What conditions respond best to treatment?
• Low back pain, including sciatica and disc herniations • Neck pain and stiffness, including whiplash injuries • Chronic arthritis and joint stiffness • Hip pain and degeneration • Shoulder pain, including rotator cuff injuries • Knee pain and stiffness • Jaw pain or ‘TMJ’ • Bursitis, tendonitis or sprains • Plantar fasciitis and other forms of foot pain • Nerve entrapment syndromes that cause numbing and tingling in the arms, hands, legs, or feet, including carpal tunnel syndromesHow do I know if it will work? Or if it won’t? Generally, any type of pain that is of musculoskeletal origin responds well to treatment. Pain that changes depending on your movement, or pain that you know started because ‘something happened’, is a fairly good indication that the pain is musculoskeletal. In the majority of cases I can relieve this kind of pain and often alleviate it completely, depending on the degree of permanent tissue damage. If you have a degenerative condition, say of your vertebral disc
• Low back pain, including sciatica and disc herniations • Neck pain and stiffness, including whiplash injuries • Chronic arthritis and joint stiffness • Hip pain and degeneration • Shoulder pain, including rotator cuff injuries • Knee pain and stiffness • Jaw pain or TMJ • Bursitis, tendonitis or sprains • Plantar fasciitis and other forms of foot pain • Nerve entrapment syndromes that cause numbing and tingling in the arms, hands, legs, or feet, including carpal tunnel syndromes How do I know if it will work? Or if it won’t? Generally, any type of pain that is of musculoskeletal origin responds well to treatment. Pain that changes depending on your movement, or pain that you know started because “something happened,” is a fairly good indication that the pain is musculoskeletal. In the majority of cases I can relieve this kind of pain and often alleviate it completely, depending on the degree of permanent tissue damage. If you have a degenerative condition, say of your vertebral discs