Call us to set up an appointment! Herndon (703) 561-0600 Ashburn (703) 723-4040

Spinal Stenosis in Ashburn: What Works? Conservative Care!

Surgery. Physical therapy. Exercise. Braces. Spinal injections. Chiropractic. Spinal manipulation. So many options are available for the treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis. (1) But they can leave the Ashburn back pain sufferer in a difficult position to make a decision about how to get rid of the pain. Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn understands and is here to help.  

Sadly, spinal surgery is a common treatment older adults with chronic low back pain due to lumbar spinal stenosis. To curb this trend, researchers are working on an algorithm for physicians to follow when diagnosing and treating older patients with low back pain due to lumbar spinal stenosis. This approach is focused on helping low back sufferers to find relief with conservative treatment focused on keeping and/or returning these patients to functional status.(2)

Chiropractic fits this proposed system. Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn plans to keep Ashburn chiropractic patients with back pain and lumbar spinal stenosis functional, keep them mobile, keep them enjoying life with as little interruption by back pain as possible. Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn offers Cox Technic. It’s Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn’s use of Cox Technic is a gentle, conservative approach to relieving back pain and related leg pain due to lumbar spinal stenosis. Chiropractic Cox Technic is research-documented to safely increase the spinal canal area by up to 28% in a doctor directed and controlled manner.

As a side note, a Cochrane review concluded that non-surgical interventions studied had no side effects while surgical interventions produced 10% to 24% side-effects. (1)  Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn offers just that conservative treatment may be worth a try before a surgical intervention for lumbar spinal stenosis.

Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn knows that Ashburn low back pain patients with lumbar spinal stenosis want to know how they’ll respond to conservative, non-surgical care like chiropractic spinal manipulation. That’s quite understandable! Researchers are getting pretty good at identifying some factors that may well answer that question. However, not all outcome predicting measures are consistent. Such uncertainty will keep researchers working for a long time! But factors like age, a patient’s beginning-of-care rating of pain, body mass index and leg pain description are pretty reliable. (3,4) Count on your Ashburn chiropractor to ask a variety of questions during the clinical examination!

How many questions might your Ashburn chiropractor need to diagnose lumbar spine stenosis? Just 6! Research shows that back pain specialists can be 80% certain of the diagnosis after hearing the answer to just 6 questions. What types of questions are these 6? Simple ones like “do you get leg or buttock pain when you walk?” or “do you feel better when you flex forward?” or “does your back pain go away when you use a shopping cart or ride a bike?” do the trick. (5) Do you see a theme here? Spinal stenosis patients often find relief by flexing forward. Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn offers Ashburn chiropractic spinal care that carefully incorporates flexion to give relief. Fellow Ashburn chiropractic patients with lumbar spinal stenosis answer these questions similarly and are thankful for the relief after treatment!

Make time now to contact Poulin Chiropractic of Herndon and Ashburn to arrange your Ashburn chiropractic appointment for conservative management and relief of your back pain. You’ll be glad you did! 

 
« View All Spine Articles
"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."