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Bldg 7, Ste 135
Mesa, AZ 85210
(480) 839-2273

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knee pain

GET RID OF OSTEOARTHRITIS WITH SOFT TISSUE APPROACHES – (12-03-07)

Chondroitin for Osteoarthritis of the Knee or Hip

This review found minimal or no benefit to the use of chondroitin for arthritis of the knee. Before we jump to conclusions… How many people in these studies with knee/hip pain was actually coming from the joint itself? The answer, of course, is that we don’t know. Degenerative joint disease = pain in clinical studies but that just isn’t always true.

For a physician that addresses soft-tissue components of injuries, how often does a knee loaded with arthritis get complete relief with some solid soft tissue approaches? I can personally say that aggressive soft tissue techniques like Graston can sometimes bring complete relief for many OA sufferers. Did we fix the OA? Of course not–but in these cases the soft tissues were the primary pain generators. So we could assume that any type of joint support would not be effective in these cases.

So, in these studies, did they rule out non-joint related pain generators? More of a rhetorical question because of course they did not.

Read entire article here

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RECIPE TO CREATE A DRUG USER

The Federal Bureau of Narcotics was formed over 80 years ago in 1930.  In 1954, President Eisenhower formed a council to battle narcotics use here in the United States.  In 1971 President Nixon coined the term “war on drugs.”  This was further strengthened by President Reagan in 1982.  Overall, untold billions of federal dollars have been spent on this effort.  Man did we get it all wrong.

We were spending our money and efforts at illicit drug use, while slowly building a society that not only condoned prescription narcotic drug use, but PAID FOR IT!  Beginning at least in 2008, the number of deaths associated with prescription narcotic use exceeded those deaths caused by illicit drug use.

Codeine, OxyContin, Percocet, Vicodin, morphine,  Xanax and Valium (these 2 are benzodiazapines–but frequently abused), Valium, Tramadol, Tylenol 3. 

It never ceases to amaze me how quickly prescriptions for narcotic pain relievers are given out.  In the ER it is almost a given.  High likelihood in urgent care.  Still far too common in a primary care settings.

And then there are the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).  Why should we throw something as safe and harmless as NSAIDs in with the narcotic drugs?

I firmly believe that, as time progresses (decades, probably) we will begin to understand just how dangerous this class of drugs is.  Arthritis /  joint damage, heart attacks, strokes, impotence, GI bleeds, disruption of intestinal barriers, dementia…this list of known effects seems to lengthen every month.

The problem here is that of sheer scale of use. Between over the counter use and the 70 Million prescriptions per year, it is estimated that there are 30 BILLION doses used per year.  That’s with a “b.”  Even uncommon side effects become magnified by this volume of use.  Of course, bleeding ulcers, heart attacks and strokes are not uncommon, so the math just gets more complicated from there.

So what does all of this have to do with this particular article?  This article looked at analgesic use after low risk surgery (gall bladder, cataract, TURP for prostate enlargement and varicose vein stripping) and what happens after 7 days and one year.  The results were surprising:

  1. Opioids were newly prescribed to 7.1% within 7 days of being discharged from the hospital
  2. Opioids were prescribed to 7.7% at 1 year from surgery
  3. Instead of going down, the number of patients receiving a prescription for opioids at 1 year increased to 15.9%
  4. Overall, an opioid prescriptions within 7 days of surgery made it  44% more likely to be a long term user
  5.  NSAIDs were prescribed to 0.3% within 7 days of discharge
  6. NSAIDs prescriptions jumped to 7.8% at 1 year from surgery
  7. Those taking NSAIDs within 7 days of surgery were almost 400% more likely to become long-term NSAID users

Wow.  Talked about generating a society that is addicted to drugs.  And while this study looks at low risk surgery, how similar would the numbers be for neck pain?  Low back pain?  Knee pain or headache?  Makes me happy to be a chiropractor.

Again, I would ask…is the “War on Drugs” looking at the wrong side of the prescription pad?

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PULLED A MUSCLE? WHY POPPING THAT ALEIVE IS A VERY BAD IDEA

Obviously, this article is going to sound a little self serving since I am, after all, a chiropractor with a vested interest in my patients not taking drugs of any kind unless absolutely necessary. My more inquisitive patients all seem to ask a similar question…if the body is so brilliantly designed, where do chronic musculoskeletal complaints come from?

Certainly there are injuries that are severe and result in tissue damage that is much greater in degree and have a high likelihood of producing chronic pain. Think skiing, skateboarding or snowboarding injury. High speed car crashes. Motorcycle accidents. Equestrian wipeouts. Surgery.

But what about the weekend warrior who pulls a hamstring? The 8 hour per day computer user? Or me, as a lifelong martial artist, who has had untold injuries over the decades to pretty much every potential area of my body? Why do these situations lead to chronic pain?

My personal thought (backed by lots of research and years of clinical practice) is that the development of chronicity has much to do with how we handle the immediate period after the injury or onset of symptoms. What do the vast majority of us do (which is, of course, the direction indicated by billions of dollars of advertising) in this immediate period? Rest the area and pop an over the counter pain medication or anti-inflammatory. This is arguably the worst possible combination possible.

Why?

First, let’s address the immobilization aspect. Literally within minutes of immobilization, the soft tissues surrounding the immobilized joint begin to break down. The longer that joint is kept from a full range of motion, the worse the tissue damage. Anyone who’s ever broken a bone and had it casted can attest to how much joint motion is lost once the cast comes off. Recovery time can be even longer than the immobilization time.

