Friday, March 15, 2013

Back Pain and Visualisation Part 1

With back pain, the human pelvis has recently become a focus for a considerable amount of new research which is relevant to manual therapy practice. In particular, movement within the pelvis is now being recognised and studied in relation to its role in maintaining stability in the vertebral column and subsequent implications for the prevention and treatment of low back pain. This important new subject area for clinicians is now covered in depth in this groundbreaking work from the people at the forefront of research and practice in the field. The contributors represent the breadth of professionals involved in manual therapy with back pain, from osteopathy, chiropractic and manual physical therapy, to orthopaedic medicine and surgery, anaesthesia and pain control. The text presents the latest research and developments in this high profile and fast developing area and demonstrates the relevance of the research to clinical practice.

The decision regions containing the training examples were found by presenting each training case to low-back-pain and recording the corresponding hidden layer activations.

More common causes of low back pain are sprains and strains of lumbar paraspinal musculo-ligamentous complex. However, the consequences of normal aging of the spine include progressive disk degeneration may be manifested in low back pain even though an exact correlation between disk degeneration and low back pain has not been established.

Nevertheless, many believe that the predominant cause of persistent low back pain is degeneration of the disk. Spondylolisthesis and spondylosis are other known causes of mechanical low back pain. However, the treatments by means of conservative methods or spine surgery depend on the pathology.

The innovative pain visualisation tool is displayed via a web browser as a 3D body. Users can log pain data on an easy-to-use PDA monitor at regular intervals. Pain can be classified as: burning, aching, stabbing, pins and needles and numbness with each pain type allocated a colour, which is represented on the 3D rotating tool.

If neck or back pain is severe, your health-care provider may suggest physical therapy. Physical therapy combines pain-relieving non invasive treatments with therapeutic exercise, posture correction, and preventive body mechanics. Yoga is ideal for this.

With visualisation, time in investment that teaches you a skill, namely how to communicate with your subconscious about your pain to obtain relief. It has no on-going costs, but does have an on-going benefit: the ability to use the subconscious to handle new pain or other conditions that may crop up in the future.








Glen Wood - The Yoga Teacher, dedicated to unlocking the Real Secrets of Back, Neck and Shoulder Pain.

To help you further with your back, neck and shoulder pain you need to sign up for your FREE "Yoga and You" report at YogaTeachingwithGlen.com YogaTeachingwithGlen.com

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