Scoliosis patients find new treatmentPublished: 2009-07-09 11:16:48Author: Michelle Dynes | Wyoming News | June 29, 2009CHEYENNE -- Linda Hess thought her only options were a back brace or surgery.
Like
4.5 percent of the population, Hess suffers from scoliosis. The
abnormal C- or S-shaped curve of the spine produces back, leg and hip
pains that can get worse with age.
Patients also can experience
muscle spasms, digestive disruptions and even difficulty breathing if
the spinal curvature doesn't allow the lungs to properly inflate.
Hess
said she wasn't interested in surgery that would fuse portions of her
spine together. The medical procedure may prevent further degeneration,
but it could limit her range of motion. Back braces also correct the
problem, but only when worn for as many as 23 hours a day.
"I didn't want to do either," she added. "So I've been suffering with it."
But
as patients search for alternatives, they can find more chiropractors
who are trained in a nonsurgical, noninvasive method. And the treatment
option is attracting Cheyenne patients like Hess to the Spine
Correction Center of the Rockies in Fort Collins, Colo.
Dr.
April Cardwell said she and her partner, Dr. Michael Farrell, use a
technique developed by developed by the Clear Institute, a group of
chiropractic physicians. She added that it blends chiropractic care and
physical therapy that retrains the body to hold the correct posture.
Cardwell
and Farrell are the only chiropractors in Colorado who are certified in
the scoliosis treatment. Fewer than 20 chiropractors carry the
specialty nationwide.
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