With tissue injury, ultimately, the size of the region affected is larger than the original injury size. Consider the swelling associated with an ankle sprain—the area of the ligament injury may actually be very small, but the entire ankle, foot and lower leg swells up to the size of a balloon and becomes discolored. Now the amount of injured tissue is much larger than the original injury and this tissue has to heal. But healing occurs in a haphazard fashion if the area is not used. I give the analogy of a leak in your bathroom faucet. You call in the plumber. He shows up with a crew that’s been drinking at the bar for half the day. They proceed to rip out half the bathroom to fix the leak and rebuild with a level of skill only a three-sheets-to-the-wind Irishman can achieve.

Our body is no different. As we heal after an injury, the new tissue, whether it is bone, muscle, ligaments, fascia or tendons, is laid down in a disorganized manner. Only as that region goes through movement do these healing tissues become stressed and become organized along the lines of force. Immobilization becomes the enemy of proper healing.

Next, let’s address the routine use of over the counter anti-inflammatories, or prescription, for that matter. All anti-inflammatory medications are, by their very nature, designed to interfere with the inflammatory process. Unfortunately, inflammation is the normal process of healing. Disrupt this and you disrupt the ability of our tissues to heal the way they were designed. Contrast this with the use of ice right after an injury. Ice works simply by reducing blood flow to the newly injured area, thus keeping the damage of the drunken plumbing crew from getting too out of hand. Arguably a good idea. But then blocking the crew from repairing the area in specific ways, like maybe taking all their crescent wrenches away from them, is going to result in improper repair.

Hopefully you can begin to understand why the combination of immobilization and anti-inflammatory medications immediately after an injury may be the first step in developing chronic pain. Repeat this cycle the next time you injure the area and the dysfunction begins to mount.

This particular study demonstrates just how bad the outcome can be when non-steroidal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs) are used after a rotator cuff surgery tendon repair. Researchers looked at the tendon to bone healing that occurred in the presence of NSAIDs and found that every case was affected, from complete failure of healing to weakened tissue. No normal healing tissue was present when compared to the group in which no NSAIDs were used.

While this relates to surgical cases in animals, the same process is interfered with in every case of tissue injury that happens in our body when NSAIDs are used. While my opinion that you should run to your chiropractor at the first hint of any type of pain may sound self-serving, the reality is that you may be diverting the development of chronic pain.

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CONSIDERING SURGERY FOR YOUR KNEE PAIN?

Knee pain is something we see commonly in our office.  Unfortunately, I think these are many more cases because patients have been told that their knee pain is arthritis and there is nothing that can be done.  This could not be further from the truth.

From a treatment viewpoint, the knee is really not a complex joint.  Basically it is referred to as a ginglymus (“hinge”) joint with a slight degree of rotation.  There are ligaments, meniscus, muscles, the joint itself and….most importantly…the fascia!

While it is difficult to describe, I generally refer to the fascia as the sheath that our joints and muscles are encased in.  It is far more complicated than that, but it seems to get the point across.  Many patients come in concerned that they may have torn a ligament in their knee and may even have an MRI to back up the idea.  However, current theories are actually debunking the idea that ligaments truly exist.

Rather, they are thickenings of the fascia along areas of a joint that provide increased stability.  We have called them ligaments and have seen them on cadavers because anatomists have dissected out what they were looking for.  In other words, they were looking for a ligament so, as they dissected out a region they actually created the ligament from the fascia surrounding that area.  So, this thickening of tissue exists, but it is actually the continuation of the fascia from the area above and below it.

So what does this mean? 

It means that the fascia surrounding a joint may be the most critical tissue that needs to be addressed for joint pain.  This can be addressed with fascial manipulation, Graston technique or Rolfing.  Laser, chiropractic adjusting, ultrasound, strengthening exercises and any number of other techniques are not going to address the problems that occur in the fascia and may not be as effective for relieving knee pain.

The fascia is also a major source of pain in the knee.  Because of this, patients develop knee pain, their primary care doctors orders X-rays (or worse-an MRI) done before any treatment, and they are told they have arthritis.  They try some pain meds, maybe a short course of physical therapy, but don’t notice much of a difference.  At this point they are resigned to wait until the pain gets debilitating enough for a knee replacement.  Sounds like a great plan, huh?

It is common for this patient to come into my office, only to leave 2 or 3 visits later with much less pain in their knees.  Did the arthritis suddenly get fixed?  Of course not.  Rather, the pain was not coming from the joint itself, but rather from the fascia surrounding the knee.

So what does all of this have to do with this particular study?

Because of the marked increase in the number of knee replacements being done in the US, researchers look to confirm that this increase was due to the increased obesity and the increasing age of the population.  This was not what they found.  Rather, knee pain increased independently of age and BMI. 

Of extreme importance is what they did NOT find.

They did NOT find an increase in arthritis of the knee.  So, our country is performing more and more knee replacements.  This is not due to obesity (obesity did play a role, but it was a smaller one) or age.  And there was not more arthritis found.  So basically, we are replacing perfecting good knee joints because of problems likely due to fascia surrounding the joint that was never effectively treated.

The bottom line is that anyone with knee pain should first be evaluated by a chiropractor that specializes in the treatment of the soft tissues that surround a joint (in this case, the knee).  If pain persists after several visits, then an evaluation by a surgeon may be warranted, but certainly not before.

 

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