SteveDavis
Ensign
No. I don't have any type of idea about it 

^ No. Haven't been offered one.
* *
You can buy them. Well, you can in the UK. I found them to be a great alternative to painkillers when I was having my back issues.
If you're suffering from neurological pain in your legs due to damage or pressure on your spinal cord, no amount of narcotics or traditional pain meds will alleviate this.
^ No. Haven't been offered one.
* *
You can buy them. Well, you can in the UK. I found them to be a great alternative to painkillers when I was having my back issues.
It sounds like maybe she has, actually. The electrical stim stuff?
If you're suffering from neurological pain in your legs due to damage or pressure on your spinal cord, no amount of narcotics or traditional pain meds will alleviate this.
I was prescribed Gabapentin (brand name Neurontin) after my spinal surgery. It's an anticonvulsant, not a traditional pain killer, and it helps with neuropathic pain.
If you're suffering from neurological pain in your legs due to damage or pressure on your spinal cord, no amount of narcotics or traditional pain meds will alleviate this.
Look into seeing a physiatrist.
No. I don't have any type of idea about it
The electrical stim stuff?
*waves*
Things are improving finally. I guess getting into the doctor's office and then PT rather quickly helped a lot. Usually with herniations, it took me a few days to get an appointment.
Glad things are turning a corner so quickly. Hmm, very quickly. Hunky male PT, is it?![]()
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Yours truly was just diagnosed with a "slipped disc" at L5-S1. I'll be starting PT this week./QUOTE]
If nobody else has suggested it, consider an inversion table. Hanging upside down from your ankles allows everything to decompress and can help maintain normal alignment. Costo had the Teeter Hangups recently for around $200 and they will last a lifetime.
That's nice, except that the pain is so bad, that I am obliged to take a strong pain pill.
I'm very careful when it comes to usage though, meaning that whenever it begins to settle, I'll return to my pain pill of choice (Tylenol with codeine). Although Vicodin is doing the trick, I don't like the "stoned" feeling (If I want to get stoned, that's why we have alcohol.) and would prefer not to need something so strong.
I've have bad pain issues since my late teens. I learned early on how to properly use pain pills. I won't even bother with stuff that tends to be addictive. I tried Ultram once for my fibromyalgia bck in the day. It's not supposed to be addictive. I found out, when I neglected to take some with me on a trip, that for me, it WAS addictive.
They went into the trash.
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