the spinal decompression machines), the makers of these machines find themselves with so much demand on their hands that they have to ‘discriminate’ the people asking for the machines through the pricing mechanism.

What usually happens in case where demand outstrips supply is that new entrants get into the market to meet the ‘over-supply’ driving the prices back to their normal levels. In the case of spinal decompression machines, however, this entry of new makers has not tended to be very easy, since these are rather sophisticated machines made using cutting edge medical engineering technology, and not everyone has that level of expertise.

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