Showing posts with label Prolotherapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prolotherapy. Show all posts

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Sacroiliac joint pain - Sciatica

In this article, Ross Hauser, M.D., a leading Prolotherapy doctor, discusses the use of Prolotherapy for SI pain.

Prolotherapy treatments consist of injections that stimulates the repair of connective tissues such as tendons and ligaments by causeing a mild inflammatory response which initiates an immune response. This mimics what the body does naturally to heal soft tissue injuries.Prolotherapy is effective in SI pain because we have found it fairly rare for sacroiliac pain to be caused by a pinched nerve or by a slipped or herniated disc. Much more common is a ligament injury which caused ligament laxity or ‘looseness.” Research published in the medial journal Spine, (A. Schwarzer, 1995) states “ligament laxity in the sacroiliac joint is the number one reason for ‘sciatica’, or pain radiating down the side of the leg, and is one of the most common reasons for chronic low back pain.” Our clinical experience has been that if we treat back pain with Prolotherapy, administering injections into the lumbar and SI ligament attachments that exhibit tenderness, the pain and referred pain diminishes, even when MRI’s showed disc abnormalities. The injections are not given near the discs yet the back pain is completely healed.

LIGAMENTS AND THE SI JOINT
Ligaments connect bones to each other, like the vertebrae to each other and the sacrum to the pelvis. The sacrum is the part of the spine below the fifth and last lumbar vertebrae and above the coccyx. The uppermost portion of our pelvis is called the ilium. The area that connects these structures is called the sacroiliac joint (SI): sacro from the sacrum, iliac from the ilium. There is an expansive mesh of ligaments that make up this sacroiliac joint which is frequently injured. A problem here can affect the groin, pubis, hips and lower lumbar areas as well.

A SUCCESS STORY: From one of the Caring Medical staff – Joe the male nurse.
One of my own injuries that was successfully treated with Prolotherapy perfectly illustrates the point made in the above paragraph. I have been one of Dr. Hauser’s nurses for nearly six years and have had several areas treated. My worst injury began as a left hamstring injury incurred from increasing my pace on a training run. The original point of injury was where the hamstring attaches to the ischial tuberosity (IT), the bottom most part of the pelvis, the bone you sit down on. As with most people, I tried rest, heat, stretching, not stretching, nothing seemed to help. Even me, a person with access to a great Prolotherapy doctor, put off the injection treatment to see if I could heal it on my own. Can you blame me? Nurses don’t like shots either. The problem was my IT hurt on my left so while driving I leaned on my right. After a month of doing this, can you guess what happened? That’s right; the pain was now traveling up into my left SI joint, and was beginning to affect my sleep. The abnormal motion of sitting just on my right buttock caused an imbalance in my SI joint. Because I was educated in the mechanics of the pelvic ligaments, I knew that if left unchecked, my IT and SI problem could eventually cause a problem in my lumbar ligaments. So two months after my original injury, it was time to get up on the Prolotherapy table and take my medicine! After the soreness from the treatment wore off in a few days, I estimated my pain as 40% less. I needed three more treatments spaced about four weeks apart to completely resolve my problem.

To learn more about Prolotherapy research or to Contact Dr. Hauser at 708-848-7789

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Prolotherapy for plantar fasciitis treatment

Ross Hauser, MD a leading Prolotherapy doctor, demonstrates a typical heel treatment, medial arch treatment, and plantar fascia treatment with Prolotherapy injections.

Prolotherapy can help give you heel pain relief, foot pain relief, and used for plantar fasciitis treatment and can be successful in treating almost any chronic foot arch pain, including tendon and ligament injury, plantar fasciitis, heel and foot injury.

Prolotherapy research



Ross Hauser, MD, a leading Prolotherapy doctor reviews Prolotherapy research and why there can never be a true double blind study. Prolotherapy is an injection technique that stimulates the body to repair the painful area. It is most often used for chronic pain treatment, including arthritis treatment, sports injury treatment, ACL tear, meniscus tear, labral tear treatment, herniated or bulging disc treatment, back pain treatment, shoulder pain treatment, hip pain treatment, cartilage regeneration and repair.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

The Regeneration of Articular Cartilage with Prolotherapy

Can research and clinical observation be documented to show that articular cartilage can be regrown with Prolotherapy? Ross Hauser’s, M.D. article from the Journal of Prolotherapy is now available online

The Regeneration of Articular Cartilage with Prolotherapy
What most people may not realize is that chondrocytes, the cells that make articular cartilage, are metabolically active. Chondrocytes proliferate and actively make articular cartilage. Osteoarthritis is an example of this, in that both the degradation and synthesis of articular cartilage are enhanced. It is well known that in osteoarthritis, chondrocytes retain their proliferative activity. Osteophytes or bone spurs are an example of this activity.

Another example of adult articular cartilage cells’ replication is acromegaly. In this condition the body produces an excessive amount of human growth hormone and with it, articular cartilage. Acromegalics often suffer from joint abnormalities caused by proliferation of chondroytes in articular cartilage. In other words, they produce too much cartilage.

When a healthy articular cartilage cell is injured, it demonstrates an enhanced reparative response and can replicate its DNA to form new cells. The rate of formation of articular cartilage can be enhanced by such stimuli as altered hydrostatic pressure, varied oxygen tension, growth factors, as well as nutrient and substrate manipulation.

If by traditional orthopedic surgery or medical standards, articular cartilage injury or degeneration causes such symptoms as knee pain, stiffness, clicking, crunching, and inability to walk, then the reversal of such symptoms with Prolotherapy must mean that articular cartilage regeneration has taken place. In this scientific editorial, the author makes the case for using Prolotherapy as the treatment of choice for degenerated joints.

The remainder of this article on Prolotherapy research is available at  Knee pain treatment research articles at www.journalofprolotherapy.com

Ross A. Hauser, M.D
Dr. Hauser the Medical Director of the comprehensive Prolotherapy, PRP, and Bone Marrow Prolotherapy clinic, Caring Medical & Rehabilitation Services in Oak Park, Illinois. Dr. Hauser is one of the leading experts in the treatment of chronic pain and sports injuries with Prolotherapy.