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#1
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Re: Degenerative Disc Disease
I am 6'3" and 205, not sure how much I'll be able to lose. I have been able to do some core work (crunches and such) but more would help I'm sure. My cardio fitness is terrible due to all this, however.
I was reading that sometimes they can inject glucosamine instead of cortisone, has anyone tried this? I don't care which one I have to get, as long as it works. People I know have both good and bad to say about cortisone wrt back pain. Most say it does not last too long, but at this point I'll take a week and be happy. The chiro that I know is not a nutjob 'subluxations caused the death of Princess Diana' kind of guy. He has a sports medicine background as well (might have been a PT or something before, I forget). He wants to see the MRI as well, so if nothing else it will be one more opinion to weigh. Right now my main goal is get the pain to stop, but then get this all 'fixed' and be back in shape by little league next year. My son will be 12 and it might be his last year, I'd really hate to miss out on yelling at him to stay down on grounders and stop throwing freakin curve balls, lol. |
#2
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Re: Degenerative Disc Disease
Oh, hm, you're not overweight. I see.
Glucosamine and joint fluid supplements take well through the GI tract; I'm not sure injections are necessary or worthwhile. Less needles = better. Keep us updated. |
#3
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Re: Degenerative Disc Disease
[ QUOTE ]
People I know have both good and bad to say about cortisone wrt back pain. Most say it does not last too long, but at this point I'll take a week and be happy. [/ QUOTE ] The problem most people have is they expect the wrong thing from the cortisone. (there are also other steroid injections you can get which may be better depending on your exact problems). They just get the shot, feel better for a while, don't do their therapy, and then the pain comes back the same as before. The steroid provides some pain killing, but mainly reduces inflammation. This stops all the swollen tissues from putting pressure on the nerve and makes some more space where things can move around. It's just a temporary effect, though, and if you don't do anything else, the vertebrae don't move on their own and the problem will come right back. Basically the steroid gives you a month or so of "breathing room" where you can use exercise/chiro/PT/etc. to adjust your spine into a position where you aren't putting so much pressure on your nerves. If the steroid wears off and you've got your spine in a better position, the inflammation won't come back. |
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